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by ezekg
3512 days ago
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I didn't mean to claim that the product is uncrackable; I only meant that the API is secure and produces cryptographically sound tokens and license keys. Keygen does nothing to circumvent users from modifying a product's source code. It is only an API, and not a way to obfuscate an app; that's up to the discretion of the company/person developing the app. There will always be ways to bypass licensing, especially for apps built on web tech, e.g. web apps, Electron apps, NW.js apps, etc. There are ways around it, sure. But that part isn't what Keygen is for. Keygen uses a combination of serial keys for licensing, as well as hardware-locked licensing by tracking machine fingerprints. It's up to the developer to enforce these, however. Also, Keygen solves a very different problem that Nalpeiron, Lime LM, Agilis, Cryptlex, etc. do not solve: easy licensing for web-based apps. All of the solutions I've seen are cumbersome, unintuitive and are of course primarily designed for compiled apps. All of that has lead me (and others) to developing licensing systems in-house that behave more or less identically. |
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