![]() The problem though is that if your app is AES encrypted then how does the Operating System run it? Put simply, there is always a route to run your app, and therefore always a route to potentially decompile and access your app. For all intents and purposes it is therefore impossible to crack today and in the forseeable future. To crack AES encryption is computationally infeasible. Neither do we claim that pure obfuscation or compilation to native code (toted as a cure-all but actually merely another form of obfuscation) provides a final answer to these issues. Unlike other less scrupulous vendors though we don't claim that JWCrypt provides you with AES-level protection of your code. ![]() If you use JWrapper then protecting your JARs and other resources is as simple as adding protected="yes" to any tags.
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