SP1 Unsuccessful in Preventing Vista Hacks 214
"The other A. N. Other" writes "It seems that Microsoft has been unsuccessful with SP1 in preventing hackers from turning a pirated, non-genuine copy of Vista into genuine copies that pass activation. The article initially looked at two of the most popular hacks (OEM BIOS hack and the grace timer hack) but after a little digging ZDNet were able to transform a non-genuine install into a genuine one. 'After a few minutes of searching the darker corners of the Internet and a few seconds in the Command Prompt I was able to fool Windows into thinking that it was genuine.'"
WHAT!?!?! (Score:3, Funny)
-mcgrew
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And it's much easier with Linux - so Windows is more secure!!!
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My tears fall now
from using Vistalike waterfalls of salt
Split my belly now
I just can not live with
shame of Vista
Balmer you jackass
what is that coming this way
a flying chair
Look what you caused such horrible poetry
was thus inspired
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:WHAT!?!?! (Score:4, Funny)
Of course he didn't.
He was frist!!
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And it wasn't the first, because I've been first before. I was surprised it was modded funny and not something stupid. It's usually a tough room when you're the first poster.
Actually when I see no posts I try not to be "first post" because they usually get modded to oblivion and nobody sees the joke.
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Black Screen of Death... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Ok they probably will, oh well thats what we get for being duped into buying a completely unnecessary OS upgrade.
Re:Black Screen of Death... (Score:5, Funny)
Copyright infringement, OTOH, is something else entirely.
Get your pirate code right! (Score:5, Funny)
As a representative of the PADL (Pirate Anti-Defamation League), I protest to your inclusion of rape in the list of activities characteristic of pirates. According to Captain John Phillip's Pirate Code, [wikipedia.org]
Please cease and desist from further defamation of pirates. Or prepare to be pillaged yourself! (And note that the article only applies to the prudent Woman.) YAAAR!
Re:Get your pirate code right! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Get your pirate code right! So, is SP1 a (Score:2)
Re:Black Screen of Death... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Black Screen of Death... (Score:5, Funny)
Just rotate it 90 degrees, poof.
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So, if the screen goes black on users who have a genuine copy, maybe they can use this hack? Or would this be illegal? Although it would then be like tricking Windows into -realizing- it is genuine...
It would be a pretty clear violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and similar laws in countries outside the United States -- bypassing a security system designed to prevent copying. Might be okay in Canada, though. I am not a lawyer, this is not legal advice, and you if you want legal advice -- go hire a lawyer.
Re:Black Screen of Death... (Score:5, Informative)
You know, it's funny... I've often found it easier to crack a piece of software than it is to track down my legitimate license. I can imagine does that with VIsta. If I were running a legitimate version of Vista and changed my hardware (or whatever causes Vista to require a to require you to reregister), I'd sooner install a crack than spend any amount of time on the phone with Microsoft.
-matthew
Here we go again... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here we go again... (Score:5, Funny)
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btw if you only want to play multiplayer a much smaller mpq will surfice though you have to build it manually using tools like mpq2k and mpqver.
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Re:Here we go again... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's been working well for me for years, and I see no reason to stop. They have my money, I have their software, and I get to use what I paid for. Problem? Didn't think so.
Re:Here we go again... (Score:5, Interesting)
I started doing this a year or two back when the latest and greatest copy protection broke a game that I had legitimately purchased. It wouldn't run at all. No matter what I did it told me I didn't have the disc. So I grabbed the no-CD patch and had no trouble with it.
Ever since then I've made it a habit to crack/patch every game I purchase. Not only do I no longer have to dig through my discs to find the right one when I want to play, but it seems to me that the games run better too.
All these assorted copy protection schemes only affect those of us who actually pay for the software. The folks who are pirating the stuff are already bypassing it all anyway, so they never get inconvenienced at all.
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This is honestly what I do with the games I play. Purchase the game legally from my favorite retailer, install it from the disc, and promptly download the no-CD crack/patch.
The only problem that I've seen with this is that sometimes, the no-cd patches will break the game in other ways. Not to mention the hassle of having to wait for the new ones to come after every patch. Lately I've taken to using publisher's download offerings instead, and have been loving it. No CD checks anymore. One time I got locked out of a game after upgrading and reinstalling my PC; but within 2 hours of an email to support, the issue was resolved.
