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by Kalium
4099 days ago
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Their products are very useful in a defensive context. Not all of the NSA's work comes under the heading of cyberweapons or intelligence-gathering. They do plenty of defensive development, too. RL's Titanium Core is one of the best unpackers around, and thus incredibly valuable for anyone doing malware analysis. Couple it with Titanium Cloud (blacklisting/whitelisting of samples) and you have the core of a system that can go interesting places. Try not to cringe at the bill. Toss in a sandbox or three and you're really getting somewhere. Add in a couple of MITRE standards for requisite government headaches, obviously. From what I've seen, a fair amount of security product companies are selling to the NSA. Doesn't work for SaaS and services, because the NSA tends to require that whatever you're selling run on their network. It's worth remembering that the NSA isn't afraid to buy from tiny companies and In-Q-Tel exists to enable investment. |
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Who cares?
You dodged part of my comment. Once again: virtually none of the commercial security work --- or even the offensive security work --- is thinly veiled NSA work. Virtually none of it.
What on earth led you to believe you'd be able to defend such a statement?