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Media Center Key Accidentally Gives Pirates Free Windows 8 Pro License

MrSeb writes "In an amusing twist that undoubtedly spells the end of some hapless manager's career, Microsoft has accidentally gifted pirates with a free, fully-functioning Windows 8 license key. As you have probably surmised, this isn't intentional — Microsoft hasn't suddenly decided to give pirates an early Christmas present (though the $40 upgrade deal from Windows 8 Release Preview is something of a pirate amnesty). ... The bug involves the Key Management Service, which is part of Microsoft's Volume Licensing system. Pirates have already hacked the KMS to activate Windows 8 for 180 days — but this is just a partial activation. Now it turns out that the free Media Center Pack license keys that Microsoft is giving out until January 31 2013 can be used on a KMS-activated copy of Windows 8 to turn it into a fully licensed copy of Windows 8 Pro. "

36 of 255 comments (clear)

  1. the 'activation' component by alphatel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In order to get to the point where you can request the Media Center license, you first have to activate using a command line and kms server (internal or external)

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    1. Re:the 'activation' component by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Funny

      Only works for "large scale" pirating?

      That proves this was deliberate - to try to get more people to install Windows 8.

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      No sig today...
    2. Re:the 'activation' component by v1 · · Score: 4, Funny

      That means that this is only beneficial for large scale pirating.

      Like in China? The "large scale pirating" is generally where they lose most of their money. When a high schooler pirates his windows pro it's not like he was going to pay full retail price if he didn't manage to pirate it, that piracy didn't cost them a sale, despite whatever the BSA will try to convince you of otherwise.

      But an entire building full of windows machines in a medium size business somewhere, that's another story entirely. That's where they really, legitimately, DO lose sales. And that's exactly where this little "bug" will be useful. This is a huge problem that kicks them where it hurts.

      --
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    3. Re:the 'activation' component by RMingin · · Score: 5, Funny

      Not true, there are many 'cracked' KMS servers out there, which are a VM with the most minimal services, running Windows Server in Core mode, and all ports but the KMS ones closed and blocked. Those same servers are patched to keep 25 fake activations renewed at all times, so any and all requests to the "cracked" KMS server result in activations. As far as MS can tell, they are legitimate, since KMS activations are not verified online, except with the original server.

      I don't see this getting patched or fixed easily. It will be a lot of work. or it'll require doing things that annoy large volume customers.

      --
      The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.
    4. Re:the 'activation' component by jonadab · · Score: 3, Insightful

      > > it'll require doing things that annoy large volume customers.
      > Since when has MS been averse to doing things
      > that annoy large volumes of paying customers

      Do you not see a difference between "large volume customers" (which, admittedly, should really be hyphenated) versus "large volumes of ... customers"?

      For Microsoft, there's a very big difference. Microsoft certainly doesn't mind annoying large volumes of their customers, as long as they're NOT the large-volume customers. This distinction explains, among other things, why Automatic Updates cannot be set to go ahead and install but wait up to 24 hours for the user to shut the computer down. Normal people are annoyed, because they don't want whatever they're doing with the computer to be interrupted. Microsoft's official answer is to set the updates to happen in the middle of the night. This answer satisfies Microsoft's large-volume customers, because they all leave all their computers running all night for no reason while the building is locked. Normal people shut the computer down at night, so then they get interrupted for a mandatory restart during their working day, but normal people don't matter, because they're not large-volume customers. This could be solved by adding a "wait up to 24 hours before forcing a restart" setting, but Microsoft can't be bothered to do that because the large-volume customers don't care.

      --
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    5. Re:the 'activation' component by MrNiceguy_KS · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sounds like a self-punishing crime.

      --
      Redundancy is good And also good.
    6. Re:the 'activation' component by marcosdumay · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hell. There goes the argument about piracy being victimless...

  2. Meanwhile at Canonical by crazyjj · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hey, we're giving our OS away for free, no license or hack needed!

    Anyone?

    Hello?

    --
    What political party do you join when you don't like Bible-thumpers *or* hippies?
    1. Re:Meanwhile at Canonical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Q: What do Ubuntu and Windows 8 have in common?

      A: You can get both for free using bittorrent.

      Q: Which of the two features unusable applications with a convoluted, misprioritized UI designed by a retarded aspie?

      A: That's a trick question - both do!

      -- Ethanol-fueled

    2. Re:Meanwhile at Canonical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hey, we're giving our OS away for free, no license or hack needed!

      That which is given has no value?

      You're right. We should shut down all charities immediately. After all humanitarian charities didn't charge the recipients for all that food and medical aid they give to the poor and needy around the world. So obviously the food provided no nutrition and the medical aid didn't help treat any diseases. All because the recipients weren't charged money for them. </sarcasm>

      Really though I'd rather use Free Software than pirate an OS that's not worth paying for. That is valuable to me. Long-time Linux user here. I appreciate that some people want or need Windows. Good for them, they found something that fits their needs. But the fact I can legally download Linux for free absolutely does not mean it didn't meet my needs just as well as Windows meets the needs of others. In fact I have a non-tangible benefit that comes with it: the gratitude that people around the world would actually donate their time and hard-won expertise to provide people like me with such a good experience.

