MS XP Activation (1 Viewer)

fatmuscle

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Microsoft Closes Activation Loophole
By Nate Mook and David Worthington, BetaNews
February 24, 2005, 8:05 PM

Microsoft is closing a loophole that enabled unscrupulous resellers to use Windows XP product keys that were stolen from large OEMs. The result: customers who purchase Windows on a new PC will not be able to activate, nor reinstall their operating system without first calling Microsoft.

The problem lies in the Certificate of Authenticity (COA) labels on PCs, which often contain unused unique product keys because OEMs preinstall Windows and bypass product activation.

These keys could easily be copied and sold by a smaller computer dealer complete with a counterfeit COA. Because the product key was never actually used by an end-user, a customer would have no trouble activating Windows via the Internet and never know the difference.

But Microsoft plans to change all this. Starting February 28, Microsoft will indefinitely begin to disable Internet product activation on OEM keys used by the top 20 worldwide PC makers.

If a customer attempts to activate Windows XP with an OEM key from a COA, they will be directed to call customer support specialists to obtain an override code - provided they can prove that their copy is legitimate by answering a series of questions.

Jupiter Research senior analyst Joe Wilcox said the change shouldn't affect many PC buyers. "Seeing as how the typical OEM would normally preactivate Windows XP, most legitimate users shouldn't have much need to go through the activation process," noted Wilcox.

"But it would be possible for someone to lift a COA number from, say, a PC on display at a local store and activate a OEM copy of Windows on another computer. Similarly, a smaller dealer could reuse the same key on multiple PCs of the same configuration," added Wilcox.

Microsoft expects to expand the Internet product activation ban to all pre-activated Windows PCs in the next quarter.

Other recent actions that Microsoft has taken against piracy include the Windows Genuine Advantage program, in which Windows users must verify their license in order to access Windows Update and the Microsoft Download Center. Incentives, such as special downloads and discounts on Microsoft products, are offered to users with legitimate licenses. Even non-legit users, however, will continue to receive critical updates to Windows.





http://www.betanews.com/article/Microsoft_Closes_Activation_Loophole/1109293194
 

fatmuscle

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yeah, thought this might apply to some of you.

i guess they'll do the same for Server 2003. damn!
 

JimmyK

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I'm assuming this wont apply to corporate editions as they only seem to be targetting activiating. They can get the 'mainstream' copies of the corporate edtions, that roam arround p2p networks, by releasing the service packs and not letting users log into their computers - or letting them install service packs - as they did with SP2.
 

fatmuscle

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watch it Jimmy.

btw, updates are pretty easy to do.
just learn to slipstream.
 

Korn

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fatmuscle said:
Microsoft Closes Activation Loophole
By Nate Mook and David Worthington, BetaNews
February 24, 2005, 8:05 PM

Microsoft is closing a loophole that enabled unscrupulous resellers to use Windows XP product keys that were stolen from large OEMs. The result: customers who purchase Windows on a new PC will not be able to activate, nor reinstall their operating system without first calling Microsoft.

The problem lies in the Certificate of Authenticity (COA) labels on PCs, which often contain unused unique product keys because OEMs preinstall Windows and bypass product activation.

These keys could easily be copied and sold by a smaller computer dealer complete with a counterfeit COA. Because the product key was never actually used by an end-user, a customer would have no trouble activating Windows via the Internet and never know the difference.

But Microsoft plans to change all this. Starting February 28, Microsoft will indefinitely begin to disable Internet product activation on OEM keys used by the top 20 worldwide PC makers.

If a customer attempts to activate Windows XP with an OEM key from a COA, they will be directed to call customer support specialists to obtain an override code - provided they can prove that their copy is legitimate by answering a series of questions.

Jupiter Research senior analyst Joe Wilcox said the change shouldn't affect many PC buyers. "Seeing as how the typical OEM would normally preactivate Windows XP, most legitimate users shouldn't have much need to go through the activation process," noted Wilcox.

"But it would be possible for someone to lift a COA number from, say, a PC on display at a local store and activate a OEM copy of Windows on another computer. Similarly, a smaller dealer could reuse the same key on multiple PCs of the same configuration," added Wilcox.

Microsoft expects to expand the Internet product activation ban to all pre-activated Windows PCs in the next quarter.

Other recent actions that Microsoft has taken against piracy include the Windows Genuine Advantage program, in which Windows users must verify their license in order to access Windows Update and the Microsoft Download Center. Incentives, such as special downloads and discounts on Microsoft products, are offered to users with legitimate licenses. Even non-legit users, however, will continue to receive critical updates to Windows.





http://www.betanews.com/article/Microsoft_Closes_Activation_Loophole/1109293194
I have an OEM verison and i had to activate it, i think
 

JimmyK

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whats this slipstream thing???
anyway.. if i get locked out, ive got a ghost image that works that i resort to when things go wrong, that will take me back to a clean install of windows with sp2 put on top. it might not save me, but it increases my chances.
 

hatty

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when this thing comes into play,does this mean that my current illegal version of windows will suddenly stop working? or will i have to actually reinstall it for my cdkey to not work?
 

fatmuscle

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yeah, they weren't going to allow ppl with particular keys to install SP2.


and btw, if you haven't already installed SP2 on your comp yet, i suggest you do.
comps found online that have not been updated, will be forced to update it.
 

hatty

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i cant update to SP2, it says something is wrong with my subscription

any ideas how i can get it? whats slipstream
 

MedNez

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Slipstreaming is where you install XP with the service packs all at once, so everything is up to date on your first install.
 

sladehk

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TAlking about closing loop-holes, Microsoft has sa habit of making them(even when attempting to close them). I remember in one instance where they were fixing an exploit and in stead made an even worse one :)
 

sladehk

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there was quite a lot of talk about it after al
 

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