The security field of malware detection incorporates solutions that rely on static analysis of binary programs. Some approaches to static analysis consist of generating a disassembled representation of the program in order to recover instruction and control flow information used to describe its structural characteristics.
This paper proposes a data mining method using a Naive Bayes classifier to detect the entry point of subroutines in binary programs. The features selected for building the classifier consist of both sequences of normalized disassembled instructions at a given program point and the sequence of bytes preceding that program point.
Section 2 describes the background and relevant work of subroutine entry point recognition on binary programs. Section 3 introduces the proposed method of training a Naive Bayes classifier over sequences of normalized assembly instructions and byte sequences immediately preceding the program point.
Point two is this: Social programs are the sledgehammer of economic reform, while the binary program is a finish hammer.
The binary program is just the challenge that will test our mettle.
As we've seen, the binary program of growth theoretically results in vigorous capital formation and a changing mix of human labor and capital labor in the productive process.
The House, though, rejected the bill 216 to 202, and it looked as though the binary program had been dealt another setback.
Representatives Dante Fascell and john Porter had asked President Reagan to appoint former Representative Ed Bethune, an outspoken critic of the binary program, to the commission, but their request had been refused, Fascell concluded, "It is now clear that the commission was set up with one purpose in mind: to rescue a defense program in trouble with Congress."
In December, during the deadlock over the 1986 Defense Department appropriations bill, a last-minute compromise resurrected the binary program. In exchange for Senate acceptance of a moratorium on testing the ASAT "satellite killer" system, the House agreed to appropriate $125.4 million for the binary program.
The
binary program contemplates not only the voluntary participation of the nation's most creditworthy companies but also the privatization of profitable publicly owned service entities (e.g., dams, bridges, toll roads, public buildings).
The AAVSO Eclipsing
Binary Program is coordinated by Marvin Baldwin, who would be glad to receive observations of RW Tauri from readers who obtain at least one hour of good data on both the descending and rising branches of an eclipse.