Microsoft's latest
anti-piracy attempt.
I honestly don't think this is that bad.
It's certainly a lot better than how the RIAA is trying to fight piracy.
I honestly don't think this is that bad.
It's certainly a lot better than how the RIAA is trying to fight piracy.
"Happy slaves are the worst enemies of freedom." - Marie Von Ebner
"It was always the women, and above all the young ones, who were the most bigoted adherents of the Party, the swallowers of slogans, the amateur spies..." - Orwell
"It was always the women, and above all the young ones, who were the most bigoted adherents of the Party, the swallowers of slogans, the amateur spies..." - Orwell
If I were going to do something like that, that's what I would have done.Or for that matter, a corporate copy, used on all of ones homemade computers...
On 3 computers in my house.
If I were going to do that.
And I'd use a keygen so I'd have unique keys on each.
Hypothetically.
"Be bold, and mighty forces will come to your aid."
My guess is that 5 will work the same as 3, hypothetically.Wonder how that would work... hypothetically. Or on 5 machines?
When does this new system go into effect? Then those who are doing such things will know the answer, hypothetically.
I also found this little nugget of wisdom:
Microsoft only wanted to stop the "casual pirater" considering every version of windows is already cracked. Not to sound like a mad pirate but to disable the activation is sadly VERY easy.
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\WindowsNT\Cu rrentVersion\WPAEvents
That's frickin it ... the "Activate me crap" dies ... and for all you tinfoil hats you don't need to reg your Windows XP. You think MS would of made it so easy if they didn't want people to pirate there OS. They would of made it so if some file isn't downloaded from there (encrypted of some kind) the OS simply won't work etc etc. No ... it's some silly regestry hack that takes less then 2 minutes to do and lasts the lifetime of the product. I know that the activation thing I mentioned above works in Windows XP MCE and Windows XP x64, im not sure about XP Pro ... if someone tries and has luck I wouldn't mind knowing.
"Be bold, and mighty forces will come to your aid."
Here's another little sum'pm sum'pm that I found:
Thursday, July 28, 2005
Microsoft "Genuine Advantage" cracked in 24h: window.g_sDisableWGACheck='all'
AV sez, "This week, Microsoft started requiring users to verifiy their serial number before using Windows Update. This effort to force users to either buy XP or tell them where you got the illegal copy is called 'Genuine Advantage.' It was cracked within 24 hours."
Before pressing 'Custom' or 'Express' buttons paste this text to the address bar and press enter:
javascript:void(window.g_sDisableWGACheck='all')
It turns off the trigger for the key check.
"Be bold, and mighty forces will come to your aid."
Method 2
For XP SP2 (repost of something someone else posted):
1. After you have installed the new Windows Genuine Advantage ActiveX control in Internet Explorer select "Tools", "Manage Add-ons".
2. This will bring up the Manage Add-Ons window to allow you to enable or disable any installed module. You have two options to view the modules: Add-ons that currently loaded by Internet Explorer and Add-ons that have been used by Internet Explorer. Select which ever one lists "Windows Genuine Advantage".
3. Click on "Windows Genuine Advantage" to select it and then click Disable. This will allow you to fully access Windows Update without Microsoft invading your privacy.
Note: Once Windows Genuine Advantage is installed, you'll prolly have to re-start IE and go back to windowsupdate.com to disable it. (Then re-start IE again so that WGA will be gone)
For XP SP2 (repost of something someone else posted):
1. After you have installed the new Windows Genuine Advantage ActiveX control in Internet Explorer select "Tools", "Manage Add-ons".
2. This will bring up the Manage Add-Ons window to allow you to enable or disable any installed module. You have two options to view the modules: Add-ons that currently loaded by Internet Explorer and Add-ons that have been used by Internet Explorer. Select which ever one lists "Windows Genuine Advantage".
3. Click on "Windows Genuine Advantage" to select it and then click Disable. This will allow you to fully access Windows Update without Microsoft invading your privacy.
Note: Once Windows Genuine Advantage is installed, you'll prolly have to re-start IE and go back to windowsupdate.com to disable it. (Then re-start IE again so that WGA will be gone)
It's not me, it's someone else.
This works, and is just as simple as it seems.Here's another little sum'pm sum'pm that I found:
Thursday, July 28, 2005
Microsoft "Genuine Advantage" cracked in 24h: window.g_sDisableWGACheck='all'
AV sez, "This week, Microsoft started requiring users to verifiy their serial number before using Windows Update. This effort to force users to either buy XP or tell them where you got the illegal copy is called 'Genuine Advantage.' It was cracked within 24 hours."
Before pressing 'Custom' or 'Express' buttons paste this text to the address bar and press enter:
javascript:void(window.g_sDisableWGACheck='all')
It turns off the trigger for the key check.
"Be bold, and mighty forces will come to your aid."
Theoretically.This works, and is just as simple as it seems.Here's another little sum'pm sum'pm that I found:
Thursday, July 28, 2005
Microsoft "Genuine Advantage" cracked in 24h: window.g_sDisableWGACheck='all'
AV sez, "This week, Microsoft started requiring users to verifiy their serial number before using Windows Update. This effort to force users to either buy XP or tell them where you got the illegal copy is called 'Genuine Advantage.' It was cracked within 24 hours."
Before pressing 'Custom' or 'Express' buttons paste this text to the address bar and press enter:
javascript:void(window.g_sDisableWGACheck='all')
It turns off the trigger for the key check.
"Be bold, and mighty forces will come to your aid."