is KMS-Digital-Online_Activation_Suite safe valid and genuine to activate windows 10?












0














I bought Windows 10 Pro Key online through Lazada, the seller gave me a product key but upon activation it failed to activate the system.



I asked the seller for some help and then he gave me a link to download some files and open it to automatically activate the system.



I read the ReadMe.text file and found this line This tool is the fork of mephistooo2 KMS-Digital-Online_Activation_Suite. I started to think if he is tricking me because as far as I know, using KMS to activate windows is illegal.



Anyway, I downloaded the file and run a security scan and the result is 0 threat found.










share|improve this question




















  • 5




    The file you were sent is NOT a Microsoft application and should not be used. The seller is not authorized to sell Microsoft products.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 13 '18 at 12:28


















0














I bought Windows 10 Pro Key online through Lazada, the seller gave me a product key but upon activation it failed to activate the system.



I asked the seller for some help and then he gave me a link to download some files and open it to automatically activate the system.



I read the ReadMe.text file and found this line This tool is the fork of mephistooo2 KMS-Digital-Online_Activation_Suite. I started to think if he is tricking me because as far as I know, using KMS to activate windows is illegal.



Anyway, I downloaded the file and run a security scan and the result is 0 threat found.










share|improve this question




















  • 5




    The file you were sent is NOT a Microsoft application and should not be used. The seller is not authorized to sell Microsoft products.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 13 '18 at 12:28
















0












0








0







I bought Windows 10 Pro Key online through Lazada, the seller gave me a product key but upon activation it failed to activate the system.



I asked the seller for some help and then he gave me a link to download some files and open it to automatically activate the system.



I read the ReadMe.text file and found this line This tool is the fork of mephistooo2 KMS-Digital-Online_Activation_Suite. I started to think if he is tricking me because as far as I know, using KMS to activate windows is illegal.



Anyway, I downloaded the file and run a security scan and the result is 0 threat found.










share|improve this question















I bought Windows 10 Pro Key online through Lazada, the seller gave me a product key but upon activation it failed to activate the system.



I asked the seller for some help and then he gave me a link to download some files and open it to automatically activate the system.



I read the ReadMe.text file and found this line This tool is the fork of mephistooo2 KMS-Digital-Online_Activation_Suite. I started to think if he is tricking me because as far as I know, using KMS to activate windows is illegal.



Anyway, I downloaded the file and run a security scan and the result is 0 threat found.







windows windows-10






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share|improve this question













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edited Dec 13 '18 at 19:31









Canadian Luke

18k3086146




18k3086146










asked Dec 13 '18 at 12:25









Banny

152




152








  • 5




    The file you were sent is NOT a Microsoft application and should not be used. The seller is not authorized to sell Microsoft products.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 13 '18 at 12:28
















  • 5




    The file you were sent is NOT a Microsoft application and should not be used. The seller is not authorized to sell Microsoft products.
    – Ramhound
    Dec 13 '18 at 12:28










5




5




The file you were sent is NOT a Microsoft application and should not be used. The seller is not authorized to sell Microsoft products.
– Ramhound
Dec 13 '18 at 12:28






The file you were sent is NOT a Microsoft application and should not be used. The seller is not authorized to sell Microsoft products.
– Ramhound
Dec 13 '18 at 12:28












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














KMS is a standard Windows activation mechanism used for "volume" licenses. That is, instead of performing a permanent activation bound to the computer, it's a license server that issues 120-day activations for all PCs on a corporate network.



So KMS itself is not illegal – but the illegal part that you're describing comes from installing a fake KMS server to provide licenses that you don't actually own. (I don't know the specifics of MS licensing, but selling 'real' KMS activations off a real server to third parties is most likely not permitted either.)



The attached archive appears to do something very similar. The script mostly just runs some built-in Windows tools and configures a generic product key that tells Windows to use KMS, but it does not install a local fake KMS server nor does it configure any specific remote KMS server to be used (e.g. over the Internet).



However, the included slc.dll is unsigned, suspiciously short, and consists mostly of functions which do nothing. In other words, it has been patched to always generate a "successful KMS activation" ticket without ever contacting a KMS server at all. So I'm 99% sure that you were sent a crack.



Although this doesn't imply that the license key you've bought is garbage, it's very likely to be.






share|improve this answer





















  • Worth pointing out that, Windows Server itself, would act its own Key Management Server (KMS) once you configure it as such. Offline activation is possible, with an initial challenge and response, Windows would activate the same way it activates when it contacts Microsoft. So KMS isn’t an application or a script which is how we know what you were sent is legitimate
    – Ramhound
    Dec 13 '18 at 21:09





















2














Key Management Service (KMS) is used to activate Microsoft products on clients using generic keys against a Volume Activation Service, hosted on a remote server. Legally owned volume licenses are installed on the server and activation is required typically every 180 days to keep the products activated on client machines.
For more information, please refer to the
Understanding KMS
article by Microsoft.



Hacking tools using KMS activation emulate a fake KMS server on the local computer and trick Microsoft products to activate against it. Products activated this way have temporary valid license and when installing such hack tools, a task is often created to automatically renew it every 60 days.



