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Microsoft tweaks anti-piracy check for Windows XP

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 27 August 2008 - 09:05 · 15 comments & 6632 views

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Microsoft has updated software that verifies whether a copy of Windows is genuine in its Windows XP Professional edition, making it similar to the notification in Windows Vista and thus more persistently visible to users. In a blog posting attributed to Alex Kochis, a Microsoft director of product marketing and management, the company said it made the changes to the Windows Genuine Notification (WGA) alerts for XP Pro because it is "the product edition that is most often stolen."

Now when a version of Windows XP Pro is found to be pirated or counterfeit, the next time a user logs on to the system, the desktop screen background will be black, replacing whatever custom desktop may have been set by the user. This will reappear every 60 minutes, even if a user resets the screen's background. Previously, this was not a part of the WGA notification for Windows XP Pro.

View: The full story @ InfoWorld

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(1 reply) #1 DKAngel on 27 Aug 2008 - 09:14
yay glad to see they are wasting time with the old dinosaur of an os
#1.1 RAID 0 on 27 Aug 2008 - 09:42
That old dinosaur is still very popular.
(1 reply) #2 harveyhanson on 27 Aug 2008 - 10:46
Bet it wont take long for the system to wrongly diagnose incorrect activation, then someone loses a wallpaper they have not go the picture for an starts whining!
#2.1 cork1958 on 27 Aug 2008 - 11:28
Exactly what I was going to say.
(1 reply) #3 atari800 on 27 Aug 2008 - 11:56
Wait...what if your desktop background is black already?
Did I circumvent the update before it has been released? Booooya
#3.1 RAID 0 on 27 Aug 2008 - 20:20
You made me lol a little.
(1 reply) #4 Jeremy of Many on 27 Aug 2008 - 17:08
*yawn*
#4.1 C_Guy on 27 Aug 2008 - 18:00
Wow, what a great contribution to the discussion!
#5 Liquidfox on 27 Aug 2008 - 19:03
What's the point, most people who have counterfeit copies of XP didn't even install WGA...
#6 Foub on 27 Aug 2008 - 19:48
As soon as this comes out it will be circumvented easily yet again.
#7 TRC on 27 Aug 2008 - 21:24
Aren't most of the pirates using legit VLK keys anyway. Yeah I know, this is for casual copiers like your neighbors grandma though.
#8 A Clockwork Lime on 27 Aug 2008 - 21:37
Funny how they're stepping up security for an operating system they don't even want to support anymore.
#9 IntelliMoo on 27 Aug 2008 - 22:14
Cracked in 10 minutes? lol
#10 Shiranui on 28 Aug 2008 - 00:42
They should have made it a more annoying colour - like bright green, or something.

Or, even better, have it cycle through a series of annoying bright colours.

No, wait, it should change the desktop to a nice photo of a sweaty Steve Ballmer.
#11 Airlink on 28 Aug 2008 - 05:39
There's a key that anyone can use on any copy of any 32-bit version of XP Pro. There's a similar key that will activate any copy of XP x64. I won't spell them out here, but anyone can find it if they know what to look for. This is an open secret: Everybody in the tech industry either knows about it or knows someone that knows about it. Microsoft can't close this loophole because they are contractual obligated to the corporate entity who they sold these keys to as part of a VLK deal. Microsoft allowed this customer to re-use these keys endlessly, without having to pay Microsoft each time one of these keys get used. Long story short: UnWGA-able keys were leaked, and Microsoft can do precisely nothing about it.

So, while this WGA update probably will make life difficult for some of the stupid software pirates, it won't touch any of the smart ones.

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