News
Microsoft Goes After Piracy Hacks with Vista SP1
It's no "reduced functionality mode"; still, Microsoft has other tricks to encourage those using pirated copies of Vista to upgrade to legitimate versions.
- By Becky Nagel
- February 25, 2008
"
Reduced functionality mode" isn't coming back but Microsoft has other tricks in the pipeline to encourage those using pirated copies of Vista to upgrade to legitimate versions.
With Vista SP1 expected to be released to the public next month, the company
is going to "disable two of the most common exploits to our product activation
technology," aka OEM BIOS or Grace Timer, wrote Senior Product Manager
Alex Kochis on the company's Windows Genuine Advantage blog last week.
"This means that users who have the exploits loaded on their systems will find those exploits disabled by SP1, and they will be asked to activate their copy of Windows Vista," he wrote.
Kochis added, "It's important to note that this update does not disable
the exploits it finds -- it simply alerts customers that exploits exist. When
we first release the update that enables Windows Vista to detect the exploits
we will also make available a separate removal tool as a download. In the future
we will integrate the removal of the exploits with the detection."
According to Kochis, the fix will be pushed out to Vista users via Windows
Update "later this month."
For more details, read the blog post here.
About the Author
Becky Nagel is vice president of AI for 1105 Media, where she specializes in training internal and external customers on maximizing their business potential via a wide variety of generative AI technologies as well as developing cutting-edge AI content and events. She's the author of "ChatGPT Prompt 101 Guide for Business Uses," regularly leads research studies on generative AI business usage, and serves as the director of AI Boardroom, a new resource for C-level executives looking to excel in the AI era. Prior to her current position she was a technical leader for 1105 Media's Web, advertising and production teams as well as editorial director for a suite of enterprise technology publications, including serving as founding editor of PureAI.com. She has 20 years of enterprise technology journalism experience, and regularly speaks and writes about generative AI, AI, edge computing and other cutting-edge technologies. She can be reached at [email protected].