Hackers Fool Vista into Activating!
Dec 12, 2006
Security Issues
One of the ways to activate Windows Vista available to Microsoft volume licensing customers is Key Management Service or KMS that requires a centralized server that clients can activate against every 180 days. As such, it’s the server that hosts the product keys; and not the client machines.
Thus, with KMS, a company can run a Microsoft-supplied authorization server on its own network, and activate Vista without contacting Microsoft for each copy.
Although KMS is meant to benefit system administrators with many on-site clients, reports are already doing the rounds that some hackers have used a VMWare image and a VBS script to simulate a local KMS that can generate valid Vista product keys.
This workaround, dubbed “Microsoft.Windows.Vista.Local.Activation.Server-MelindaGates,” can activate both Enterprise and Business editions of Vista. However, the Home and Ultimate editions of Vista cannot work with a KMS, so they cannot be easily activated with the MelindaGates Hack.
Reportedly, the hacked download is available online on sites such as ‘The Pirate Bay’ and other file sharing sites.





