The HackadayU video series on learning to use Ghidra is now available! While this was the first HackadayU course, there are more on the way. Anool Mahidharia just finished teaching KiCAD & FreeCAD 101 ...
The past few days have been busy if you’re trying to keep up with the pace of computer security news. Between a serious Chromium bug that’s actively being exploited on Windows 7 systems, the NSA ...
The National Security Agency (NSA), the same agency that brought you blockbuster malware Stuxnet, has now released Ghidra, an open-source reverse engineering framework, to grow the number of reverse ...
The National Security Agency released a free, public version of Ghidra, a set of tools developed internally for software reverse engineering. The agency will also release Ghidra's source code, ...
I knew nothing about Ghidra, but learning it's about reverse-engineering (disassemblers and decompilers) made me think I could include this one in the virtual Gadget Master library. It's The Ghidra ...
GHIDRA is a software reverse engineering (SRE) framework that helps analyze malicious code and malware-like viruses. It has been created and maintained by the National Security Agency Research ...
In brief: The United States National Security Agency announced that it is giving away its reverse-engineering tool GHIDRA for free and making it open-source. The program will be available on GitHub in ...
From left, Albert Sweets, Dr. James Whitney, Dr. Kevin Kornegay, Vinton Morris, and Aaron Edmund are part of Morgan State University’s Cybersecurity Assurance and Policy research team. The team has ...