(Upon rereading... ugh, no I'm not a game publi
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Re:Here we go again... (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Here we go again... (Score:5, Insightful)
Well... it's more like from the beginning, not in the end.
Basically its just another example of how even elegant code is unnecessarily costly when used to stupid purpose. Trying to prop up a 1989 business model with the likes of WGA, DRM, etc is just stupid. Find another business model. It isn't like there is some worldwide shortage of them.
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Re:Here we go again... (Score:5, Interesting)
That is the funny part. WGA is a solid failure, yet Microsoft will not give up on it. It only get's in the way of legit users and eats up processor cycles for no useful reason. Yet they insist on making life hell for everyone that is a legit user while all their attempts no not even bother the stolen software users.
It's getting as bad as Games, Legit copies are more of a PITA than a cracked copy. Which is why as soon as I buy a game, I go searching for the cracks, no-cd patches, etc... to give me back control of the game I bought.
BTW, the cool part of the XP WGA crack, I can reinstall XP on my machines at will without calling Msft. I simply use the crack to insert the COA sticker's number inot XP and it instantly becomes that copy, WGA is happy, the "you must register" crap goes away. I have a better experience.
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That's because Microsoft hates you. They say "Never attribute to malice what can adequately be explained by incompetence", right? Well, in the past year or so, I've come to the conclusion that incompetence is no longer sufficient to explain Microsoft's products, therefore they must be the result of malice.
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Activation does nothing whatsoever to stop people stealing Windows, because if you steal it you get a serial number in the box. I doubt most stores inventory management systems are sophisticated enough to track the individual serial numbers of boxes in stock, so if you get away from the store without being caught i
Re:Here we go again... Sounds like a major (Score:2)
This is nothing new (Score:5, Insightful)
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Yes, this might have been true in the past. These days, with all the OEM bundling MS manages to achieve, they don't need piracy anymore. For Windows anyway.
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At least here in Argentina most home and small office users have pirated copies of Windows. Although it's bundled in brand computers, most people buy computers assembled by small computer shops or by themselves, because there are much much cheaper than buying Dell, Compaq, etc.
OEM copies of Windows, though much cheaper than boxed versions, are expensive enough to have a big impact in the price of a custom-built PC.
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I don't agree with the "piracy boosts sales" theory regarding Windows.
Yes, this might have been true in the past. These days, with all the OEM bundling MS manages to achieve, they don't need piracy anymore. For Windows anyway.
I respectfully disagree - partially.
I think that there are a LOT of geeks who build their own systems who wouldn't buy Vista unless they have experience with it, and wouldn't have experience with it at this point without 'pirating'("free trialing") vista.
Which is why I think MS made these changes in SP1 rather than as soon as the 'cracks'/tricks came to light: They got a year of geeks tinkering and learning that isn't "that bad", and then they close the holes and nudge the geeks to buy it for real. Now th
SP2... (Score:2)
Will be the same in Vista I'd imagine.
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Curious tactics anyway (Score:3, Interesting)
Geeks complain about WGA and then crack it anyway, n00bs buys their boxen with it pre-installed and so the audience WGA seems to be the most effective against are the casual upgraders that don't have the cash to shell out, but want the shiniest and latest software regardless.
Another angle; several friends of mine have to my pleasant surprise, asked me before if I knew of a retailer that would sell PCs with Linux on. Upon querying if they're sure they want Linux what with most commercial software being incompatible etc, the answer has always been the same; "no, but I'd save fifty quid (pounds) on Windows and then install it anyway".
Invariably, if this process was easy to do, it would beg the question; without the hassle of cracking Windows, would Linux even be considered? I think not, but increasingly it is.
Re:Curious tactics anyway (Score:5, Interesting)
If people actually have to buy Windows and Office for what MS is charging for them, maybe they'll stop for a second and finally realise what it means to enter into business with a monopoly: high prices and low quality.
There's no doubt in my mind, from the sample of people and businesses that I know, that they'd take a long hard look at Linux if they were unable to pirate MS products so easily.
Re:Curious tactics anyway (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Curious tactics anyway (Score:5, Insightful)
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Depends on what you do. I've been using Linux since about 1998 or so. I have the same home directory all this time, all my email, etc.
