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194 lines
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194 lines
12 KiB
HTML
<!DOCTYPE html>
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<title>Read Me - Activation FAQs</title>
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<html>
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<head>
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<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
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</head>
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<body style="background-color: #DfDfDf;">
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<pre>
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<code>
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Updated 30-08-2019
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====================================================================================================
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Activation FAQs:
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====================================================================================================
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The following text is a mixture of facts and few guesses. The facts as listed are true as far as
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I am able to know.
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You should read it with a grain of salt. It's a good habit to doubt things, but don't start to
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believe your doubts if you don't have any reasonable argument to justify the doubt.
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Digital License and KMS38 activation descriptions are based on reverse engineering efforts by
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the methods' authors - @mspaintmsi and an Anonymous developer.
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If you think anything written here is false, please notify https://windowsaddict.ml/
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====================================================================================================
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=====================================
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Digital License (HWID) Activation:
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=====================================
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Written by @mspaintmsi-
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During the upgrade process from Windows 7, 8, 8.1 to Windows 10 (Also from Windows 10 to a newer
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version of Windows 10) properly activated systems are eligible for a digital license.
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The digital license activation is permanent and linked to a specific user (Through hardware and optionally through a Microsoft Account).
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Internally it works something like this,
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The upgrade process executes gatherosstate.exe contained in the installation medium.
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The job of gatherosstate is to generate a Genuine Ticket for use by the Client License Platform migration tool (ClipUp)
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This ticket is a GenuineAuthorization XML file containing the following information: (There are more fields in tickets from ClipUp, but we won't need those)
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* Its version. As of now, this is always "1.0"
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* the genuineProperties:
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* Properties:
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* OA3xOriginalProductId - The Product ID of the BIOS key.
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* OA3xOriginalProductKey - The BIOS product key.
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* SessionId:
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* OSMajorVersion - The OS Version Major
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* OSMinorVersion - The OS Version Minor
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* OSPlatformId - The OS Platform ID. Always 2 (2 means Windows NT)
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* PP - Protected Process - Whether or not gatherosstate was run as a protected process
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(It practically never does. ClipUp is also capable of generating those tickets, and it runs as a protected process.)
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* Hwid - The Hardware Id - a base64-encoded byte array containing information about the current hardware configuration.
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* Pfn - Package Family Name - The package family name of your Windows edition.
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* OA3xOriginalProductKey - The BIOS product key. (Yes, it's a duplicate)
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* DownlevelGenuineState - Indicates whether or not your system is genuine. (activated)
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* TimeStampClient - The ISO 8601 format date of ticket generation.
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* Signatures:
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* signature: (Either downlevelGTkey or clientLockboxKey depending on which utility actually generated the ticket - SLC, gatherosstate or ClipUp)
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* downlevelGTkey - rsa-sha256 signature for the Properties field
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* clientLockboxKey - rsa-sha256 signature for the Properties field
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This ticket is later applied using ClipUp and sent to Microsoft Servers.
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In return, the Microsoft servers responds with the JSON "receipt" for the digital license. The fields in it are irrelevant and mean practically nothing.
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This license is linked to specific hardware, and can be transferred to other hardware if needed using a linked Microsoft Account.
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This process during upgrading requires a lot of time, and it's not as easy as clicking an “Activate” button.
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so to achieve this, @mspaintmsi and an Anonymous developer discovered a way to quickly generate a valid ticket for acquiring a license.
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There were a lot of methods for this, but the simplest one is placing a modified SLC (Software Licensing Client) library next to gatherosstate.
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Due to gatherosstate loading this library dynamically it can be substituted very easily without modifying the gatherosstate file at all.
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This library was originally a modified version of SLSHIM by @vyvojar on GitHub (but has went through so many changes that it barely resembles it anymore).
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This library is supposed to query the licensing information for use by gatherosstate.
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gatherosstate has no way to verify this information, so it blindly places it into the ticket.
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After sending the ticket and receiving the receipt your system is activated.
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Now a question arises,
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Q.) Can Microsoft differentiate counterfeit tickets and block the license?
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A.) Umm.. Yes, but actully no.
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The signature type can (sort of) be used to determine what utility is responsible for the ticket.
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There is no way (in a standard environment) for a non-activated Windows 10 installation to generate a ticket.
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In the normal process, gatherosstate will ask SLC for the entire ticket, but when this fails it will generate and sign it by itself, creating a
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"downlevelGTkey" signature.
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For every system with an installed product key a generated ticket will be returned by SLC and thus will have a "clientLockboxKey" signature.
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Put simply, the signature (should) always be a "clientLockboxKey" one in case of an activated system, but in this case it isn't.
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Microsoft will not take action against it, because of the risk of voiding valid licenses.
