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The International Obfuscated C Code Contest (abbreviated IOCCC) is a computer programming contest for code written in C that is the most creatively obfuscated. Held semi-annually, it is described as "celebrating [C's] syntactical opaqueness". [1] The winning code for the 27th contest, held in 2020, was released in July 2020. [2]
Additionally, deobfuscation tools exist, aiming to reverse the obfuscation process. While most commercial obfuscation solutions transform either program source code or platform-independent bytecode (as used by Java and .NET), some also work directly on compiled binaries.
Code morphing is an approach used in obfuscating software to protect software applications from reverse engineering, analysis, modifications, and cracking.This technology protects intermediate level code such as compiled from Java and .NET languages (Oxygene, C#, Visual Basic, etc.) rather than binary object code.
ProGuard is an open source command-line tool which shrinks, optimizes and obfuscates Java code. It is able to optimize bytecode as well as detect and remove unused instructions. [4] ProGuard is free software and is distributed under the GNU General Public License, version 2. [3]
DashO is a code obfuscator, compactor [clarification needed], optimizer, watermarker [clarification needed], [2] and encryptor for Java, Kotlin and Android applications. [3] It aims to achieve little or no performance loss even as the code complexity increases. [4] [5]
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Malbolge has three registers, a, c, and d. When a program starts, the value of all three registers is zero. a stands for 'accumulator', set to the value written by all write operations on memory and used for standard I/O. c, the code pointer, is special: it points to the current instruction. [13] d is the data pointer. It is automatically ...
The Underhanded C Contest was a programming contest to turn out code that is malicious, but passes a rigorous inspection, and looks like an honest mistake even if discovered. The contest rules define a task, and a malicious component. Entries must perform the task in a malicious manner as defined by the contest, and hide the malice.