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Windows Defender Anti-virus Bypassed Using Direct Syscalls & XOR Encryption
(cybersecuritynews.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Yes, but that's why x86 assembly programmers do it...
No argument there. It's also why it's done in ARM, 8080, SM83, z80, 6502, and basically every other assembly language. It's only not done in RISC-V because you can fold 0 into any instruction as an operand, therefore eliminating the need to clear a register before an instruction.
So why correct the person with a more narrow claim that makes it seem like xor being faster than loading zero is a rarity in CPU architectures? If I said "birds can fly", and your response was "eagles can fly. Ftfy. Not all birds can fly", it would be both true and utterly unhelpful.
Hey look, I'm good at something.