yes, i'm using a few of the same tricks, and i'm not taking the obfuscation to a higher degree, but i got tired of toying with this, so here it is
#!/usr/bin/perl
$_=q| and za::PERL{INeD _,$0;@I=<_>;$I=$I[-1]}and rnaaiA::aIviet{@I=aNlit//,$I;Z
"\n$I[3]\l$I[-2]$I[-6]$I[21]$I[-5]"}and iD::aAya{Z"$I[-9]$I[4]\l$I[-3]t$I[-10]".
"$I[2]\l$I[-13] "}and drejDev::dnt{Z TAN{T/Y/i&&"\L\n$_\E"}TAN{$_=~a/:://&&$_}@A
}and Y::z{@A=TAN{leDgth==6?$_:""}keya%{*::}}and Tight::yIn{Z" zer,"}|;y{aIDNnTd}
{sonpumb} ; s(Z){print}g and s{z}[hack]g and chomp;s|Y|perl|g and y[A]{a}; eval;
you might hack perl, but
brejnev says in soviet russia PERL hacks YOU
and yes, i found out later that it's spelled brezhnev, so no need to correct me there. but when you unravel it, you'll see why i can't change the spelling :)
enjoy!
I'm reading the code, and it seems like a perl-encoded substitution cipher :-P ...
I can imagine the code behind your '$_' ... but i'm too lazy tonight ... i'm tempted to subst. your final 'eval' for a simple print ... tic, tac, tic, tac
turo
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