REVERSE ENGINEERING

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REVERSE ENGINEERING

Meaning & Definition Reverse engineering is the process of discovering the technological principles of a human made device, object or system through analysis of its structure, function and operation It often involves taking something (e.g., a mechanical device, electronic component, or software program) apart and analyzing its workings in detail to be used in maintenance, or to try to make a new device or program that does the same thing without using or simply duplicating (without understanding) the original.

PURPOSE Reverse engineering has its origins in the analysis of hardware for commercial or military advantage. The purpose is to deduce design decisions from end products with little or no additional knowledge about the procedures involved in the original production. The same techniques are subsequently being researched for application to legacy software systems, not for industrial or defense ends, but rather to replace incorrect, incomplete, or otherwise unavailable documentation.

Reasons for reverse engineering Interoperability. Lost documentation: Reverse engineering often is done because the documentation of a particular device has been lost (or was never written), and the person who built it is no longer available. Integrated circuits often seem to have been designed on obsolete, proprietary systems, which means that the only way to incorporate the functionality into new technology is to reverse-engineer the existing chip and then re-design it. Product analysis. To examine how a product works, what components it consists of, estimate costs, and identify potential patent infringement. Digital update/correction. To update the digital version (e.g. CAD model) of an object to match an "as-built" condition. Security auditing. Acquiring sensitive data by disassembling and analyzing the design of a system component. [3] Military or commercial espionage. Learning about an enemy's or competitor's latest research by stealing or capturing a prototype and dismantling it. Removal of copy protection, circumvention of access restrictions. Creation of unlicensed/unapproved duplicates. Materials harvesting, sorting, or scrapping. [4] Academic/learning purposes. Curiosity. Competitive technical intelligence (understand what your competitor is actually doing, versus what they say they are doing). Learning: learn from others' mistakes. Do not make the same mistakes that others have already made and subsequently corrected.

DIFFERENT TYPES OF REVERSE ENGINEERING REVERSE ENGINEERING OF MACHINES REVERSE ENGINEERING OF SOFTWARE REVERSE ENGINEERING OF PROTOCOLS REVERSE ENGINEERING OF INTEGRATED CIRCUITS & SMART CARDS REVERSE ENGINEERING FOR MILITARY APPLICATIONS

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