mechanical or electronic fastening device
A lock is a mechanical or electronic device that fastens something closed and prevents unauthorized access or opening. Locks matter because they protect our possessions, secure our homes and vehicles, and give us control over who can access things that are important to us.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
A typical modern padlock and its keys A lock is a mechanical or electronic fastening device that is released by a physical object (such as a key, keycard, fingerprint, RFID card, security token or coin), by supplying secret information (such as a number or letter permutation or password), by a combination thereof, or it may only be able to be opened from one side, such as a door chain.
A key is a device that is used to operate a lock (to lock or unlock it). A typical key is a small piece of metal consisting of two parts: the bit or blade, which slides into the keyway of the lock and distinguishes between different keys, and the bow, which is left protruding so that torque can be applied by the user. In its simplest implementation, a key operates one lock or set of locks that are keyed alike, a lock/key system where each similarly keyed lock requires the same, unique key.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).