Windows 7 Cracks
New Windows Pirates Strike again!
There are already a bunch of cracks purportedly out there for Windows 7.
Software cracking is the modification of software to
remove protection methods: copy prevention, trial/demo
version, serial number, hardware key, CD check or software
annoyances like nag screens and adware.
The distribution and use of cracked copies is illegal in
almost every developed country. There have been many
lawsuits over cracking software, but most have been to do
with the distribution of the duplicated product rather than
the process of defeating the protection, due to the
difficulty of constructing legally sound proof of individual
guilt in the latter instance.
In the United States, the passing of the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) legislation made software
cracking, as well as the distribution of information which
enables software cracking, illegal.
However, the law has hardly been tested in the U.S.
judiciary in cases of reverse engineering for personal use
only. The European Union passed the European Union Copyright
Directive in May 2001, making software copyright
infringement illegal in member states once national
legislation has been enacted pursuant to the directive.
The most common software crack is the modification of an
application's binary to cause or prevent a specific key
branch in the program's execution. This is accomplished by
reverse engineering the compiled program code using a
debugger such as SoftICE, OllyDbg, GDB, or MacsBug until the
software cracker reaches the subroutine that contains the
primary method of protecting the software (or by
disassembling an executable file with a program such as
IDA).
The binary is then modified using the debugger or a hex
editor in a manner that replaces a prior branching opcode
with its complement or a NOP opcode so the key branch will
either always execute a specific subroutine or skip over it.
Almost all common software cracks are a variation of this
type. Software developers are constantly developing
techniques such as code obfuscation, encryption, and
self-modifying code to make this modification increasingly
difficult.
A specific example of this technique is a crack that removes
the expiration period from a time-limited trial of an
application. These cracks are usually programs that patch
the program executable and sometimes the .dll or .so linked
to the application. Similar cracks are available for
software that requires a hardware dongle. A company can also
break the copy preventions of programs that they have
legally purchased but that are licensed to particular
hardware, so that there is no risk of downtime due to
hardware failure (and, of course, no need to restrict
oneself to running the software on bought hardware only).
In other cases, it might be possible to decompile a program
in order to get access to the original source code or code
on a level higher than machine code. This is often possible
with scripting languages. An example is cracking (or
debugging) on the .NET platform where one might consider
manipulating CIL to achieve one's needs.
There are a number of sites on the Internet that let users
download cracks for popular games and applications (although
at the danger of acquiring malicious software that is
sometimes distributed via such sites). Although these cracks
are used by legal buyers of software they can also be used
by people who have downloaded or otherwise obtained pirated
software (often through P2P networks).
The most visible and controversial effect of software
cracking is the releasing of fully operable proprietary
software without any copy protection. Software companies
represented by the Business Software Alliance estimate and
claim losses due to piracy.
Software cracking has also had positive effects for the
industry, as well as general consumers. For example, the
warez groups have helped increase the popularity of file
formats such as Xvid and MP3.
Due to the potential legal repercussions, many individuals
who release cracks to the public for commercially available
software choose to remain anonymous. This can often create
confusion as the available documentation is often sparse. It
is beyond the ability of most to determine the exact
operations the crack will execute.
As an example, several spyware removal utilities have rules
in place that regard certain cracks as having a malicious
payload such as a hidden DDOS daemon.
The first software copy protection was on early Apple II and
Commodore 64 software. Game publishers, in particular,
carried on an arms race with software crackers. More
recently, publishers have resorted to increasingly complex
countermeasures, such as StarForce, to try to stop
unauthorized copying of their software.
Most of the early software crackers were computer hobbyists
who often formed groups that competed against each other in
the cracking and spreading of software. Breaking a new copy
protection scheme as quickly as possible was often regarded
as an opportunity to demonstrate one's technical superiority
rather than a possibility of money-making. The cracker
groups of the 1980's started to advertise themselves and
their skills by attaching animated screens known as crack
intros in the software programs they cracked and released.
Once the technical competition had expanded from the challenges of cracking to the challenges of creating visually stunning intros, the foundations for a new subculture known as demoscene were established. Demoscene started to separate itself from the illegal "warez scene" during the 1990's and is now regarded as a completely different subculture.
Many software crackers have later grown into (extremely)
capable software reverse engineers; The deep knowledge of
assembly required in order to crack protections enables them
- inter alia - to reverse engineer drivers in order to port
them from binary-only drivers for Windows to drivers with
source code for GNU/Linux and other Free operating systems.
Software crackers have their secretive organizations on the
Internet. Similar to other "gray area" Internet activities,
there are also various detector, legal and other specialists
on the subject.
Apple Computer has begun incorporating a Trusted Platform
Module into their Apple Macintosh line of computers, and
making use of it in such applications as Rosetta. Parts of
the operating system not fully x86-native run through the
Rosetta PowerPC emulator, which in turn requires the Trusted
Platform Module for proper operation. (This description
applies to the developer preview version, but the mechanism
differs in the release version.) Recently, the OSx86 project
has been releasing patches to circumvent this mechanism.
Microsoft is planning to reduce common Windows based
software cracking with the release of the NGSCB initiative
in future versions of their operating system.
*from Windows
Vista Update*















