Vista: Piracy rates half the level of XP, says Microsoft

Tougher to fake it...

By Ina Fried, 4 December 2007 08:52

NEWS

Microsoft said it's seeing piracy rates for Windows Vista that are half those of Windows XP.

The decline in piracy rates is largely due to the fact Vista is much tougher to fake than XP.

Microsoft VP, Mike Sievert, said: "Piracy rates are lower because it's harder."

There are a variety of reasons for that, including the fact businesses no longer have volume licence keys that can be used to activate an unlimited number of machines. Another is the fact Vista machines that aren't properly activated pretty quickly become basically unusable once they enter "reduced functionality mode".

For Microsoft, the gains have been significant. In its last profits call, Microsoft said five percentage points of Windows growth could be attributed to gains in piracy.

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But Microsoft is making the experience a little less harsh for those running pirated versions of Vista. With Service Pack 1, Microsoft is doing away with reduced functionality mode in favour of putting prominent notifications on systems that are not found to be genuine.

Non-genuine systems with SP1 will display a warning at start-up that the system is not properly activated. Users will have the option to "activate now" or "activate later", though the second option won't show up for a time. Users will also have their desktop background changed to white and a prominent notification placed in the lower right hand corner saying that the machine is not genuine.

Still, in a significant change, those with non-genuine or non-activated copies of Vista will still be able to use their systems. Sievert said the change is designed to minimise the impact on customers who might unwittingly have gotten an illegitimate copy of Vista while still discouraging piracy.

He said: "People won't want this experience, at the same time it will be broadly interpreted as being more fair."

Also with SP1, Microsoft is closing two key loopholes that pirates have used to evade Microsoft's security measures. One involves mimicking the process used by large computer makers to pre-activate their Vista machines, while the other extends the grace period that customers have to activate their machine, in some cases extending it for decades. It's not the first time Microsoft has moved to close holes in its activation process. A year ago, the company changed Vista to disable a hack known as "Frankenbuild" that merged elements of the final Vista with a pre-release version.

Ina Fried writes for CNET News.com

Comments

There are 9 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Guy Reynolds

    Or maybe its that the pirates have read the market better than Microsoft and realise that it is not worth pirating Vista yet, since the market does not appear to want it.

  2. 2. James Wilkinson

    LOL Even the Pirates don't want Vista....

  3. 3. anonymous

    Because none of the pirates are foolish enough to actually want Vista on their machines, maybe?

  4. 4. Karen Challinor

    Microsoft VP, Mike Sievert, said: "Piracy rates are lower because it's harder."

    Cloud starer, Karen Challinor says: "Piracy rates are lower because nobody wants it"

    once you get past the "oo pretty" of the aero interface what do you get, you get an OS that thinks it's job is to tell you what to do the entire thing is the embodiment of that damn paperclip assistant

    an OS is supposed to control the machine and make the resources of the machine available to the user in a controlled yet accessible manner, it is not the job of the OS to control the user

  5. 5. anonymous

    Maybe its because only half as many want Vista?

  6. 6. Richard

    Perhaps even "pirates" don't want Vista?

    "...seeing piracy rates for Windows Vista that are half those of Windows XP..."

    So, even "pirates" have some sense!

  7. 7. Roger Ash

    I wonder if it's occurred to Microsoft that only popular software suffers from high piracy levels?

  8. 8. Jeremy Wickins

    A better explanation for the low piracy rate is that those who would use pirated copies don't want Vista, just like everyone else. Recent articles seem to suggest that the majority of Vista sales are OEM on machines sold, not upgrades, with lots of people reformatting and putting XP on their shiny new machine. Microsoft may just be missing the point (or just spinning a story nicely!)

  9. 9. Joe Whitehead

    Why would someone running illegitimate copies of games they didn't pay for, want a DOS (DRM Operating System)?
    The people who would pirate Windows Vista are likely to be selling/distributing it (truly pirated), and not just unauthorized users.
    What I'm saying, is that if they can 'fix' the activation, then they're likely not to want the extra 'features' in the first place.

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