Comparing Windows 10 Home and Windows 11 Home highlights differences in features, performance, and user experience.
Comparing Windows 10 Home and Windows 11 Home highlights differences in features, performance, and user experience.
Microsoft’s latest anti-piracy measures are making OEM and low-cost third-party keys ineffective. You’re considering purchasing a retail Windows 10 or 11 version with an offline account—what’s more suitable? Let me know! Thanks!
The information was shared on Discord, but the precise deployment date remains protected by confidentiality agreements. I don’t have confirmation from other sources beyond that. If it’s accurate, it’s unclear what steps to take regarding the OS since only a limited budget was allocated for a more affordable key.
It appears a Discord user is spreading unsubstantiated claims about upcoming anti-piracy initiatives from Microsoft, promising detailed updates without providing concrete dates or evidence. This behavior seems aimed at drawing interest rather than sharing reliable information.
Ah ok, do you by chance have any info about any of this anti piracy stuff? Or any idea where I can buy a retail key at a discount... it’s £119 here so it’s a lot more than I budgeted. Apparently when the anti piracy thing is rolled out it’s going to cause random shutdowns, annoying pop ups too (120 day after they release it). Other than that I also heard it may cause some sort of hardware locking??? (Don’t quite me on that I couldn’t make heads or tails as a lot of people were talking at once) so if this is true I’d rather steer clear of an OEM key.
Certainly! Here’s a rephrased version:
Ignore it and live on.
I haven’t heard much about the anti-piracy steps you mentioned. The main update I know is that the Pro version will need a Microsoft Account moving forward, similar to how Home works now. After the release of Windows 10, Microsoft has been more focused on expanding user adoption rather than restricting licenses, which makes sense given their strategy since then.