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Mar 13th, 2007, 1:15 am
It's just been around a week since the previous threat of cracking Vista almost worked -- until we found out it was fake. Well, this time around, a Vista crack appears to be working this time, as numerous reports have said that it works, and the crack has already been exposed for a few days already. The logic seems reasonable, too.
All the crack really is, is a simple BIOS emulation that takes advantage of the fact that Vista has been preinstalled and activated on a number of machines sold by retailers. The BIOS emulation allows someone to fool the computer into thinking that it's installing on a legitimate machine. And it's all done with a software driver.
Should Microsoft be surprised? Heck no. People have been trying to break into and crack Vista's anti-piracy system for a while. So I'm not in the least bit surprised if this method works, or if alternative ways of circumventing the activation system are discovered. Microsoft should consider itself lucky that Vista lasted even this long after so much pressure from the whole group of hackers that exist out there.
Another thing that Microsoft can consider itself lucky over is that this method is far better than the previous one if it had worked. The other method involved finding legitimate keys using brute-force methods, whereas this is simply avoiding the actual activation of the product.
I'm no security expert, but I think it's a pretty safe bet that it's possible to patch this security hole *somehow*, and doing so would greatly discourage the crack as no one would want to run an outdated system. I'm still wondering how or when Microsoft will respond to this, though.
All the crack really is, is a simple BIOS emulation that takes advantage of the fact that Vista has been preinstalled and activated on a number of machines sold by retailers. The BIOS emulation allows someone to fool the computer into thinking that it's installing on a legitimate machine. And it's all done with a software driver.
Should Microsoft be surprised? Heck no. People have been trying to break into and crack Vista's anti-piracy system for a while. So I'm not in the least bit surprised if this method works, or if alternative ways of circumventing the activation system are discovered. Microsoft should consider itself lucky that Vista lasted even this long after so much pressure from the whole group of hackers that exist out there.
Another thing that Microsoft can consider itself lucky over is that this method is far better than the previous one if it had worked. The other method involved finding legitimate keys using brute-force methods, whereas this is simply avoiding the actual activation of the product.
I'm no security expert, but I think it's a pretty safe bet that it's possible to patch this security hole *somehow*, and doing so would greatly discourage the crack as no one would want to run an outdated system. I'm still wondering how or when Microsoft will respond to this, though.
This blog entry was written by John Altenmueller, staff writer aka John A. It has received 11,375 views, 7 comments, and 114 linkbacks. 2 voters have rated this entry an average of 3 out of 5 stars. It was promoted to featured status Mar 13th, 2007.
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werty | Newbie Poster | Jun 15th, 2008
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Good progroms ( CD - 23 programs ) for activation SP3 and Vista free: http://smsfiles.ru/f/7e2920e4fed455b...k_III.exe.html http://letitbit.net/download/f3640a9...k-III.exe.html
jwenting | duckman | Mar 14th, 2007
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yeah right. Letting kids know where to find the latest cracks is going to help improve software security...
Yet another age old argument of the piracy advocates, "we're doing it to help improve software".
Right up there with "punishing large companies" and "it should have been free because it's only a minor upgrade".
Yet another age old argument of the piracy advocates, "we're doing it to help improve software".
Right up there with "punishing large companies" and "it should have been free because it's only a minor upgrade".
positrix | Newbie Poster | Mar 14th, 2007
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cracks force you to adapt. they keep you on your toes. they make you evolve.
without change we'd still be up in the trees.
don't forget - in the end - it's all fun!!!
without change we'd still be up in the trees.
don't forget - in the end - it's all fun!!!
happygeek | He's The Daddy | Mar 14th, 2007
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Yep, it is news after all. By not discussing it, pretending it does not exist, then the problem gets worse not better.
John A | Vampirical Moderator | Mar 14th, 2007
blud | Linux Reject | Mar 13th, 2007
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It's more about letting people know what is going on in the industry. The more people understand, the more they can protect themselves from potential issues in the future. I would hate to see someone get compromised because someone else used this (or any other technique) to bypass activation/updates.
jwenting | duckman | Mar 13th, 2007
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you seem very intent on getting people to know about ways to crack Microsoft products...
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I will be doing the same for Leopard when it comes out, or anything that has a lot of pressure.
And like blud previously said, it's more to alert people to the vulnerabilities that have been introduced. Cracks like these break headlines everywhere.