Windows machines have to be reloaded every year or two to "stay fresh". I've *NEVER* reloaded the O/S on my Linux system (now a laptop) for this reason. The ot
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In fact, I'm not FINDING a solution other than 'turn it all off, wait 5 minutes, reboot'.
(Yes, it is because we have a lexmark printer, but it was free-to-us.
I run windows on the desktop because I play windows-only games regularly, and rebooting is annoying.
My server/router is running linux because it works, and works well.
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I'm sorry, where did I say no one ever had problems with Windows? The fact is though that you can't walk into any store, buy a printer, and bring it home expecting it will work on Linux. Chances are it won't.
I run windows on the desktop because I play windows-only games regularly, and rebooting is annoying.
You're doing something wrong if you're rebooting a lot. Most people can run XP just fine, never turning the computer off. Unless you're dual booting.
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Re:Curious tactics anyway (Score:4, Insightful)
MS probably realizes this (Score:2)
That is probably a truer indication of it's worth. Basically, you're paying $44/machine to moves office files to/from work. That's a reasonable price.
As for the several hundred dollars MS wants for the "corporate" version... not so much.
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If we were talking about a vase, you would be right. However, when dealing with "imaginary" things like licenses and contractual obligation, not so.
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The people at Microsoft know this. That why they leave it easy to install stolen copies. Their plan is to make everyone who can pay and to let the others use it for free. Much better to give away a copy for free then to let them find out about the competition.
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No surprise there... (Score:5, Interesting)
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I don't know about that, I've been able to get along just fine with XP...
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Sure as long as you are running a stable release and stick within that release. Upgrading between releases can be much more troublesome.
In the windows world most home and small buisness systems are never upgraded from one windows release to the next. they are purchased with a version of windows and that version of windows stays on them until they are retired. Versions of windows come with a very long security update life cycle that facilitates this (7 YEARS of overlap!)
Re:No surprise there... (Score:4, Insightful)
in the linux world you are lucky to find a vendor offering more than a year of security update overlap for desktop versions.
Of course (Score:5, Insightful)
I have to say the other post about "the ones that steal it making it harder for everyone else" is one of the most naive and ignorant post I have ever seen.
It isn't "stealing" it's copyright violation, and you have fairly naive view of human behavior.
Relax there are more important things to worry about than some crappy OS.
How is MS supposed to win? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Ideally you want a balance of price to value, so that people feel they are genuinely getting their money's worth. I know there are some pieces of software that I gladly pay for because they do what they are supposed to and do it very well. I genuinely want to help the developers out and ensure that they will continue to develop the product. Then there are other pieces of software that seem like a waste of money.
No matter wh
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Does anyone think MS really cares? (Score:5, Interesting)
In an age of copy protected floppies and copy protection on games and virtually every type of software, MS still shipped DOS and Win 3.1 unprotected. Friends would install it, and even geeks would go, wow, a GUI that works and I can even multi-task my DOS applications.
Corporation and distributor fraud has been at the heart of the MS movement for Geniune. Yes, they are stupid about it, as WGA has screwed users more than it ever should have with XP and Vista, but prior to WGA, even if you were a legit OEM MFR of computers you often had a 50% chance of getting pirate copies of Win9x/Win2K and especially Office.
I know from being an OEM and buying through distribution channels that 50% of the product that came through the door was not legit. It was so bad that even employees at some of the larger vendors, would place your MS software orders to their 'friends' and invoice it separately without your knowledge or the knowledge of some of the distributors.
This also wasn't from fly by night wholesalers. Our corporate IT people also had problems, even orders from companies like CDW and others had a large chance of being fake.
So MS added WGA and activation, this cut down the problem, but put a strain on legitimate users. MS would have been served to just put more monitoring and pressure in the distribtution channels, but again there are retailers and OEMs that would take advantage shady 'good' deals, and the customers would again be using forged copies, not even knowing that their local shop was screwing over people.
SP1 lightens WGA, and MS has internal plans to further lighten WGA on the websites and for allowing updates. They are looking into taking the burden of WGA off the end-user. I would look for more OEM tools and OEM activation, and keeping Corporate IT activation systems intact and WGA for consumers going away eventually.
