Search Result for "cryptography": 
Wordnet 3.0

NOUN (2)

1. the science of analyzing and deciphering codes and ciphers and cryptograms;
[syn: cryptanalysis, cryptanalytics, cryptography, cryptology]

2. act of writing in code or cipher;
[syn: cryptography, coding, secret writing, steganography]


The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48:

Cryptography \Cryp*tog"ra*phy\ (-f?), n. [Cf. F. cryptographie.] 1. The act or art of writing in code or secret characters; also, secret characters, codes or ciphers, or messages written in a secret code. [1913 Webster +PJC] 2. The science which studies methods for encoding messages so that they can be read only by a person who knows the secret information required for decoding, called the key; it includes cryptanalysis, the science of decoding encrypted messages without possessing the proper key, and has several other branches; see for example steganography. [PJC]
WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006):

cryptography n 1: the science of analyzing and deciphering codes and ciphers and cryptograms [syn: cryptanalysis, cryptanalytics, cryptography, cryptology] 2: act of writing in code or cipher [syn: cryptography, coding, secret writing, steganography]
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (19 January 2023):

cryptography The practise and study of encryption and decryption - encoding data so that it can only be decoded by specific individuals. A system for encrypting and decrypting data is a cryptosystem. These usually involve an algorithm for combining the original data ("plaintext") with one or more "keys" - numbers or strings of characters known only to the sender and/or recipient. The resulting output is known as "ciphertext". The security of a cryptosystem usually depends on the secrecy of (some of) the keys rather than with the supposed secrecy of the algorithm. A strong cryptosystem has a large range of possible keys so that it is not possible to just try all possible keys (a "brute force" approach). A strong cryptosystem will produce ciphertext which appears random to all standard statistical tests. A strong cryptosystem will resist all known previous methods for breaking codes ("cryptanalysis"). See also cryptology, public-key encryption, RSA. Usenet newsgroups: news:sci.crypt, news:sci.crypt.research. FAQ MIT (ftp://rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet/news.answers/cryptography-faq/). Cryptography glossary (http://io.com/~ritter/GLOSSARY.HTM#BruteForceAttack). RSA cryptography glossary (http://rsasecurity.com/rsalabs/faq/glossary.html). Cryptography, PGP, and Your Privacy (http://draco.centerline.com:8080/~franl/crypto.html). (2000-01-16)