'Since came out, it has been running nonstop and has retrieved 2 more keys that are not valid.'
'it was successful in retrieving 3 Keys with only 1 working,' wrote salmypal. But I'd wish people would stop using it, and I think it'll be deleted from the site soon.' As of Monday, KezNews still included links to several sites where KeyGen could be found.īut some users remained adamant that the brute force utility had cranked out one or more valid Vista keys. 'I don't think there is anything they can do. I'd prefer a job rather than a lawsuit,' he wrote. 'Well, actually yes, I am worried about getting into trouble. 'Are you scared of getting into trouble?' asked tyga45.Ĭomputer User replied to that question Saturday. 'It's not fake, it's not impossible, but it's near impossible,' wrote a user identified as ecko, who posted another message reading: 'It's not a hoax, but it takes so long you'll be wasting your time trying.' Last week, a KezNews poster calculated that that it would take Computer User's KeyGen 1.35 quintillion years to check all possible 25-character combinations that make up a Vista product activation key. Others writing on the same thread were leery of Computer User's new-found religion, and either called his revelation into question or wondered if it had been issued because he had been spooked by legal threats.