

This information is "hashed" before it is sent. This is an MD5 hash of your machine information, including information about your hard drive (the serial number), your CPU, your bios, and your Windows install. Of interest to some is the machine specific hash that will be sent. What machine specific information does PingPlotter send? A hash describing the machine you're currently running on.Your user name (as you entered it in PingPlotter).When you enter your registration code into PingPlotter, the following information is sent: What information is sent to the PingPlotter servers?

It was designed to make the use of unpurchased registration keys more difficult (hopefully, just difficult enough that people will feel it's worth $39.99 to register!). It was not designed to help companies monitor their license count usage. It was *NOT* designed to cause problems from people that want to use it on multiple PCs personally (in fact, the PingPlotter single user license specifically allows installation on multiple PCs). The server side validation code was designed specifically to stop keygens from working - both the current version, and other versions in the future. This document is a brief overview of how this works. The upside is that the implementation is pretty non-intrusive for real registered users, but there may be some concerns about privacy.
Key for pingplotter pro generator#
Why is this happening?Īlthough we really didn't want to have to do this (it took a considerable amount of time to implement), it was a measure made necessary by some of the hacking community (a key generator was released). Starting with version 2.30, PingPlotter registration keys are validated on the PingPlotter servers (). Information about PingPlotter server-side registration code validation
