Playstation 3 says "sup dawg".I don't think the AP protection will ever be cracked at this rate.
Fixed that for youI never understood why you thought it would be. Riivolution still hasn't been cracked publicly.I don't think the AP protection will ever be cracked at this rate.
That's what I meant. The people who could do it aren't douchy enough to release a cracked version. They have respect for the author. I know at least one person who has cracked Riivolution.Fixed that for youI never understood why you thought it would be. Riivolution still hasn't been cracked publicly.I don't think the AP protection will ever be cracked at this rate.
Then your theory is wrong.
I never understood why you thought it would be. Riivolution still hasn't been cracked.I don't think the AP protection will ever be cracked at this rate.
'Cause changing a conditional jump to a normal jump isn't done all the time in the hacking scene to make programs bypass registration checks, etc.I never understood why you thought it would be. Riivolution still hasn't been cracked.I don't think the AP protection will ever be cracked at this rate.
I wanted a gamecube USB loader with audio streaming support that doesn't require trivial authentication processes which end up corrupting hard drive sectors. Then I read how Crediar is working on implementing it into Dios Mios and have since began to wait for that. There isn't a snowball's chance in hell of Devolution being cracked, unless someone can find out how to bypass or trick it into not making .dvv files.
Cause changing a conditional jump to a normal jump isn't done all the time in the hacking scene to make programs bypass registration checks, etc.
@the_randomizer - you clearly don't know what you're talking about when it comes to hacking programs so why don't you just be quiet and lurk?
If someone wanted to hack Devolution, they need to find the places where the AP checks are implemented and just jump over them like Rydian mentioned.
@the_randomizer - you clearly don't know what you're talking about when it comes to hacking programs so why don't you just be quiet and lurk?
If someone wanted to hack Devolution, they need to find the places where the AP checks are implemented and just jump over them like Rydian mentioned.
Do you have any suggestions on how to hack it? Yeah, that's what I thought. You don't have any authority over me, so I don't have to just lurk.
The problem with that is that Devolution doesn't decompile easily. I'm guessing part of the machine code is un/re-encrypted, compressed and/or moved around at runtime so FINDING where to put those unconditional jumps might just be as hard as making your own DVV files.Do you have any suggestions on how to hack it? Yeah, that's what I thought. You don't have any authority over me, so I don't have to just lurk.@the_randomizer - you clearly don't know what you're talking about when it comes to hacking programs so why don't you just be quiet and lurk?Therein lies the issue; programs like Devolution use very peculiar methods/code which, when executed, produce the aforementioned fragile DVV files which must remain in a specific location at all times. So far, I can think of two very hard-to-crack (if not impossible) things with strong encryption, the 3DS and Devolution.Cause changing a conditional jump to a normal jump isn't done all the time in the hacking scene to make programs bypass registration checks, etc.
If someone wanted to hack Devolution, they need to find the places where the AP checks are implemented and just jump over them like Rydian mentioned.
Because the law allows it and they can? IMO, IP laws ought to be gutted and their length significantly shortened. Some IP owners may also seek to generate future revenue from reselling old software (like VC games).That's the other thing, why do authors hold on to IP when they no longer benefit from it? Take for instance games no longer in print, used sales don't generate any revenue towards the company, no profit is lost, and the only one who gets money are the second-hand shops. It's a dead console and money is neither is nor lost.
Because it's still illegal.That's the other thing, why do authors hold on to IP when they no longer benefit from it? Take for instance games no longer in print, used sales don't generate any revenue towards the company, no profit is lost, and the only one who gets money are the second-hand shops. It's a dead console and money is neither is nor lost.