Windows Vista Keygen a Hoax


Recommended Posts

The author of the Windows Vista keygen that was reported yesterday has admitted that the program does not actually work. Here is the initial announcement of the original release of the keygen, and here is the followup post in which the same author acknowledges that the program is fake. Apparently, the keygen program does legitimately attack Windows Vista keys via brute force, but the chances of success are too low for this to be a practical method. Quote from the author: 'Everyone who said they got a key is probably lying or mistaken!

Source removed due to warez.

Edited by shockz
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/543286-windows-vista-keygen-a-hoax/
Share on other sites

technically, it could theoretically get the right key the first time it tries it and could theoretically get the right key in a year. the reason why it because it uses random keys and just sees if they work. the chances, however, of it working are very slim. the reason why is because it tests all letters a-z and all numbers 0-9 (last i checked. the product keys don't use all of those so it might've been modified not to). that gives it 3625=808281277000000000000000000000000000000 possible keys. now it's not gonna test them all, but at least an xp key has many less characters. iirc, it only uses 26, so that means 2625=236773830000000000000000000000000000 combinations. it's a much smaller number. that leaves us with 808044503000000000000000000000000000000 keys that, if vista uses the same character set as xp, are definitely invalid. if it's left to run forever, however it will check them. not only that, but it's much more complex than just having the right letters, of course, so there's not nearly that many valid keys, making the number of invalid ones much bigger.

technically, it could theoretically get the right key the first time it tries it and could theoretically get the right key in a year. the reason why it because it uses random keys and just sees if they work. the chances, however, of it working are very slim. the reason why is because it tests all letters a-z and all numbers 0-9 (last i checked. the product keys don't use all of those so it might've been modified not to). that gives it 3625=808281277000000000000000000000000000000 possible keys. now it's not gonna test them all, but at least an xp key has many less characters. iirc, it only uses 26, so that means 2625=236773830000000000000000000000000000 combinations. it's a much smaller number. that leaves us with 808044503000000000000000000000000000000 keys that, if vista uses the same character set as xp, are definitely invalid. if it's left to run forever, however it will check them. not only that, but it's much more complex than just having the right letters, of course, so there's not nearly that many valid keys, making the number of invalid ones much bigger.

There are only 24 possible characters per digit in a Vista key, so it's more like.

24^25 = 3.20096586 * 10^34

Heh, I thought it sounded weird in that other thread where I brought up the math example... There's just so insanely many combinations with these characters and one of 36 (26+10) values for each character, that the few MS may have actually activated is like a drop in the ocean.

There are only 24 possible characters per digit in a Vista key, so it's more like.

24^25 = 3.20096586 * 10^34

Hm, do they only use 14-16 letters in the alphabet or so? I can imagine 0 and 1 of the digits are skipped due to similarity with O and I.

Heh, I thought it sounded weird in that other thread where I brought up the math example... There's just so insanely many combinations with these characters and one of 36 (26+10) values for each character, that the few MS may have actually activated is like a drop in the ocean.

There's 26 letters (uppercase A-Z), and then you have 0-9 for 10 more, for 36 in total.

At least the keys I've seen seem to suggest there can be either of A-Z and either of 0-9 in any position.

No, MS doesn't use all of them. I know they seem to like Z and Q a lot though.

There are OEM "hacks" coming out now anyway so some worthless little bruteforce keygen is quickly going to become unpopular.
The OEM hack is also 100% working and it only takes like 5 minutes to apply it. Vista even passes WGA afterwards.

All you need is a modified BIOS with the proper id tables applied to it, an OEM key and the OEM license file from the disc and it passes WGA and doesn't even need to be activated.

No, MS doesn't use all of them. I know they seem to like Z and Q a lot though.

OK, so they only use around 14-16 letters or so; like half the alphabet?

Because they definitely use a number of digits. I can imagine 0 and 1 are skipped however.

All you need is a modified BIOS with the proper id tables applied to it, an OEM key and the OEM license file from the disc and it passes WGA and doesn't even need to be activated.

Actually the latest OEM "hack" doesn't require actual modifications to the BIOS, it loads an OEM BIOS environment at boot. However it seems like it doesn't like laptops.