This is a good thing and now SlashDot makes the article read like Vista is 'hackable' in a 'bad' way, instead of a 'good' way.
Also remember MS has already put out enough copies of Vista, that they probably don't care about the few *nix users hacking it for a VM or dual install, nor even the OSX Mac base.
Counting the entire sales history of Macs as total base, and the entire *nix installation base, Vista is still millions of copies ahead and still growing, and THIS is even if you only count the retail copies sold, not even the OEM portion which is substantially even larger.
MS can afford for people to Hack Vista, especially when there are cliches in the Mac community that love the hardware, but like Vista better than OSX and use it as their primary OS and great if they hack and install Vista, and find out that it runs better on Mac hardware than OSX. MS has a win win, even if the people don't like Vista, and it didn't cost MS anything for the % that did prefer Vista. (See online articles comparing Vista to Leopard or running native Intel binaries under OSX compared to Vista. (Adobe products and OpenGL games are great selling points for Vista, all running faster under Vista than OSX on the same machine.)
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I know that I'm probably hanging around with the wrong stereotypical Mac types, but nobody I know buys them for the hardware. I've spent more time trying to get OS X running on non-Mac hardwar
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In fact there's been quite an accelerated mac migration around these parts.. it's a combination of lots of things - they're familiar with ipods (know the brand), vista is a trainwreck and comes preinstalled on new PCs so puts them off (It's hassle to get a geek to install XP, and this geek in particular
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There is also a part of the market that likes the iPod and Mac hardware and doesn't even understand the concept of an OS.
From the two there is a small uprising of people from the Mac world using Vista more than OSX on Mac Hardware. It is not quite as rare as you think, especially with Leopard requiring as much or more hardware to run well than Vista. (1GB RAM, and even Newer GPU than Vista)
When have I used OSX
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the customers would again be using forged copies, not even knowing that their local shop was screwing over people.
You say that like Microsoft isn't complicit in screwing people over by putting the drop-dead code in there in the first place.
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And this was comparing Vista to Tiger, let alone Leopard that hasn't yet lived up to the speed or stability of Tiger.
http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/software/microsoft-vista-faster-on-a-mac-pro-than-apples-own-os-x-232402.php [gizmodo.com]
Then there are the Games, just do a search anywhere, or on any gaming forum that has native binaries for OSX and Windows. Customers are POed that they get 1/2 the frame rates in OSX in a LOT of games. (Yes
How does this work? (Score:2)
Can someone please explain to me how they can get a non-genuine copy to "pass activation"? I can understand hacking WGA so that it doesn't request activation or hacking WGA so that even when Microsoft tells it that its failed, it reports a success.
However this article suggests that you can feed a duff key to Microsoft and they'll incorrec
Re:How does this work? (Score:4, Informative)
Sure, some OEM versions don't need activation, all they need is the correct SLIC table embedded in the bios to tell vista that it is a OEM computer and a OEM product key.
With that you will not need activation and you will be Genuine. So you are right it does not pass activation, just like the VLK keys of XP don't pass activation, because it is not needed.
There are tons of sites about it
On a side note if you buy a computer that is OEM Vista Home Premium you can use the SLIC table in your BIOS and get Vista Ultimate, just by changing your key. Once again no activation
Ever Wonder? (Score:2)
Ironic (Score:3, Interesting)
I understand why Microsoft does this, but I wonder if it is really solving the problem?
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About a year ago my girlfriend and I realized we could not share a computer (I do web design for a living) so she decided to go out and
False positives... (Score:2)
Just need to keep finding ways to bypass those unnecessary "we're not going to install on anything but XP" checks idiot hardware manufacturers put in their driver installers.
The only way to encourage Vista adoption? (Score:2, Interesting)
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My predictions for the future of Windows XP (Score:3, Interesting)
Why even bother... (Score:2)
I can honestly say I've never seen... (Score:2)
Rather the opposite (Score:2)
Come on.... (Score:5, Funny)
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You experienced either a bug, your own fault or a tragic moment of serious bad luck (do you know the NICs in your system?). Hardware-wise, Linux is ready for the desktop.
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First there's time.
I can't be bothered to take the time to make the switch. I have a LOT of data. Making the switch would tak