      Money is simply a tool to facilitate trade. That's all it is. Don't let it completely dominate your entire view of everything. As anyone who has ever truly loved someone knows, some of the very finest things in life are monetarily free.

    3. Re:Meanwhile at Canonical by ameen.ross · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Emphasis mine:

      some of the very finest things in life are monetarily free.

      Mod parent way up

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  3. huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    What's this license key and activation nonsense?

    Sincerely,
    Confused Linux User.

  4. Re:Too expensive. by Sez+Zero · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple sells hardware. Microsoft sells software.

    Telling MS to sell Windows cheaper is like saying that Apple should be giving away iPhones.

  5. I disagree with the premise. by Hans+Adler · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As far as I know Microsoft *does* have a strong interested in being pirated in those jurisdictions in which they are not going to sell much anything. It's a question of market share and staying the monopolist.

    1. Re:I disagree with the premise. by Vanderhoth · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I was about to say the same thing. It's kind of like how Adobe "allows" their photo shop suite to be pirated. They don't formally allow it and will adamantly deny it, but the truth is you get high school and collage students using the product for free, then when they get to the corporate world, where the money for Adobe really is, the corporations by the product that considered the norm for the field.

      Right now MS is having a hard time pushing Windows 8 few individuals want to use it and there's no way any major corporate entity is going to switch because they don't want to spend money to buy a product that's probably going to need weeks or months to for people learn to use properly when the existing product works just fine. By having Win8 pirated a wider population of individuals will be willing to use and get use to using it, which will be beneficial and essential to having Win8 adopted by the larger corporate community.

  6. And still no one wants it. by hawks5999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This sounds less like a career limiting move a d more like a marketing ploy to get a bigger installed base for Vista 2.0 (or is it Millennium Edition 3.0?)

  7. one way to increase windows 8 adoption by cheap.computer · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I guess msft read the recent reports of abysmal sales for Windows 8 and decided to use its proven strategy of promoting piracy of Windows to drive up adoption.

    1. Re:one way to increase windows 8 adoption by causality · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I guess msft read the recent reports of abysmal sales for Windows 8 and decided to use its proven strategy of promoting piracy of Windows to drive up adoption.

      I really don't understand what they're doing with Win 8.

      I recently bought a netbook that came with Windows 7. I strongly prefer Linux, so it wasn't very long before I repartitioned the drive and installed the OS of my choice. But before I did that, I decided to gave Windows 7 a try, just for the hell of it. I was a bit impressed, actually.

      I generally don't like the Windows way of doing things. I prefer the transparency of a *nix system, the storage of important settings in plain text files, the central package manager instead of being nagged about updates for lots of individual programs, the way I don't need malware scanners, the ease with which open source programs can be modified and studied, the fact that drivers are generally maintained with the kernel and not by third parties, the power of the command line, the ease of automation and scripting, the huge variety of choices for graphical desktop, the simple fact that my Linux distro of choice (Gentoo) doesn't assume I'm clueless and thus doesn't get in my way, the ease with which I can find out what caused a problem and fix it and it stays fixed, and the general Open Source philosophy.

      Those things about Windows that I don't like are not going to change anytime soon. So it's just not for me. But, having said all that, when I tried Windows 7 I thought that Windows had come a long way. It was stable, solid, and slick. It seemed to me to be what most people wanted: a highly improved and polished XP.

      Then I learn about Windows 8 and I'm wondering what the hell the people at Microsoft are thinking. It's as though they want to sabotage themselves. What do they hope to gain here? Is it just that the days of Win 9x made them too arrogant and they don't appreciate that people have more options now? Or what? I haven't seen them pull something like this since either Microsoft Bob or Windows Millenium.

      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    2. Re:one way to increase windows 8 adoption by SEE · · Score: 5, Funny

      What was Microsoft thinking? Thinking had nothing to do with it; they had no choice.

      See, Windows 98 SE was followed by Windows Me, which sucked more.
      Windows Me was followed by Windows XP, which sucked less.
      Windows XP was followed by Windows Vista, which sucked more.
      Windows Vista was followed by Windows 7, which sucked less.

      Windows 7 accordingly had to be followed by a "sucked more" release.

  8. Freebie by GerryHattrick · · Score: 3, Funny

    Just admit that you can't even *give* it away.

  9. As I surmised by oodaloop · · Score: 4, Informative

    In an amusing twist that undoubtedly spells the end of some hapless manager's career, Microsoft has accidentally gifted pirates with a free, fully-functioning Windows 8 license key. As you have probably surmised, this isn't intentional

    Yes, in fact, this is exactly what I surmised after seeing the word "accidentally". That usually implies lack of intention.

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  10. Re:Too expensive. by Xest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    £15 - £40 for an upgrade is too expensive for a piece of software you probably use day in day out every single day?

    If that's too expensive then what the fuck do you call every other peice of software on the planet that you probably get far less usage out of such as computer games that last for about 6 hrs play time and cost the same price?

    Of all the criticisms of Windows 8, price isn't one of them. It's the first Windows OS that actually has sane pricing options.

