Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • transitive verb To make anonymous, especially by removing or preventing access to names.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • verb transitive To render anonymous; especially to remove data that would establish the identity of a person

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[anonym(ous) + –ize.]

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Examples

  • The program could collect domestic data but would "anonymize" names and other identifying information with encryption codes until evidence was gathered to justify a warrant so that names could be revealed.

    Former NSA executive Thomas A. Drake may pay high price for media leak 2010

  • The program could collect domestic data but would "anonymize" names and other identifying information with encryption codes until evidence was gathered to justify a warrant so that names could be revealed.

    Former NSA executive Thomas A. Drake may pay high price for media leak 2010

  • The program could collect domestic data but would "anonymize" names and other identifying information with encryption codes until evidence was gathered to justify a warrant so that names could be revealed.

    Former NSA executive Thomas A. Drake may pay high price for media leak 2010

  • For today's edition of the NPR News program "Day to Day," I filed a report on Google's announcement that it will "anonymize" some search-related user data by stripping IP addresses from records after 18 to 24 months.

    Boing Boing 2007

  • Recently, more people in my real life have discovered the blog, and man, I wish I would have named myself Kate (because that's always what I wanted my name to be, anyway) and I could have called N something riotous and unfathomable (Dolan, knowing me and the way I "anonymize" names here) -- and I would have been fine.

    blog: September 2008 2008

  • Recently, more people in my real life have discovered the blog, and man, I wish I would have named myself Kate (because that's always what I wanted my name to be, anyway) and I could have called N something riotous and unfathomable (Dolan, knowing me and the way I "anonymize" names here) -- and I would have been fine.

    blog: Aversion 2008

  • Blogging about students, colleagues, and administrators raises further questions; I suspect, for example, that we are all familiar with non-anonymous bloggers who purportedly "anonymize" their colleagues, even though their actual blog posts make it painfully easy to identify who is who.

    The Little Professor: 2007

  • Blogging about students, colleagues, and administrators raises further questions; I suspect, for example, that we are all familiar with non-anonymous bloggers who purportedly "anonymize" their colleagues, even though their actual blog posts make it painfully easy to identify who is who.

    In person 2007

  • The proxies "anonymize" traffic and bounce it to computers in other countries that send it along to the restricted sites.

    FOXNews.com 2011

  • Cory Doctorow warns that Web searches are more difficult to "anonymize" than is commonly believed, citing AOL's accidental data disclosure in 2006.

    WN.com - Articles related to Tobacco Funds Shrink as Obesity Fight Intensifies 2010

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