Well, the .nfo of the current R2R cracks have a pretty accurate explanation. I provided a nearly 1:1 cookbook for this kind of protection to the developer community about a decade ago, and it looks like somehow it made its way to "them". Some language is identical.DavidEkl wrote: Wed Jan 26, 2022 11:37 am Cool, thanks for the response and explanation! I was under the impression that you had to have some kind of hash/salt represented in the code/assembly, and that was the reason i figured perhaps public/private key would be safer. It seems you’ve already considered that angle a long time ago!
Sounds very interesting, and would love to learn more, but obviously you can’t leak implementation details haha
Thanks Urs![]()
Which really just means we have to finally simply do what we have come up with over the years, but which wasn't necessary until now. I.e. we were prepped for the day, and now we do what we have prepped for, in the form of moving to keyfile protection.
