![]() ![]() ![]() Now you're thinking, "but scams don't fly." Yes they do - they may go viral by being promoted by influencers who do or don't know they're scams. ![]() "If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, flies like a duck, makes babies like a duck, eats like a duck, and quacks like a duck, it probably is." Just replace "duck" with "scam that manipulates you based on your hopes and/or fears". "If it seems too good to be true, then it probably is." After researching, I determined that they are probably a criminal enterprise. I had someone recommend one such vendor (BryteSoft) to me, and another defended that company, located in Hong Kong. Some of what I state will, by proxy, equally apply to other really cheap keys for other companies' products. You'll find blogs, vlogs and reviews about this controversy all over, but I'm going to try to look at this not based on my hopes of super-cheap keys but on legality and Microsoft's public stand. People sometimes ask about various websites that are selling software keys for $10-$20 or some other very temptingly low price (legit Windows 10 starts at about $140, Windows 11 at $200), especially when it comes to Windows and expensive software (e.g. ![]()
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