Yeah, well - They should be looking at the hardware supported by the Linux kernels and our present day compilers, so they can look at software running on present day devices.
Another way, like you said, is to focus on adversarial interoperability, so paying attention to formats which do not have a meaningful way to disassemble / patch today and could use this treatment - for ensuring that critical systems always have a fallback. This especially means figuring out the supply chain of chips and firmware and having ways to ensure all of them are auditable.
Another way, like you said, is to focus on adversarial interoperability, so paying attention to formats which do not have a meaningful way to disassemble / patch today and could use this treatment - for ensuring that critical systems always have a fallback. This especially means figuring out the supply chain of chips and firmware and having ways to ensure all of them are auditable.