In my opinion, Lazada has taken your money and gave you a hacking tool,
which by itself is dangerous to use as it might install unknown software
on your computer.
The product key you received is probably for KMS activation, so cannot be
used by itself for normal Windows activation.



I'm afraid your money is lost.
I recommend looking for a legitimate seller of Microsoft licenses.






share|improve this answer





















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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    KMS is a standard Windows activation mechanism used for "volume" licenses. That is, instead of performing a permanent activation bound to the computer, it's a license server that issues 120-day activations for all PCs on a corporate network.



    So KMS itself is not illegal – but the illegal part that you're describing comes from installing a fake KMS server to provide licenses that you don't actually own. (I don't know the specifics of MS licensing, but selling 'real' KMS activations off a real server to third parties is most likely not permitted either.)



    The attached archive appears to do something very similar. The script mostly just runs some built-in Windows tools and configures a generic product key that tells Windows to use KMS, but it does not install a local fake KMS server nor does it configure any specific remote KMS server to be used (e.g. over the Internet).



    However, the included slc.dll is unsigned, suspiciously short, and consists mostly of functions which do nothing. In other words, it has been patched to always generate a "successful KMS activation" ticket without ever contacting a KMS server at all. So I'm 99% sure that you were sent a crack.



    Although this doesn't imply that the license key you've bought is garbage, it's very likely to be.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Worth pointing out that, Windows Server itself, would act its own Key Management Server (KMS) once you configure it as such. Offline activation is possible, with an initial challenge and response, Windows would activate the same way it activates when it contacts Microsoft. So KMS isn’t an application or a script which is how we know what you were sent is legitimate
      – Ramhound
      Dec 13 '18 at 21:09


















    3














    KMS is a standard Windows activation mechanism used for "volume" licenses. That is, instead of performing a permanent activation bound to the computer, it's a license server that issues 120-day activations for all PCs on a corporate network.



    So KMS itself is not illegal – but the illegal part that you're describing comes from installing a fake KMS server to provide licenses that you don't actually own. (I don't know the specifics of MS licensing, but selling 'real' KMS activations off a real server to third parties is most likely not permitted either.)



    The attached archive appears to do something very similar. The script mostly just runs some built-in Windows tools and configures a generic product key that tells Windows to use KMS, but it does not install a local fake KMS server nor does it configure any specific remote KMS server to be used (e.g. over the Internet).



    However, the included slc.dll is unsigned, suspiciously short, and consists mostly of functions which do nothing. In other words, it has been patched to always generate a "successful KMS activation" ticket without ever contacting a KMS server at all. So I'm 99% sure that you were sent a crack.



    Although this doesn't imply that the license key you've bought is garbage, it's very likely to be.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Worth pointing out that, Windows Server itself, would act its own Key Management Server (KMS) once you configure it as such. Offline activation is possible, with an initial challenge and response, Windows would activate the same way it activates when it contacts Microsoft. So KMS isn’t an application or a script which is how we know what you were sent is legitimate
      – Ramhound
      Dec 13 '18 at 21:09
















    3












    3








    3






    KMS is a standard Windows activation mechanism used for "volume" licenses. That is, instead of performing a permanent activation bound to the computer, it's a license server that issues 120-day activations for all PCs on a corporate network.



    So KMS itself is not illegal – but the illegal part that you're describing comes from installing a fake KMS server to provide licenses that you don't actually own. (I don't know the specifics of MS licensing, but selling 'real' KMS activations off a real server to third parties is most likely not permitted either.)



    The attached archive appears to do something very similar. The script mostly just runs some built-in Windows tools and configures a generic product key that tells Windows to use KMS, but it does not install a local fake KMS server nor does it configure any specific remote KMS server to be used (e.g. over the Internet).



    However, the included slc.dll is unsigned, suspiciously short, and consists mostly of functions which do nothing. In other words, it has been patched to always generate a "successful KMS activation" ticket without ever contacting a KMS server at all. So I'm 99% sure that you were sent a crack.



    Although this doesn't imply that the license key you've bought is garbage, it's very likely to be.






    share|improve this answer












    KMS is a standard Windows activation mechanism used for "volume" licenses. That is, instead of performing a permanent activation bound to the computer, it's a license server that issues 120-day activations for all PCs on a corporate network.



    So KMS itself is not illegal – but the illegal part that you're describing comes from installing a fake KMS server to provide licenses that you don't actually own. (I don't know the specifics of MS licensing, but selling 'real' KMS activations off a real server to third parties is most likely not permitted either.)



    The attached archive appears to do something very similar. The script mostly just runs some built-in Windows tools and configures a generic product key that tells Windows to use KMS, but it does not install a local fake KMS server nor does it configure any specific remote KMS server to be used (e.g. over the Internet).



    However, the included slc.dll is unsigned, suspiciously short, and consists mostly of functions which do nothing. In other words, it has been patched to always generate a "successful KMS activation" ticket without ever contacting a KMS server at all. So I'm 99% sure that you were sent a crack.



