Microsoft closes piracy loophole: mandatory activation for volume licenced Vista

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James Bannan09 November 2006, 11:46 PM

That's right, every single damn PC system admins roll out with Vista will need individual activation. In the industry's worst spin-doctoring of all time, Microsoft says it has made this change to improve the volume customer experience.


With the imminent arrival of Vista Business and Enterprise additions, Microsoft has dropped a nasty little surprise on system admins. Windows Vista sports a little feature called Volume Activation 2.0.

Yes you read correctly – Volume ACTIVATION. Apparently, every volume licensed product to date has been using Volume Activation 1.0, which bypassed the activation process once the correct key was entered.

Volume licenced serial numbers have been the mainstay of pirated copies of Microsoft products – they may fail the online validation test, but they keep running once installed.

Every volume product except Windows Vista and Longhorn Server will keep Volume Activation 1.0. Microsoft has moved to Volume Activation 2.0 for two reasons:

  • Close significant piracy loopholes (Volume License keys represent the majority of keys involved in Windows piracy)
  • Improve the volume customer experience.

The first reason I can live with, but the second is flat-out ridiculous. The “volume customer experience” is the joy of having volume licensed products and NEVER having to activate them. When you’re dealing with hundreds if not thousands of individual installations of Windows and Office, not having to double-handle each one by activating it makes life a lot easier.

But, it’s a brave new world and it seems that the good times for software pirates are over. Now, instead of a Volume License product key, Vista administrators have two choices – the Multiple Activation Key (MAK) or the Key Management Service (KMS).

Multiple Key Activation activates individual machines or groups of machines using a direct internet or phone connection to Microsoft, and they have a limited amount of activations built-in. To increase the activation limit, you have to ring a Microsoft Activation Center. For Australia, the numbers are 02 9870 2131 or 1800 642 008.

There are two options for using MAK activation – proxy and independent. Proxy activation involved multiple computers connecting to Microsoft simultaneously via one connection. This option is not available yet, and will be made so via the Volume Activation Management Tool (VAMT), due for release in 2007. Independent activation is just that – each computer connects to Microsoft individually for Vista activation.

Key Management Service allows businesses to administer activation in-house. One Vista workstation runs KMS, and all the other Vista workstations (installed with KMS Volume License keys) connect to that workstation for activation. To prevent someone bringing in their home computer, installing KMS-activated Vista and leaving again, each KMS-activated installation of Vista reconnects to the KMS host every 180 days to renew activation. If a KMS installation of Vista cannot connect to the host for thirty days, Vista goes into Reduced Functionality Mode (RFM).

The KMS host has to be activated before it can activate other machines, using the KMS volume key assigned to you. Each KMS key can use used on two computers up to 10 times -- anything more than this and it’s another call to Microsoft. At the moment a KMS host has to be running Vista or Longhorn Server, but in 2007 Windows 2003 will be able to host KMS as well.

And two more pieces of bad news. Firstly, KMS is only available for businesses with at least 25 Vista machines connected to the corporate network. Secondly, if you create an image using MAK activation, every new computer you setup from that image has to be individually activated – you can’t activate an image and propagate it. Each clone counts as a completely new machine requiring activation.

So is this the end for pirates? There are ways of cracking Windows activation, as pirated copies of Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005 attest to. However, Volume Activation 2.0 certainly looks set to put an end to casual Windows piracy, made so easy by Volume Activation 1.0. On the downside, life for system admins just got harder, with another layer of administrative complexity.

So much for improving the volume customer experience…


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raindog:

Now what were the advantages of migration to Vista again, flashy new flying envelopes wasn't it, and a cool as toolbar that half the beta users hate.

Now if we add this lastest wonder to the list of negatives, recalulate the extra labour required to rollout each box and compare TCO with current OS platform. Lets see, need faster and more powerful hardware, more disk space. We going to have higher demands on existing network infrastructure. We will need to spend much more time loading and authenticating each box.

Justification for a corporate Vista rollout? Will be a brave soul or one with a wicked sense of humour, who wants to suggest a vista migration proposal at the next budget meeting!

29 February 2008, 8:28 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

drewhiggins:

Instead, round up all of the users, give them all an activation key and to earn their lunch break they have to endure ten minutes on the phone to Microsoft.

Make it Activation Day.

29 February 2008, 8:34 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Matius:

Please give me number activation code for windows vista final via phone.
thank's

29 February 2008, 8:34 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Mgt. in conflict:

Leave it to Microsoft to screw the Network Administrators once again. Now since piracy has cracked every version of Windows to date, I hope someone does in fact crack Vista. I love the fact that you can't reinstall the operating system more than a couple of times and have to call Microsoft for more Cha-ching bling to do so. Gee I'd like to apply that to Bill's house to where if he remodels his house and builds an addition, he has to pay me to change the colors of the walls every few years. (This excludes any color of paint he already has and night want to use to paint the walls.) Excuse me, isn't it his house? It's like the idea to pay taxes for your car that you park on your land that you pay taxes on every year. Common people, Nothing is certain but death, taxes and Microsoft Activation!

29 February 2008, 8:28 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Anonymous:

Iam a Administrator of a large school 1000 students. Microsoft has finally gone mad this system is beyond bull shit. Apart from Vista need for high powered machine to run now we have this system. I have been using Vista now since its release in my professional option its just not worth the trouble. The sysprep system using a xml file is far to hard to handle. If this is Microsoft's best I am sorry Iam leaving Microsoft for something else. My last word Vista is a over priced memory hungery CRAP!

29 February 2008, 8:34 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

tin:

Hmmm. I wonder how this will work for big users with higher than normal reinstall rates (like large schools).

29 February 2008, 8:28 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

hwang:

Just imagine what will happen if some large corporation wants to install 1000 machines at once... Pure chaos. Probably best to get MS guys to come and activate onsite.

29 February 2008, 8:34 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

tin:

5 machines or 5000, it's still going to frustrate IT people. I find the idea of reading a 20 char "random" string over the phone to be a bad way to deal with things.

I guess IT people will end up with the Vista activation phone number on speed-dial.

29 February 2008, 8:34 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Shamine White:

Didn't they say that vista will have no more blue screen.
Well i installed vista and Voila"there is a blue screen.Vista Sucks.Beieve me there is an OS which even looks like vista has the 3d interface and is a complete OS ,office pack editors and all the goodies,Only thing it was realesed 2 years ago its called Suse Linux 10.1

29 February 2008, 8:30 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

tito:

how can i download vista

29 February 2008, 8:38 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Anil kumar:

dont download vista. it is a crap operating system. need more hardware and resources and over priced. you can have your windows xp with the same finctionality of vista home
vista sucks!!!!

29 February 2008, 8:38 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Tony Brown:

Good lord Tito Why would you actually want to download it ?
Even with a broadband connection it would take hours.
I've just had 4 tries at downloading WinXP Service Pack 3
and it's only 334Mb's. I finally succeeded on the last try. That took about 90 mins so imagine what the whole of Vista would take.
Nooooooooooooo don't do it. If you really wan't it go for an up-grade copy or buy a new version.

29 February 2008, 8:38 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Ogrish:

The only reason i can see to get vista, would be to play Halo 2 vista, and thats just because the xbox version, and the pc version dont have the map editor.



29 February 2008, 8:50 PM (1 year ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

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