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But what was the origin of the invalid numbers? That's the teaser I kept reading for ...


There more info here: http://www.keacher.com/1060/how-i-got-to-my-first-sale/

The first result for "blurity serial number" points to https://www.trademarkia.com/blurity-77870929.html

Edit: Entering the serial number does indeed produce the easter egg dialog, with a coupon code that still works. BTW, there is a typo on the buy page 'regsitration'.


We have a winner!

After I discovered people were doing that, I was rather surprised that they thought that the trademark serial number would be a valid registration key. I guess people don't read.

Edit: Thanks for the heads-up about the typo. Oops!


Mind the sampling method, it only suggests that software pirates don't read ;)


Think like someone trying to get software for free, and you should get it.


OK, I'm thinking like someone who's trying to get software for free. I still don't get it.

If they were modifying an existing valid key, it doesn't seem like people would keep using the same one. Unless people are downloading a keygen or something.

Any more hints?


To me it seems like these keys were shared on a site somewhere and when people Googled for free blurity key or whatever these came up.


If that were true the author would have been able to find the keys, but he said Google failed him.


Maybe they didn't search on Google then, but another forum or site that isn't indexed by Google.


It's possible the serial was posted on a dark net, such as Tor.


Maybe the invalid key was posted on a warez site and everybody was trying to use it.


Besides a keygen, software might be bundled with a list of keys to use when downloading from certain sites.




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