ghacks Technology News

  • Author: Martin
  • Published: Mar 13th, 2007
  • Comments: 7

How to bypass Vista activation

Imagine a race. A race between Microsoft and Crackers. Whenever Microsoft releases a new operating system that they say is absolutely secure and uncrackable some crackers find a way after days, weeks or even months. Vista was designed to be the first operating system that would not be copied en masse because of the way it had to be activated to function after a trial period. The first workarounds popped up pretty quickly buying time for the one real workaround to rule them all.

The weakness was first discovered by the famous (underground) group Paradox which discovered a way to emulate so called “Royality OEM2″ which require no activation at all. Those special OEM versions are only issued to major computer manufacturers such as Dell and Asus to take the hassle of activating the operating system away from their clients. These manufacturers embed license information into their hardware products which is equivalent to a online or phone registration.

Tags: , , , , ,
Categories: Operating Systems, Windows

  • Author: Martin
  • Published: Mar 3rd, 2007
  • Comments: None

Method to Bruteforce Vista key a hoax – kinda

Yesterday I was writing about a method to get a working Windows Vista key by bruteforcing. The method would generate random keys and check them locally for validity. If the local check would be successful the user had to try and use the key to activate his version of Windows Vista. This could of course still be rejected if someone else did already use the key to activate his version.

Tags: , , , ,
Categories: Hacking, Operating Systems, Windows

  • Author: Martin
  • Published: Mar 2nd, 2007
  • Comments: 6

Got no Vista key ? Bruteforce one !

As if it would not be easy enough to circumvent the activation of Windows Vista some clever guys managed to bruteforce working Windows Vista keys. Bruteforcing simply means that the script is testing about 20000 keys per hour changing the product key to a possible working one if one is found. I’m not sure why Microsoft has no protection against this kind of attack but they surely will add some sort of protection soon – something in the like of banning IPs that check more than x keys per minute.

Tags: , , , , , ,
Categories: Hacking, Operating Systems, Windows

© 2005-2009 Ghacks.net. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy - About Us