Anonymous ID: ee88e7 March 7, 2019, 4:49 a.m. No.5555703   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5731 >>5739 >>5838 >>5906

>>5555673

 

Is the release of Ghidra going to uncover all sorts of fuckery??

 

https://www.wired.com/story/nsa-ghidra-open-source-tool/

 

>You can't use Ghidra to hack devices; it's instead a reverse-engineering platform used to take "compiled," deployed software and "decompile" it. In other words, it transforms the ones and zeros that computers understand back into a human-readable structure, logic, and set of commands that reveal what the software you churn through it does. Reverse engineering is a crucial process for malware analysts and threat intelligence researchers, because it allows them to work backward from software they discover in the wild—like malware being used to carry out attacks—to understand how it works, what its capabilities are, and who wrote it or where it came from.