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Terms containing Algorithm | all forms
SubjectEnglishNorwegian Bokmål
comp., MSasymmetric algorithmasymmetrisk algoritme (An asymmetric cipher that uses two keys, one for encryption, the public key, and the other for decryption, the private key. As implied by the key names, the public key used to encode plaintext can be made available to anyone. However, the private key must remain secret. Only the private key can decrypt the ciphertext. The public key algorithm used in this process is slow (on the order of 1,000 times slower than symmetric algorithms), and is typically used to encrypt session keys or digitally sign a message)
comp., MSasymmetric key algorithmasymmetrisk nøkkelalgoritme (A method of encryption that uses a pair of mathematically related keys: a public key and a corresponding private key. Either key can be used to encrypt data, but the corresponding key must be used to decrypt it)
math.Efron's self-consistency algorithmmanglende informasjon prinsippet
math.Efron's self-consistency algorithmEfron selvbildet konsistens algoritme
math.EM algorithmestimering-maksimering algoritme
math.EM algorithmEM algoritmen
math.estimation-maximisation algorithmestimering-maksimering algoritme
math.estimation-maximisation algorithmEM algoritmen
math.estimation-maximization algorithmestimering-maksimering algoritme
math.estimation-maximization algorithmEM algoritmen
comp., MShash algorithmnummeralgoritme (An algorithm that produces a hash value of some piece of data, such as a message or session key. With a good hash algorithm, changes in the input data can change every bit in the resulting hash value; for this reason, hashes are useful in detecting any modification in a data object, such as a message. Furthermore, a good hash algorithm makes it computationally infeasible to construct two independent inputs that have the same hash. Typical hash algorithms include MD2, MD4, MD5, and SHA-1)
comp., MSpublic key algorithmfellesnøkkelalgoritme (An asymmetric cipher that uses two keys, one for encryption, the public key, and the other for decryption, the private key. As implied by the key names, the public key used to encode plaintext can be made available to anyone. However, the private key must remain secret. Only the private key can decrypt the ciphertext. The public key algorithm used in this process is slow (on the order of 1,000 times slower than symmetric algorithms), and is typically used to encrypt session keys or digitally sign a message)

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