) can be used to hide malicious payloads that trigger buffer overflows in decompression routines.
A framework for detecting malicious code by analyzing the "difficulty" of compressing it, using compression ratios as a feature for security scanners. 3. Practical/Software Engineering Focus
Which direction sounds most interesting to you? I can help you outline the , abstract , or key findings for any of these. i dove down the 7z rabbit hole (it goes deep) neil.7z
Analyze the 7zip failure case where malicious websites impersonated 7-zip.org . The paper would investigate how to create a blockchain-based or decentralized signing system that prevents users from downloading compromised software from "mirror" sites.
Based on the technical, modern, and slightly chaotic context of "neil.7z" (referencing 7-Zip, compression, and potential security issues), here are three interesting, high-impact paper concepts: 1. Security/Cryptography Focus ) can be used to hide malicious payloads
"The Ghost in the Archive: Detecting AI-Generated Malware via 7z Entropy Analysis"
A new architecture for decentralized software distribution that reduces reliance on DNS trust, making it nearly impossible to trick users into downloading malicious installers. The paper would investigate how to create a
"Trusting the Mirror: An Analysis of Malvertising in Software Repositories"