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Autori principali: Tab, Zhang, De Sutter, Bjorn, Collberg, Christian, Coppens, Bart, Mebane, Waleed
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03875
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author Tab
Zhang
De Sutter, Bjorn
Collberg, Christian
Coppens, Bart
Mebane, Waleed
author_facet Tab
Zhang
De Sutter, Bjorn
Collberg, Christian
Coppens, Bart
Mebane, Waleed
contents Empirical research in reverse engineering and software protection is crucial for evaluating the efficacy of methods designed to protect software against unauthorized access and tampering. However, conducting such studies with professional reverse engineers presents significant challenges, including access to professionals and affordability. This paper explores the use of students as participants in empirical reverse engineering experiments, examining their suitability and the necessary training; the design of appropriate challenges; strategies for ensuring the rigor and validity of the research and its results; ways to maintain students' privacy, motivation, and voluntary participation; and data collection methods. We present a systematic literature review of existing reverse engineering experiments and user studies, a discussion of related work from the broader domain of software engineering that applies to reverse engineering experiments, an extensive discussion of our own experience running experiments ourselves in the context of a master-level software hacking and protection course, and recommendations based on this experience. Our findings aim to guide future empirical studies in RE, balancing practical constraints with the need for meaningful, reproducible results.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_03875
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Empirical Studies on Adversarial Reverse Engineering with Students
Tab
Zhang
De Sutter, Bjorn
Collberg, Christian
Coppens, Bart
Mebane, Waleed
Software Engineering
Empirical research in reverse engineering and software protection is crucial for evaluating the efficacy of methods designed to protect software against unauthorized access and tampering. However, conducting such studies with professional reverse engineers presents significant challenges, including access to professionals and affordability. This paper explores the use of students as participants in empirical reverse engineering experiments, examining their suitability and the necessary training; the design of appropriate challenges; strategies for ensuring the rigor and validity of the research and its results; ways to maintain students' privacy, motivation, and voluntary participation; and data collection methods. We present a systematic literature review of existing reverse engineering experiments and user studies, a discussion of related work from the broader domain of software engineering that applies to reverse engineering experiments, an extensive discussion of our own experience running experiments ourselves in the context of a master-level software hacking and protection course, and recommendations based on this experience. Our findings aim to guide future empirical studies in RE, balancing practical constraints with the need for meaningful, reproducible results.
title Empirical Studies on Adversarial Reverse Engineering with Students
topic Software Engineering
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03875