The future of emulation is going to make such lawsuits irrelevant once more capable AI are here. That and decentralized emulation projects which I am shocked are not already a thing.
I could see AI being very helpful in the painstaking original target console RE’ing effort. A capable system could make short work in a process that takes years manually
Those who say these things severely underestimate what AI is capable of or will be in short order or just don’t understand how they work and why.
But setting that aside, I’m not saying we’ll be able to feed AI a raw decompiled firmware and have it spit out a fully functional emulator in an hour.
But, in the near future we might be able to feed it raw decompiled firmware and it’ll be able to map proprietary undocumented syscalls in a few minutes, that would be a big chunk of work that could take months of not years
A decent AI model could significantly lower the barrier to entry for emulator development from “A handful of elite hackers and programmers”
With current models? No. See my points above especially the one about the volume of data required.
Reverse engineering firmware is extremely niche, even more so for emulation. There are so few examples that current AI models wouldn’t have enough training data to work off of.
The future of emulation is going to make such lawsuits irrelevant once more capable AI are here. That and decentralized emulation projects which I am shocked are not already a thing.
What does “more capable AI” have to do with this?
I could see AI being very helpful in the painstaking original target console RE’ing effort. A capable system could make short work in a process that takes years manually
But AI has no actual intelligence of it’s own. It’s not going to magically just figure things out. All it can do is spit back what it has been fed.
Those who say these things severely underestimate what AI is capable of or will be in short order or just don’t understand how they work and why.
But setting that aside, I’m not saying we’ll be able to feed AI a raw decompiled firmware and have it spit out a fully functional emulator in an hour.
But, in the near future we might be able to feed it raw decompiled firmware and it’ll be able to map proprietary undocumented syscalls in a few minutes, that would be a big chunk of work that could take months of not years
A decent AI model could significantly lower the barrier to entry for emulator development from “A handful of elite hackers and programmers”
I see you don’t understand what an LLM is, how they operate or comprehend the kind and volume of training data that is required.
So you do not believe AI will eventually be able to near instantly code anything you desire including an emulator?
With current models? No. See my points above especially the one about the volume of data required.
Reverse engineering firmware is extremely niche, even more so for emulation. There are so few examples that current AI models wouldn’t have enough training data to work off of.