Dear visitor, thanks for stopping by! If you want, you can follow all updates on Snowball.be via RSS. You can also follow me on Twitter or Facebook. More interesting posts from other Microsoft Regional Directors can be found at The Region.
Gill Cleeren     Vista     March 1, 2007    

It appears that Keznews forum member Snooza has discovered a method that effectively obtains a Windows Vista key which can then be activated. The idea is a simple brute force attack: the software generates keys and when it finds one, you manually have to check if it activates. The 8-step method can take anywhere from two minutes to two days. Members of the forum have verified the strategy and claim it works. This technique should worry Microsoft, not because they are losing customers to piracy again, but because the customers who are actually spending the money on the latest Windows version may start being unable to activate the software with a legally purchased key. It seems that the main issue is time, and with today’s modern PCs, it really isn’t that much of a problem. Evidently, pirates would rather wait a couple of hours, than go to work and make the money needed to purchase a legal copy. The author of the article over at Keznews has a disclaimer which emphasizes that, "under no circumstances should anyone sell the key that they generate. I do not support Piracy, this was simply an experiment in which i used to practice my vbscripting. This was just for fun and was a complete accident! I strongly encourage everyone to purchase windows vista, and be a genuine customer!"

  Posted on: Thursday, March 01, 2007 11:42:14 AM (Romance Standard Time, UTC+01:00)   |   Comments [1]
         
Saturday, March 24, 2007 3:54:22 PM (Romance Standard Time, UTC+01:00)
It's the same as in Windows Xp or 2003. Since 2002 you can generate in a few seconds your own unique XP or 2003 Product key. And because this algorythm is able to generate billions of keys it's nearly impossible to get 2 keys which are identical.
Mr. X
Comments are closed.
2/8/2012   10:46:38 PM
 Welcome to Snowball.be
Hello and welcome to snowball.be!

My name is Gill Cleeren, I'm a Microsoft Regional Director and an MVP ASP.NET.
On Snowball.be, you'll find all kind news and articles on .net, ASP.NET, WPF, Silverlight and Microsoft in general.
More on me can be found on my about page.

Should you have any questions, don't hesitate to contact me by Send mail to the author(s) .

 Partner sites
 Most popular tags
.net (124) .net 3.0 (6) .net 3.5 (18) .NET 4 (18) .NET Show (1) ADO.net (4) ASP.net (53) ASP.net AJAX (4) ASP.NET MVC (3) Atlas (12) Azure (2) Blend (2) Book (5) Book review (4) C# (43) Case studies (1) Chopsticks (3) Community (10) Community Day (15) Consoles (1) Database (1) DevDays09 (4) DotNetNuke (4) Efficiency (57) Enterprise Library (5) Events (60) Expression (7) Games (3) Hardware (9) Internet (18) IT (1) jQuery (1) LightSwitch (3) Links (11) LINQ (4) Mac (2) Metro (1) Microsoft (75) Mix 07 (6) Mix 08 (4) Mix 09 (1) Mix 11 (1) Movies (4) MVP (5) MVP Summit 2008 (3) mvvm (1) Office 2007 (10) Other (8) PDC (22) PDC2008 (10) Personal (36) ppt (9) Programming (52) Programming tools (22) Regional Director (2) Silverlight (142) Silverlight Advent Calendar (24) sl4 (44) Slide decks (13) Snowball (13) Software (20) Microsoft (25) Speaking (14) SQL Server (10) TechDays (13) TechEd (14) telerik (6) Telerik (6) TFS (1) Twitter (1) Vista (73) Vista Tricks (9) Visual Studio.net (38) Visug (33) VS2010 (8) Wallpaper (2) WCF (2) Webcasts (9) Webinars (5) Windows (41) Windows 7 (5) Windows 8 (1) Windows Azure (2) Windows Mobile (3) Windows Phone 7 (2) WinFX (17) WinRT (1) WP7 (2) WPF (40) XAML (24)

 On this page
 This site
 Archives
Navigation
 Sitemap
 Blogroll OPML
 Disclaimer

All content is property of www.snowball.be. Nothing on this site can be copied or published elsewhere, unless otherwise stated.

This site is made by Gill Cleeren.

Questions? Opinions? Send mail to the author(s) E-mail