Encryption is like putting your toys inside a special box that only you and your best friend can open.
How it works
Imagine you have a message, maybe a secret note to your friend, and you want to keep it safe from others. That’s where encryption comes in. It changes your message into something that looks like nonsense, just like when you draw on the back of your notebook with crayon, and only your best friend knows how to erase it properly.
The special box
When you use encryption, you’re like a kid who puts their toys inside a box and locks it. Only someone with the right key, like your best friend, can unlock the box and see the toys again. In this case, the key is something that helps turn the nonsense message back into real words.
If someone tries to peek at your secret note without the key, all they’ll see is a jumble of letters, just like looking at a messy room full of toys you can’t recognize!
Examples
- Using a password to hide your favorite video game from siblings.
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See also
- What are cryptographic puzzles?
- How Are Prime Numbers Used In Cryptography?
- What is Quantum Cryptography? An Introduction?
- What are model inversion attacks?
- How Does a Blockchain Make Transactions Secure?