The NSA publicly released a tool for cracking software wide open, and hackers are loving it — so long as the NSA makes good on its promise not to use it to spy on them

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The NSA launched Ghidra, an open source tool to reverse-engineer software and look for flaws. Here's how it works, and why the NSA released it.

tool for disassembling suspicious files, analyzing malware, and testing for vulnerabilities.

The NSA promises that there are no backdoors or other methods of spying built in to Ghidra, but hackers have gone over the code with a fine-tooth comb to double-check that claim.

 

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