

- #BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE INSTALL#
- #BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE PATCH#
- #BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE ISO#
- #BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE WINDOWS 7#
- #BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE WINDOWS#
Windows Product Key Hash: kuih8eJuUDgtNRwQvxlm7O449ek= I tried to run MGADiag and here is the result: I tried to use phone activation but it didn't success. I tried to re-input the key here (Control Panel\System and Security\System) and suddenly my desktop go black and there is watermark "This copy of Windows is not genuine".

#BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE ISO#
I decided to download the ISO from here ( ) with my original key of Win 7 but they reject the request. I need to reinstall the Windows but my drive is broken.
#BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE PATCH#
Tell the people on the other end of the line that Microsoft's stupid KB 3004394 patch broke your system, and you want a refund.I got an original Win 7 HP I bought when I bought my Asus laptop. If Windows continues to report that you aren't genuine, you should go through the steps to activate Windows over the phone. If you haven't, click the link to Activate Windows Now.
#BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE WINDOWS 7#
But if Windows 7 is telling you that you're a thief and a scoundrel, try this: Even at this late date - working all the way through the weekend, until late Sunday night - I'm not sure that this fix will work in all cases. There's been a whole lot of bad advice flowing around this problem. In addition, the Silver Bullet patch removed all mention of KB 3004394 and KB 3024777 from the list of installed updates. Late Thursday night, Microsoft released its "Silver Bullet" patch, KB 3024777, which nullified KB 3004394 (I'm tempted to say "uninstalled" but it isn't clear whether the bad patch is literally uninstalled). Then we started hearing rumors that manually uninstalling KB 3004394 would, in fact, cause more problems. On Thursday afternoon, Microsoft started advising in the Answers Forum that people infected with KB 3004394 should manually remove the patch, although the KB 3004394 article admonished, "The ability to remove Windows Updates through Control Panel may no longer function on some Windows 7 SP1-based and Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1-based computers after KB 3004394 is installed." On Thursday morning, Microsoft pulled the patch.
#BUILD 7601 NOT GENUINE INSTALL#
Windows users started screaming about KB 3004394 within hours of it being rolled out of the Automatic Update chute last Tuesday: Bogus UAC prompts, MMC plug-ins refused to start, Windows Defender wouldn't start, Microsoft Security Essentials wouldn't install, VirtualBox wouldn't work, the AMD Catalyst Omega driver wouldn't install, and other Windows Updates wouldn't install after KB 3004394 infected those machines. And if you guessed that the bad patch may not even show up on customers' systems, you get the giant whoopee cushion. If you guessed that the aberrant patch is KB 3004394, you get the big prize. If you guessed that all of those problems were caused by a bad Black Tuesday patch, you win the small prize. Looking around the Internet and answering my email, I see at least a hundred posts from people who are being told their copy of Windows 7 is disingenuous when, in fact, they know it's genuine. I could go on - there are dozens more, in the Activation section alone, all in the same vein - but you get the gist of it.

Another "This computer is not running genuine Windows".Windows 7 "not genuine" message after 3 years without a problem."This computer is not running genuine windows" What is this? How do I fix it?.Windows keeps claiming my genuine copy is non-genuine.This computer is not running genuine windows.Windows installed latest updates, and now says my version of Windows isn't genuine?.I receive error "This copy of Windows is not genuine"."Windows 7 Build 7601 This copy of Windows is not genuine." Purchased hard copy of Windows from retail store."This computer is not running a genuine version of windows" I know this version is genuine.I'm being told my copy of Windows is not genuine, but it is.Windows Genuine but getting message not genuine.I have a question for you: What do all of these Microsoft Answers forum posts have in common? Have you been following this month's Black Tuesday bounty of problematic patches? Good.