    Although this doesn't imply that the license key you've bought is garbage, it's very likely to be.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Dec 13 '18 at 13:23









    grawity

    233k36493547




    233k36493547












    • Worth pointing out that, Windows Server itself, would act its own Key Management Server (KMS) once you configure it as such. Offline activation is possible, with an initial challenge and response, Windows would activate the same way it activates when it contacts Microsoft. So KMS isn’t an application or a script which is how we know what you were sent is legitimate
      – Ramhound
      Dec 13 '18 at 21:09




















    • Worth pointing out that, Windows Server itself, would act its own Key Management Server (KMS) once you configure it as such. Offline activation is possible, with an initial challenge and response, Windows would activate the same way it activates when it contacts Microsoft. So KMS isn’t an application or a script which is how we know what you were sent is legitimate
      – Ramhound
      Dec 13 '18 at 21:09


















    Worth pointing out that, Windows Server itself, would act its own Key Management Server (KMS) once you configure it as such. Offline activation is possible, with an initial challenge and response, Windows would activate the same way it activates when it contacts Microsoft. So KMS isn’t an application or a script which is how we know what you were sent is legitimate
    – Ramhound
    Dec 13 '18 at 21:09






    Worth pointing out that, Windows Server itself, would act its own Key Management Server (KMS) once you configure it as such. Offline activation is possible, with an initial challenge and response, Windows would activate the same way it activates when it contacts Microsoft. So KMS isn’t an application or a script which is how we know what you were sent is legitimate
    – Ramhound
    Dec 13 '18 at 21:09















    2














    Key Management Service (KMS) is used to activate Microsoft products on clients using generic keys against a Volume Activation Service, hosted on a remote server. Legally owned volume licenses are installed on the server and activation is required typically every 180 days to keep the products activated on client machines.
    For more information, please refer to the
    Understanding KMS
    article by Microsoft.



    Hacking tools using KMS activation emulate a fake KMS server on the local computer and trick Microsoft products to activate against it. Products activated this way have temporary valid license and when installing such hack tools, a task is often created to automatically renew it every 60 days.



    In my opinion, Lazada has taken your money and gave you a hacking tool,
    which by itself is dangerous to use as it might install unknown software
    on your computer.
    The product key you received is probably for KMS activation, so cannot be
    used by itself for normal Windows activation.



    I'm afraid your money is lost.
    I recommend looking for a legitimate seller of Microsoft licenses.






    share|improve this answer


























      2














      Key Management Service (KMS) is used to activate Microsoft products on clients using generic keys against a Volume Activation Service, hosted on a remote server. Legally owned volume licenses are installed on the server and activation is required typically every 180 days to keep the products activated on client machines.
      For more information, please refer to the
      Understanding KMS
      article by Microsoft.



      Hacking tools using KMS activation emulate a fake KMS server on the local computer and trick Microsoft products to activate against it. Products activated this way have temporary valid license and when installing such hack tools, a task is often created to automatically renew it every 60 days.



      In my opinion, Lazada has taken your money and gave you a hacking tool,
      which by itself is dangerous to use as it might install unknown software
      on your computer.
      The product key you received is probably for KMS activation, so cannot be
      used by itself for normal Windows activation.



      I'm afraid your money is lost.
      I recommend looking for a legitimate seller of Microsoft licenses.






      share|improve this answer
























        2












        2








        2






        Key Management Service (KMS) is used to activate Microsoft products on clients using generic keys against a Volume Activation Service, hosted on a remote server. Legally owned volume licenses are installed on the server and activation is required typically every 180 days to keep the products activated on client machines.
        For more information, please refer to the
        Understanding KMS
        article by Microsoft.



        Hacking tools using KMS activation emulate a fake KMS server on the local computer and trick Microsoft products to activate against it. Products activated this way have temporary valid license and when installing such hack tools, a task is often created to automatically renew it every 60 days.



        In my opinion, Lazada has taken your money and gave you a hacking tool,
        which by itself is dangerous to use as it might install unknown software
        on your computer.
        The product key you received is probably for KMS activation, so cannot be
        used by itself for normal Windows activation.



        I'm afraid your money is lost.
        I recommend looking for a legitimate seller of Microsoft licenses.






        share|improve this answer












        Key Management Service (KMS) is used to activate Microsoft products on clients using generic keys against a Volume Activation Service, hosted on a remote server. Legally owned volume licenses are installed on the server and activation is required typically every 180 days to keep the products activated on client machines.
        For more information, please refer to the
        Understanding KMS
        article by Microsoft.



        Hacking tools using KMS activation emulate a fake KMS server on the local computer and trick Microsoft products to activate against it. Products activated this way have temporary valid license and when installing such hack tools, a task is often created to automatically renew it every 60 days.



        In my opinion, Lazada has taken your money and gave you a hacking tool,
        which by itself is dangerous to use as it might install unknown software
        on your computer.
        The product key you received is probably for KMS activation, so cannot be
        used by itself for normal Windows activation.



        I'm afraid your money is lost.
        I recommend looking for a legitimate seller of Microsoft licenses.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 13 '18 at 12:59









        harrymc

        254k13265565




        254k13265565






























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