All you need is a modified BIOS with the proper id tables applied to it, an OEM key and the OEM license file from the disc and it passes WGA and doesn't even need to be activated.

OEM requires a license file? I thought it was just like usual, but difference license terms. Is the license so manufacturers like HP, Dell, etc. do not have to activate?

OEM requires a license file? I thought it was just like usual, but difference license terms. Is the license so manufacturers like HP, Dell, etc. do not have to activate?

Yep. It works the same as if you had bought a Dell or another OEM system that doesn't need activation on the end users part.

Actually the latest OEM "hack" doesn't require actual modifications to the BIOS, it loads an OEM BIOS environment at boot. However it seems like it doesn't like laptops.

That method also disables floppy disk drive...

New method installs a driver and fools Vista into thinking you have the required BIOS table.

Ahh, this seems like a BIG one for Microsoft, First Time Stop thingy, and now this one.

I guess the pirates are always ahead of us.

I'm happy I have a legit Key and Don't have to worry about this. It's a big hassle if your trying to use a pirated software, one day it works, the next day, your system won't boot.

Edit: wrong Topic to post at... lol... I was going to post one in the OEM thingy.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Unsurprisingly, there's what the law says and what the old white wealthy males legally enforce...
    • Or anything online that requires an anti-cheat
    • Gf needed a new Surface and was looking at a Surface Laptop because of the Snapdragon. Seeing as it was a two year old chip she just decided to get a Lenovo Yoga 2 in 1 instead. Personally this Surface Ultra Cassis reminds me a bit of Razor. It would be interesting if it could handle proper gaming and be 17 inch.
    • No idea, frankly, I'm not into minimum requirements gaming, but it would be an interesting test to find out. Also, I just have to point out that it wasn't my intention to downplay the performance of DXVK on Linux or Linux gaming in general (despite my own experience being a bit of a mixed bag). I just thought it would be good to point out that DXVK is not Linux exclusive and that you can benefit from using it even in Windows.
    • Fastfetch 2.64 released bringing new logos and other improvements by David Uzondu Fastfetch, the popular command-line system information tool that developers created as a fast alternative to the classic Neofetch utility, has updated its codebase to version 2.64, bringing experimental scripting power, streamlined compilation options, a smarter logo renderer, and Codec module support. As noted earlier, Fastfetch can now detect hardware-accelerated video codecs across Windows, macOS, Linux, and Android through this new Codec module. On Linux and BSD, the utility uses VA-API by default, with a fallback to VDPAU on Nvidia hardware if compiled with libva and libvdpau. Windows users get D3D12VA on Windows 11 or D3D11VA with Media Foundation Transforms on older systems, while macOS relies on VideoToolbox and Android utilizes AMediaCodec. You can manually toggle Vulkan Video via the config file, and the program will report both encoders and decoders unless configured otherwise. Logo support for Quasar, Origami, Origami_small, NixOS2, and BerserkArch also landed in this release. BerserkArch, if you have never heard of it, is a specialized Arch Linux derivative that targets security researchers and power users. This distro comes with an offensive security tool manager, simply called berserk, which allows users to install complex hacking toolkits with single terminal commands. Moving on, Fastfetch now has experimental scripting options for custom formats using Lua or QuickJS. The Lua integration supports versions 5.3 through 5.5, sharing a single interpreter instance across all modules so you can store variables globally. T Alternatively, if you prefer JavaScript, you can use QuickJS-ng version 0.15.0 or newer to evaluate your custom formats with the qjs: prefix. Other changes that version 2.64 brings include native CMake compilation flags to disable specific modules to shrink the final binary size. Users can delete unwanted ASCII logo files directly from the source directory before building to save additional space. The format engine now boasts ANSI-escape awareness, meaning you can center text with the new vertical bar specifier without breaking colored outputs. Haiku users receive preliminary support for boot manager, window manager theme, screen brightness, and other basic properties. Finally, the Linux edition now extracts desktop wallpaper and theme details from the modern COSMIC desktop environment.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Apprentice
      fernan99 went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • One Month Later
      nothanks earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      471
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      247
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      78
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      59
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!