![]() Maybe I should take the approach that the Mythbusters do and state whether this is "plausible" "busted" or "confirmed." Using that criteria the keygen is plausible and I saw the default keygen change twice. ![]() Microsoft could well find itself having to fend off a number of cracks over the next few months. However, what this incident has done is generate interest among hacker circles in generating a keygen for Windows. Looking at the VBScript code it's clear that the script is capable of generating valid keys, but as I said, the hard part is not getting keys past Windows but getting them past the activation servers. It was pretty obvious from the type of crack that this wasn't reliable by a long shot. I didn't use these to activate Windows and I made that clear in the article. ![]() I never claimed to have found "activation keys," all I saw what that after running the script for some time that the Magical Jellybean applications showed that the keys had changed. Note to Engadget writers who didn't read this article before commenting.
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