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 ...
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, ...
The annual RSA Conference in San Francisco draws thousands of cybersecurity experts from around the world, along with numerous corporate exhibitors that use the opportunity to spotlight their newest ...
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 United States’ National Security Agency is planning to open-source an internally developed reverse-engineering framework for popular operating systems this spring. The framework, called GHIDRA, is ...
Internally, the NSA uses GHIDRA to examine all kinds of software. Now, the agency wants to 'give back,' so GHIDRA is available for download on the NSA's website. Robert Joyce, an NSA senior advisor, ...
Flaw in National Security Agency’s Ghidra reverse-engineering tools allows hackers to execute code in vulnerable systems. A medium severity bug reported on Saturday impacts Ghidra, a free, open-source ...
At the RSA security conference today, the National Security Agency, released Ghidra, a free software reverse engineering tool that the agency had been using internally for well over a decade. The tool ...
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 ...
At the RSAConference in March, a free reverse engineering framework called GHIDRA is being released that was developed by the U.S. National Security Agency. In March 2017, WikiLeaks leaked the CIA ...