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Besides, they never really cared for consumer piracy; That's not where they get the most money from.
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====================================================================================================
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==============================
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KMS38 Activation:
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==============================
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Written by @mspaintmsi-
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The KMS38 method is closely related to the HWID method, as it utilizes the same tools.
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This method also generates a GenuineAuthorization XML file using gatherosstate, but with slight differences.
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This time instead of the "Pfn" field, we have the "GVLKExp" field.
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GVLKExp is short for "Generic Volume Key Expiration (date)" and contains an ISO 8601 timestamp of when the KMS activation ends.
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This volume expiration date can be changed to an arbitrarily (signed) integer value using the SLC library.
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The very long time for activation is related to the Y2K38 problem as this date (19 january 2038 around 3AM) is the maximum date we can give
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to gatherosstate without it looping back to year 1970.
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The main difference is that those tickets are only valid on Volume:GVLK systems. That mostly includes Enterprise and Education editions.
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Now another question,
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Q.) Can Microsoft block this kind of activation?
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A.) Not directly. They could only update Clipup to allow for a maximum activation period of 180 days.
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Not much beside that can be done on their part.
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The tickets are not sent to Microsoft at all, so they can't block them or take action directly.
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====================================================================================================
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==============================
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Online KMS Activation:
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==============================
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- What is KMS activation?
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Key Management Service (KMS) is a genuine activation method provided by Microsoft for volume
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licensing customers (organizations, schools or governments). The machines in those environments
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(called KMS clients) are activated via the Environment KMS Host Server (authorized Microsoft's
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licensing key), instead of Microsoft activation servers.
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By design, the KMS activation period lasts up to 180 Days (6 Months) at max, with the ability to
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renew and reinstate the period at any time. Activation renewal automatically happens every 7
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days if the client can connect to the KMS host server.
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For more info, see,
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https://www.microsoft.com/Licensing/servicecenter/Help/FAQDetails.aspx?id=201#215
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https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee939272(v=ws.10).aspx#kms-overview
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- How we are getting it for free?
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Developers reverse-engineered the KMS Host Server setup, so now anyone can host a KMS server and
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activate the systems without any limitations.
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KMS activators such as KMSpico, MTK, KMS_VL_ALL, and etc., locally create an emulated KMS Host
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Server and activate Windows and Office.
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This locally-emulated KMS server requires you to run binary files which often cause
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anti-virus alerts (false positives).
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Another method of KMS activation is publicly-available Online KMS Host Server.
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In this method, the site hosts the emulated KMS server and anyone can simply use this server to
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activate their systems, there is no requirement for running any software on your system and
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no worry of AV's alert. And this method is the most identical to the genuine KMS activation.
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As long as the site hosting the emulated KMS server remains on line, and is available to connect
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to, continued activation will be assured.
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- Is it safe to use Online KMS activation?
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Yes.
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Now let's go into the details, why,
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In the KMS protocol, there is a relationship of host and client. The client system asks the host
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system to grant the activation, and the host system grants the activation if it's eligible.
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In doing this, the client system shares some of the system’s data, which is not sensitive in nature.
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According to the Microsoft documents, the client system shares the following LIMITED data
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with the host system:
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Client FQDN, CMID, time-stamp, Product license state, expiration time and IP address
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https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee939272(v=ws.10).aspx#kms-overview
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In this info sharing, the only important part is your IP address.
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We can now talk about possible assumptions and consequences regarding this, but before we begin,
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you should know the following facts.
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- IP addresses do not necessarily represent a specific person. Internet Service Providers (ISP's)
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mostly use DYNAMIC IP, which means the same IP address can be used by many different persons,
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and a dynamic IP address is periodically reassigned to different people all the time. But a
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STATIC IP address is permanently assigned to a single, unique, subscriber.
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However, the Internet Service Provider (ISP) won't reveal that information unless
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there is a legal reason to do so.
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- Microsoft has NEVER tried to catch Home users for using a few pirated activations (not
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talking about stolen legal keys) simply because the cost of legal actions would be much higher
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than the amount of money gained by forcing a few people to PURCHASE activations.
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- No law enforcement is going to take action based on the IP's from all over the world without
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the consent from the Microsoft itself.
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- In case you are feeling that your machine’s sharing of IP address information as part of the
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ongoing KMS activation process is quite intrusive in nature, then you should keep in
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mind that any website can fingerprint your device, which means that website can keep a record of
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you not only by your IP address, but also with information about your device hardware.
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* After these facts, I can't imagine how Online KMS Activation can negatively affect the user.
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If you know exactly how it can, than please let me know. Thanks.
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====================================================================================================
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</code></pre>
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</body>
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</html>
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<p> </p>
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