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I am currently, working on deep learning algorithm with an objective of devising optimum method for edge devices where trade-off between the accuracy & speed will be minimum. For this reason, I want to hide my code for saving my work being concluded in span of last 6 months from getting public in few minutes. Any other way or hint will be appreciated for doing same.

user3457384
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  • A wrapper just *wraps* the contained code; it doesn't stop it from being what it is, and wrappers are generally quite easy to penetrate, whether it's unpacking by-hand or just running the software and then reaching into memory to pull the content out after it's been uncompressed/decrypted/etc. – Charles Duffy Apr 08 '19 at 17:01
  • Frankly, and I say this as someone who's been responsible for writing more than one DRM tool, you're better off putting your effort into developing new/better functionality rather than worrying about reverse-engineering. Someone willing to pay a good RE team can *always* get your code out; getting the expertise needed to refine that code is more expensive, and a bunch of code without a team of people who understand the algorithms is useless. – Charles Duffy Apr 08 '19 at 17:03
  • One way to get some perspective is to be involved in the process of buying a software development company's intellectual property out of bankruptcy, and trying to reboot a business on top of it. There's way more to running a software business than just having posession of the source. – Charles Duffy Apr 08 '19 at 17:05

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