- Cryptography - Wikipedia
Cryptography, or cryptology, [1] is the practice and study of techniques for secure communication in the presence of adversarial behavior [2] More generally, cryptography is about constructing and analyzing protocols that prevent third parties or the public from reading private messages [3]
- What is cryptography? - IBM
Cryptography is the practice of developing and using coded algorithms to protect and obscure transmitted information so that it may only be read by those with the permission and ability to decrypt it
- What is Cryptography? Definition, Types and Techniques | TechTarget
In computer science, cryptography refers to secure information and communication techniques derived from mathematical concepts and a set of rule-based calculations called algorithms, to transform messages in ways that are hard to decipher
- What is Cryptography? Definition, Importance, Types | Fortinet
Cryptography is the process of hiding or coding information so that only the person a message was intended for can read it The art of cryptography has been used to code messages for thousands of years and continues to be used in bank cards, computer passwords, and ecommerce
- Cryptography | NIST
Post-quantum cryptography, including standards that can be implemented now to secure against both quantum and classical computers without drastic changes to existing communication protocols and networks
- Cryptography and its Types - GeeksforGeeks
Cryptography is the science of protecting information using mathematical techniques to ensure confidentiality, integrity, and authentication It transforms readable data into unreadable form, preventing unauthorized access and tampering
- Cryptology - Encryption, Ciphers, Security | Britannica
Cryptography, as defined in the introduction to this article, is the science of transforming information into a form that is impossible or infeasible to duplicate or undo without knowledge of a secret key
- What is Cryptography? - Kaspersky
Cryptography is the technique of obfuscating or coding data, ensuring that only the person who is meant to see the information–and has the key to break the code–can read it
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