
In my on going research into the gaming arena, I came across something that can allow users to look at assembly dlls of a dot not program/application. This does not look good. Anyone one of you come across this and were you able to encrypt/encode your code in your applications in someway to protect it? :-)

Reverse engineering is pretty easy for many languages, more so for runtime bases languages like Java and .NET by nature of their design There are however many solutions to this problem. You can start by reading this http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc164058.aspx On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 9:39 AM, aki <aki275@googlemail.com> wrote:
In my on going research into the gaming arena, I came across something that can allow users to look at assembly dlls of a dot not program/application. This does not look good. Anyone one of you come across this and were you able to encrypt/encode your code in your applications in someway to protect it? :-) _______________________________________________ Skunkworks mailing list Skunkworks@lists.my.co.ke http://lists.my.co.ke/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/skunkworks ------------ Skunkworks Server donations spreadsheet
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Cheers @Rad! Code protection is important. Somehow the whole process that am covering at the moment makes sense to plan ahead. :-) On Tue, Mar 30, 2010 at 9:47 AM, Rad! <conradakunga@gmail.com> wrote:
Reverse engineering is pretty easy for many languages, more so for runtime bases languages like Java and .NET by nature of their design There are however many solutions to this problem. You can start by reading this http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/magazine/cc164058.aspx
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