dmca
Open Source


A suite of reverse engineering tools for ELF executables and any operating system that supports it, including numerous gdb patches.  [edit]  


Project Details

AUDIENCE : developers
scienctific research : DEVELOPMENT STATUS : pre-alpha
LICENSE : gnu general public license (gpl)
OPERATING SYSTEM : bsd
Linux2 : posix : unix : PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE : assembly
C :

Attribution :

Information obtained from users, and repositories like FLOSSmole, Wikipedia, Apache, Codehaus, Tigris and several others. Please inform us of any errors, objections or omissions. You can find our terms of service here.
more details


Users

dmca
Be the first to add!


Alternatives



    Screenshots


    If you are a member, to have your comment attributed to you. If you are not yet a member, Join OStatic and help the Open Source community.


    Recent dmca activity

         

    EFF Takes On Apple Over DMCA Takedown Notice

    I can't help, when hearing more of the details about the EFF and OdioWorks joint lawsuit against Apple, thinking that the whole situation is just broken from any angle. The DMCA isn't without issue and the fact that it was applied to an online discussion about reverse engineering possibilities is a disturbing first. Even more backwards is the idea that a company producing wildly popular devices that are unsupported on an operating platform that's attracting an increasing number of tech- and gadget-happy people would not expect (or tolerate to some degree) discussion about reverse engineering.

    Let's put the legal issues aside for a moment -- or the idea that any copy protection systems were going to be stripped and copyright laws would be violated left and right. Wouldn't having a device your company produces but will not (or can not) support on some platforms reverse engineered so that it is able to work on (and with) a larger pool of software going to make your device more desirable?



    CoreAVC for Linux: DMCA by Mistake?

    It was widely reported online that the CoreAVC for Linux project on Google Code was shutdown overnight - and indeed, as I write this the project's page redirects to a takedown page.

    However, the project, concerned with hooking up a commercial H.264 codec to various bits of Linux software, was apparently removed at the request of CoreCodec, which owns the commercial CoreAVC.



    Sponsor Gallery