Posted on 03/03/2007 7:46:13 AM PST by FunkyZero
An anonymous reader writes "The author of the Windows Vista keygen that was reported yesterday has admitted that the program does not actually work. Here is the initial announcement of the original release of the keygen, and here is the followup post in which the same author acknowledges that the program is fake. Apparently, the keygen program does legitimately attack Windows Vista keys via brute force, but the chances of success are too low for this to be a practical method. Quote from the author: 'Everyone who said they got a key is probably lying or mistaken!'"
(Excerpt) Read more at freerepublic.com ...
My mistake, here is the source URL, I accidentally linked to a previous Freep post. Here is the correct URL for the slashdot entry:
http://it.slashdot.org/it/07/03/03/1339209.shtml
My apologies for the mistake.
Just the loser crowd
emotionally caught up
in hating Bill Gates.
They're now pretending
that Microsoft invented
activation keys.
Never mind many
minicomputers used it.
Also never mind
great PC software
has used it for years. One time
the shuttle [!] called down
to Wolfram Research.
A PC crashed in orbit
and they needed to
reactivate their
copy of Mathematica.
Microsoft's okay.
Don't you just enter 666 when prompted ?
you use Vista as a Demo without an activation key the use the rearm dailytech website and kedz has info on how to do this, there are other ways to do it better that I will not talk about here.
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