Pirates Hack Vista's Registration Features

Dec 8, 2006

Hackers are distributing a file that they say lets users of the corporate 
version of Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system get around the software's
anti-piracy mechanisms.

Windows Vista must be "activated," or authorized by Microsoft, before it will 
work on a particular machine. To simplify the task of activating many copies
of
Vista ,
Microsoft offers corporate users special tools, among them Key Management 
Service (KMS), which allows a company to run a Microsoft-supplied authorization
server on its own network and activate Vista without contacting Microsoft for 
each copy.

The software Microsoft.Windows.Vista.Local.Activation.Server-MelindaGates lets 
users spoof that KMS process, allowing them to activate copies of the enterprise
editions of Vista, its creators say. The hacked download is available online on 
sites including
The Pirate Bay
and other file sharing sites.

Microsoft's official KMS offering is available to customers with 25 or more 
computers running
Vista .
The machines activate the software by connecting to the KMS server, and must 
reactivate every six months.

KMS is not the only option that enterprises have for volume activation of 
Vista: they can also call Microsoft by phone or connect over the Internet to 
activate
the software.

The MelindaGates hack allows users to download a VMware image of a KMS server 
which activates Windows Vista Business/Enterprise edition, its creators claim.

Microsoft did not respond to requests for comment on the hack.

Aimed At Reduced Piracy

Vista is the first Windows operating system that requires volume users to 
activate each product. The new activation processes are aimed at reducing 
piracy.

While one security expert said he isn't surprised that KMS has been cracked, he 
said the MelindaGates hack offers some insight into piracy.

"This also shows how piracy is not just about kids swapping games," said Mikko 
Hypponen, chief research officer of F-Secure. "The only parties that would
need a KMS crack would be corporations with volume licensing."

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,128115-pg,1/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
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