untraceable

English

Etymology

From un- +‎ traceable.

Adjective

untraceable (comparative more untraceable, superlative most untraceable)

  1. Not able to be traced or tracked down.
    • 2013 November 17, Nick Bilton, “Disruptions: A Digital Underworld Cloaked in Anonymity”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 22 August 2022:
      Then there is bitcoin, the cryptocurrency that has been skyrocketing in value lately. Bitcoin is basically virtual cash — anonymous, untraceable currency stuffed into a mobile wallet.
    • 2016, Abdelrahman Desoky, Noiseless Steganography, page 4:
      The core idea of the Nostega paradign is basically camouflaging messages by embedding them in a form of noiseless data by employing either altered authenticated data or legitimate untraceable data, as shown in Section 1.3.

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