  11. Interesting hack, and pretty "Oops" on MS' part by idontgno · · Score: 4, Informative

    On the upside, you can have a fully activated copy of Win 8 with relatively little effort.

    On the downside, it'll still be Windows 8.

    I think I'll pass, thanks.

    --
    Welcome to the Panopticon. Used to be a prison, now it's your home.
  12. Re:Too expensive. by telchine · · Score: 4, Funny

    Apple sells hardware. Microsoft sells software.

    [fanboy]Apple sells dreams, Microsoft sells nightmares[/fanboy]

  13. Just a key, not a license. by leuk_he · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is not a valid license. It is just a key that happens to work arround the current version of their anti-piracy control. But if you use this, and get an audit, you will have to shell out the full amount of a retail key ( 4 to six times the the price of a basic oem version). It might stop working at any time if you apply updates supplied by MS. They know what keys are published, and can block them if they want.

    This is very disappointing coming from a site that is very rigorous when it comes to the free GPL license. The MS license has at least to be paid.

  14. Re:Too expensive. by Ambiguous+Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    On the other hand, upgrading a household of OS X computers costs 0*(number of computers) + $20, whereas upgrading a household of Windows computers costs, at a minimum, $40*(number of computers).

    --
    Their may be a grammatical error, misspeling, or evn a typo in this post.
  15. Re:What about windows 7? by pla · · Score: 4, Informative

    You don't even need a key or a (code-based) hack to run Win7 forever without activation - You can run it in fully-functional pre-activation mode forever.

    Google "slmgr -rearm" and "IR5". Note that IR5 doesn't install any sort of actual cracks, it just scripts a few simple tasks you can do manually if you don't trust it.

  16. Re:M$ by somersault · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I used Visual Studio in the early 2000s and I liked it, but I like other IDEs too. Delphi was what I used for developing GUIs for ages. The options for doing so in Visual Studio back then were a lot more complicated, either that or I just didn't know where they were. I find Eclipse a bit annoying, but I tried Netbeans recently and I like it. I also started using Emacs a few years ago for things like C, scripting and web page editing, and I like it a lot.

    So yeah, Visual Studio is one of the few decent products that MS produce (or at least it was 10 years ago), but it's pretty silly to suggest that people won't like the alternatives available to them.

    --
    which is totally what she said
  17. Changing business models by DragonWriter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Apple sells hardware. Microsoft sells software. " Mission statements aside, they both sell software and are in competition with each other.

    Apple is a hardware company (that also makes software to support the hardware) that has been slowly pivoting to sell online services and serve as the middle man in content delivery.

    Microsoft is a software company (that sometimes also makes hardware to move the software) that has been slowly pivoting to sell online services as serve as the middleman in content delivery.

    Apple dropping prices on iPhones and Microsoft dropping prices on Windows and similar software both make sense in that context -- where they are competing with firms that are already optimized to sell online services and serve as the middle man in content delivery and which are also delivering hardware and software -- at low prices -- to support the online services / content delivery business (e.g., Google, Amazon.)

  18. In related news by GameboyRMH · · Score: 4, Funny

    Dirty needles accidentally give users free AIDS.

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
  19. RHN Activation Key by Frankie70 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here - https://access.redhat.com/knowledge/solutions/2474

    You can read about license keys and activation nonsense.

  20. Re:Too expensive. by chrisxcr1 · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you buy an upgrade from the App Store you are allowed to install it on all of the Macs you own. That does not work for businesses though. For business use you do have to buy one upgrade for one machine.

  21. Re:Too expensive. by Nemyst · · Score: 4, Funny

    Correction, Apple sells dreams only to crush them a year later.

  22. Re:Too expensive...for Buffett by BoRegardless · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Warren Buffett in the late 90s as a traveling buddy of Bill Gates was asked if he invested in Microsoft and Warren replied that he didn't invest in things in which he didn't understand the long term profitability.

    Warren in retrospect was entirely 100% right. If you can't come up with good reasons for people to buy your products at what is attractive to them, they will figure another product to buy.

    Probably 95% of the users of MS Word could do everything they normally need on Open Office software. That doesn't bode well for MS long term.

  23. Microsoft and piracy by bmo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It has been known for years, and publicly admitted by Bill Gatess 14 years ago that piracy is Microsoft's key to building and keeping market share. While Ballmer has threatened in the past to turn up the anti-piracy knob to 11, that was all bluster. The goal is not to eliminate piracy, but make it just inconvenient enough for most people.

    If you are willing to jump through the hoops to pirate Windows and Office, Microsoft would rather you do that than try any alternative at all. Because they know that those who try alternatives and get by with "good enough" are gone for good.

    Bill Gates' original "Open Letter to Hobbyists" can be completely disregarded as the writing of a naive young man soon to figure out that piracy builds market share.

    My "diagnosis" of the situation is that this was not by accident. My prediction for the future is that Microsoft will not fix this, or at least make a half-hearted attempt to make it look like it's harder. They will not close this hole.

    --
    BMO

  24. Re:Too expensive. by amorsen · · Score: 4, Funny

    To get a legitimate license for Mac OS, you need to pay for an expensive hardware dongle.

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