Dear ImageJ Experts,
The software for my acoustic beamforming system (see www.youtube.com/optinav for sample output if you are interested) consists of about 10 ImageJ plugins: one for recording data, one for processing it, and eight or so utility plugins. Gabriel, you'll be glad to know that the processing code started out at Threshold Colour. The installation procedure is basically "install ImageJ, remove the contents of the plugins folder, put beamforming.jar into the plugins folder, start ImageJ, and increase the memory." It is a little more complicated because the is some third party software to be installed (it is driven from ImageJ using AppleScript) and a hardware driver or two. My question concerns securing beamforming.jar. I know this is open source land, but beamforming.jar contains algorithm trade secrets that I want to protect, and, in addition, I don't want it to be distributed to non-customers. So far, all I do is remove the java files before building the .jar file. This does nothing to prevent redistribution, and, as I understand it, does not protect against decompiling. Is there an obvious solution? Bob Robert Dougherty, Ph.D. President, OptiNav, Inc. 4176 148th Ave. NE Redmond, WA 98052 (425)891-4883 FAX (425)467-1119 www.optinav.com [hidden email] |
You can protect your source from decompiling with an obfuscator.
ProGuard e.g. is a free software and links (on the website) also alternatives. http://proguard.sourceforge.net/ Best regards Marcel |
In reply to this post by Robert Dougherty
On Wednesday 04 March 2009 03:37:47 Robert Dougherty wrote:
> The software for my acoustic beamforming system (see > www.youtube.com/optinav for sample output if you are interested) Awesome! That is really very impressive. This could come in handy to find out who is chatting during my lectures :-) Presumably one can also apply classification of different types of sound, so one finds a predetermined type? Regards Gabriel |
In reply to this post by Robert Dougherty
The military could use this tool to spot snipers when their rifles are
not silenced. =] On Tue, 2009-03-03 at 19:37 -0800, Robert Dougherty wrote: > Dear ImageJ Experts, > > The software for my acoustic beamforming system (see www.youtube.com/optinav > for sample output if you are interested) consists of about 10 > ImageJ plugins: one for recording data, one for processing it, and > eight or so utility plugins. Gabriel, you'll be glad to know that the > processing code started out at Threshold Colour. The installation > procedure is basically "install ImageJ, remove the contents of the > plugins folder, put beamforming.jar into the plugins folder, start > ImageJ, and increase the memory." It is a little more complicated > because the is some third party software to be installed (it is driven > from ImageJ using AppleScript) and a hardware driver or two. My > question concerns securing beamforming.jar. I know this is open > source land, but beamforming.jar contains algorithm trade secrets > that I want to protect, and, in addition, I don't want it to be > distributed to non-customers. So far, all I do is remove the java > files before building the .jar file. This does nothing to prevent > redistribution, and, as I understand it, does not protect against > decompiling. Is there an obvious solution? > > Bob > > > Robert Dougherty, Ph.D. > President, OptiNav, Inc. > 4176 148th Ave. NE > Redmond, WA 98052 > (425)891-4883 > FAX (425)467-1119 > www.optinav.com > [hidden email] -- Hugo Arruda de Moura Torres ================================== Departamento de Biofísica Universidade Federal de São Paulo Rua Botucatu 862 7o. andar CEP 04023-062 Vila Clementino São Paulo - SP - Brasil Tel:+55 (11) 5576 4530 r.220 Fax: 55 11 5571 5780 |
Hugo,
Indeed, but my system is not really designed for that. For one thing, post processing would not be the appropriate work flow. BBN developed a system called Boomerang a few years ago for that purpose. Bob On Mar 4, 2009, at 10:46 AM, Hugo A. M. Torres wrote: > The military could use this tool to spot snipers when their rifles are > not silenced. =] > > -- > Hugo Arruda de Moura Torres > ================================== > Departamento de Biofísica > Universidade Federal de São Paulo > Rua Botucatu 862 7o. andar > CEP 04023-062 Vila Clementino > São Paulo - SP - Brasil > Tel:+55 (11) 5576 4530 r.220 > Fax: 55 11 5571 5780 Robert Dougherty, Ph.D. President, OptiNav, Inc. 4176 148th Ave. NE Redmond, WA 98052 (425)891-4883 FAX (425)467-1119 www.optinav.com [hidden email] |
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