![]() It denied me, saying the free upgrade had ended, as expected. I tried an upgrade a while back just to see what would happen. If the free upgrade was truly supposed to end at the end of July, why have the activation servers keep allowing those old keys to work? Spartan117458 wrote:The only thing I can't understand about that process is why Microsoft keeps allowing activation for those old Win7/8.1 keys if they aren't providing a legitimate license. They would prefer to let some people break the rules rather than accidentally stop those who deserve the upgrade. MS hasn't stopped the upgrades because it would potentially interfere with legit uses, like those usingĪssistive technologies. All keys of the right type (Home, Pro, etc.) were allowed to upgrade. Why can people break the law if it's illegal?Īlso, MS never checked to see if keys where old or new. The only thing I can't understand about that process is why Microsoft keeps allowing activation for those old Win7/8.1 keys if they aren't providing a legitimate license. ![]() The free upgrade ended a while back, so while this may work, it won't be a legit license. Once Windows is up and running, use the Windows 7 key - it will activate and convert to Windows 10 key. ![]() ![]() If you have a legit Windows 7 key that hasn't been upgraded, just install 10 and skip the key on the initial install. ![]()
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