Quote:
Finally, and most challenging, is the cat & rodent game of finding the gooey goodness of keybits hidden in a mutating, self-encrypted maze. The freeme proof of concept was a lesson to microsoft, as was the initial fu4wm hack (details of which may not be public yet?). The last fu4wm version and the mirakagi follow-on used a highly fragile method that involved disassembling automatic-variable initializers and brute forcing the mutation parameters (the attempts displayed in the text box).
|
This is the part that I haven't touched at all at the moment but I believe it can be done

If not by me than by someone. Creating open source code is always good start for better hackers than me.
Quote:
It would delight me to see an open source solution, but the odds are stacked against you. I suspect you'll lose interest rather than seeing it through to the lawsuit and extradiction attempts. If you think I'm wrong ... you are welcome to contact me.
|
I am not afraid of MS

I believe they are aware that every code I write is based on my own findings. Moreover I am not from US so I don't have to be afraid of DMCA

Of course they can say that I use their code or something like this. I will not run away and hide from such opinions I am really willing to rewrite ANY part of FreeMe2 code if they believe it uses their pattents. Maybe openssl is theirs

Thanks for very interesting info. Of course I think you are wrong and I will contact you trough mail to prove it. Regards.