John's crossword
Across
- 6. using letters and numbers
- 8. to put information into code (=a system of words, numbers, or symbols that hides its real meaning)
- 9. a short flash of light or sound used in Morse code (=a system for sending messages, used especially in the past)
- 10. a secret message written in code
- 13. a system for sending messages in which you hold two flags in various positions to represent different letters and numbers
- 14. a secret system of writing, used for sending messages so that no one can understand them unless they know the system
- 15. the use of codes to put information on a website into a form that can only be read by users with permission
- 16. to succeed in understanding the meaning of something written in a secret system of letters or symbols called a code
- 18. a quick way of writing that uses symbols to represent letters, words, or phrases, used especially when you write what someone is saying as they are talking
Down
- 1. to change information that was in a code that could not be read or understood into a form that can be read and understood
- 2. a way of keeping Internet messages secret in which a single key (=letter or number) changes the message into code and back again
- 3. if someone breaks a code (=a secret way of writing), they learn how to understand it
- 4. to succeed in understanding the meaning of a message written in code
- 5. completely automated public Turing test to tell computers and humans apart
- 7. a name for someone or something that you use when you want to keep their real name secret
- 11. a system of sending messages using signals of sound or light that represent the letters of the alphabet
- 12. a secret system of writing, used for sending messages so that no one can understand them unless they know the system
- 15. marked with letters or numbers that give information
- 17. to put secret information into code (=a system of words, numbers, or symbols that hides its real meaning)
- 19. a long signal used for sending messages in Morse code. Short signals are called dots.