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What is the difference between encoding and encryption?

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  • 9
    As a first approximation, encryption uses a key, encoding does not. Jan 11, 2011 at 12:48
  • 1
    If you decode an encoded data goot job, but if you decrypt an encrypted data without knowing the secet key, Kudos to you, You hacked it.
    – sujeet
    Jun 17, 2019 at 5:22
  • 1
    Encoding is like translating language A to language B so that people knowing language B easily get it. Encrypting it like translating language A to language B in a way so that only specific people knowing language B get it, usually you tell them the way before you start translating, maybe a method or key..like treat Pomegranate as grenade.
    – sujeet
    Jun 17, 2019 at 5:32

11 Answers 11

227

Encoding transforms data into another format using a scheme that is publicly available so that it can easily be reversed.

Encryption transforms data into another format in such a way that only specific individual(s) can reverse the transformation.

For Summary -

Encoding is for maintaining data usability and uses schemes that are publicly available.

Encryption is for maintaining data confidentiality and thus the ability to reverse the transformation (keys) are limited to certain people.

More details in SOURCE

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  • 5
    Do you consider "document with public key for signature" as Encoding or Encryption ? :)
    – Jarod42
    Jul 12, 2018 at 10:52
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    @Jarod42 A digital signature is neither an encryption nor an encoding of the document, as the original data cannot be recovered from it.
    – Thilo
    Mar 12, 2019 at 14:11
  • 2
    "using a scheme that is publicly available" - encryption definitely uses schemes that are publicly available as well, in fact any cryptographic scheme worth its own weight is always publicly available (i.e. no backdoors as in public eye). The part that isn't publicly available are the secrets needed to decipher the data, not the actual scheme/algorithms (e.g. RSA, DH etc). Jan 17, 2020 at 18:39
  • There is a good article about the difference at packetlabs.net/encryption-encoding-and-hashing
    – MB_18
    Jan 24, 2022 at 12:17
51

Encoding:

  1. Purpose: The purpose of encoding is to transform data so that it can be properly (and safely) consumed by a different type of system.

  2. Used for: Maintaining data usability i.e., to ensure that it is able to be properly consumed.

  3. Data Retrieval Mechanism: No key and can be easily reversed provided we know what algorithm was used in encoding.

  4. Algorithms Used: ASCII, Unicode, URL Encoding, Base64.

  5. Example: Binary data being sent over email, or viewing special characters on a web page.

Encryption:

  1. Purpose: The purpose of encryption is to transform data in order to keep it secret from others.

  2. Used for: Maintaining data confidentiality i.e., to ensure the data cannot be consumed by anyone other than the intended recipient(s).

  3. Data Retrieval Mechanism: Original data can be obtained if we know the key and encryption algorithm used.

  4. Algorithms Used: AES, Blowfish, RSA.

  5. Example: Sending someone a secret letter that only they should be able to read, or securely sending a password over the Internet.

Reference URL: http://danielmiessler.com/study/encoding_vs_encryption/

35

Encoding is the process of transforming data so that it may be transmitted without danger over a communication channel or stored without danger on a storage medium. For instance, computer hardware does not manipulate text, it merely manipulates bytes, so a text encoding is a description of how text should be transformed into bytes. Similarly, HTTP does not allow all characters to be transmitted safely, so it may be necessary to encode data using base64 (uses only letters, numbers and two safe characters).

When encoding or decoding, the emphasis is placed on everyone having the same algorithm, and that algorithm is usually well-documented, widely distributed and fairly easily implemented. Anyone is eventually able to decode encoded data.

Encryption, on the other hand, applies a transformation to a piece of data that can only be reversed with specific (and secret) knowledge of how to decrypt it. The emphasis is on making it hard for anyone but the intended recipient to read the original data. An encoding algorithm that is kept secret is a form of encryption, but quite vulnerable (it takes skill and time to devise any kind of encryption, and by definition you can't have someone else create such an encoding algorithm for you - or you would have to kill them). Instead, the most used encryption method uses secret keys : the algorithm is well-known, but the encryption and decryption process requires having the same key for both operations, and the key is then kept secret. Decrypting encrypted data is only possible with the corresponding key.

