At 9:00 PM -0700 8/30/02, Nomen Nescio wrote:
Bill Frantz writes, regarding the possibility that the Palladium
architecture could be designed to resist the use of encrypted
code:
All general purpose computers require a way to move data space to code
space to support compilation.
Well, this is
Bill Frantz [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
All general purpose computers require a way to move data space to code
space to support compilation. Even if you don't allow compilation, most
modern systems have enough different powerful scripting languages that
interpretation is sufficient to support
Paul Crowley wrote:
I'm informed that malware authors often go to some lengths to prevent
their software from being disassembled. Could they use Palladium for
this end? Are there any ways in which the facilities that Palladium
and TCPA provide could be useful to a malware author who wants
On 29 Aug 2002, Paul Crowley wrote:
I'm informed that malware authors often go to some lengths to prevent
their software from being disassembled. Could they use Palladium for
this end? Are there any ways in which the facilities that Palladium
and TCPA provide could be useful to a malware
I'm informed that malware authors often go to some lengths to prevent
their software from being disassembled. Could they use Palladium for
this end? Are there any ways in which the facilities that Palladium
and TCPA provide could be useful to a malware author who wants to
frustrate legitimate