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  • It doesnt always require having the same keys to do encryption and decryption. Doesnt diffe-hellman use the sender's private key to encode and the recipient's private key to decode?
    – David Mann
    Apr 11, 2014 at 14:44
  • "HTTP does not allow all characters to be transmitted safely...." I think this is misleading. HTTP is 8-bit clean. You can transmit any byte you want in an HTTP message body. The headers are spec'd ASCII, but that's nothing to do with "safe" transmission. Nov 14, 2014 at 10:47
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Encoding is the process of putting a sequence of characters into a special format for transmission or storage purposes

Encryption is the process of translation of data into a secret code. Encryption is the most effective way to achieve data security. To read an encrypted file, you must have access to a secret key or password that enables you to decrypt it. Unencrypted data is called plain text ; encrypted data is referred to as cipher text

10

Encoding is for maintaining data usability and can be reversed by employing the same algorithm that encoded the content, i.e. no key is used.

Encryption is for maintaining data confidentiality and requires the use of a key (kept secret) in order to return to plaintext.

Also there are two major terms that brings confusion in the world of security Hashing and Obfuscation

Hashing is for validating the integrity of content by detecting all modification thereof via obvious changes to the hash output.

Obfuscation is used to prevent people from understanding the meaning of something, and is often used with computer code to help prevent successful reverse engineering and/or theft of a product’s functionality.

Read more @ Danielmiessler article

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    Encoding is the ability to understand charset. Based on which content is read and written in files. Eg. UTF-8, UTF-16, UTF-32, ANSI. Encryption is which transform the data which is already encoded.
    – Arun
    Oct 31, 2017 at 13:38
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See encoding as a way to store or communicate data between different systems. For example, if you want to store text on a hard drive, you're going to have to find a way to convert your characters to bits. Alternatively, if all you have is a flash light, you might want to encode your text using Morse. The result is always "readable", provided you know how it's stored.

Encryption means you want to make your data unreadable, by encrypting it using an algorithm. For example, Caesar did this by substituting each letter by another. The result here is unreadable, unless you know the secret "key" with which is was encrypted.

3

I'd say that both operations transform information from one form to another, the difference being:

  • Encoding means transforming information from one form to another, in most cases it is easily reversible
  • Encryption means that the original information is obscured and involves encryption keys which must be supplied to the encryption / decryption process to do the transformation.

So, if it involves (symmetric or asymmetric) keys (aka a "secret"), it's encryption, otherwise it's encoding.

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Encoding -》 example data is 16
Then encoding is 10000 means it's binary format or ASCII or UNCODED etc Which can be read by any system eassily and eassy to understand it's real meaning

Encryption -》 example data is 16 Then encryprion is 3t57 or may be anything depend upon which algo is used to encryption Which can be read by any system eassily BUT ony who can understand it's real meaning who has it's decryption key

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These are little bit different from each other. The encoding used when we want to convert text in a specific computer coding technique and in the encryption we hide data between a specific key or text.

0

Encoding is process of transforming given set of characters in relevant accepted format, take this question's URL,

  • This is what we see -->

    hhttps://stackoverflow.com/questions/4657416/difference-between-encoding-and-encryption

  • Over transmission this will be transformed to -->

    https%3A%2F%2Fstackoverflow.com%2Fquestions%2F4657416%2Fdifference-between-encoding-and-encryption

^ is example of URL encoding using ASCII char set where,

  • : = %3A

  • / = %2F

The reverse of Encoding is Decoding to original form and with given ASCII standard.


Encryption is process of converting plane text to cipher text so only authorized party can decipher it.

  • For example a simple HELLO is encrypted into KHOOR if just 3 characters are shifted.

p.s. Encoding (to code in some form) is form of encryption. :)

what-is-encryption

-1

Encryption converts data to non-readable format (Possibly containing special non-readable characters).

Encoding helps to convert that data to readable format (characters) so that it can be stored for future use i.e. possibly during decryption.

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