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Home/ Questions/Q 7748403
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T10:46:35+00:00 2026-06-01T10:46:35+00:00

I’ve been using the below code in order to get the Windows License Key.

  • 0

I’ve been using the below code in order to get the Windows License Key. It worked pretty well a long time. But now I discovered that it works on Windows XP (x86) but not on Windows 7 x64.

Reason: The DigitalProductID regisitry value contains only zeroes within the range we are looking for on the 64 bit operating system. Therefore the result it BBBBB-BBBBB-BBBBB-BBBBB-BBBBB. Why is it so and how can I fix this?

    public static string LicenseCDKey
    {
        get
        {
            try
            {
                byte[] rpk = (byte[])Registry.LocalMachine
                   .OpenSubKey(@"Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion")
                   .GetValue("DigitalProductId");
                string serial = "";
                const string possible = "BCDFGHJKMPQRTVWXY2346789";
                for (int i = 0; i < 25; i++)
                {
                    int accu = 0;
                    for (int a = 0; a < 15; a++)
                    {
                        accu <<= 8;
                        accu += rpk[66 - a];
                        rpk[66 - a] = (byte)(accu / 24 & 0xff);
                        accu %= 24;
                    }
                    serial = possible[accu] + serial;
                    if (i % 5 == 4 && i < 24)
                    {
                        serial = "-" + serial;
                    }
                }
                return serial;
            }
            catch
            {
                return ErrorString;
            }
        }
    }
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T10:46:37+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 10:46 am

    As user287107 pointed out x86 applications (32 bit) running on a x64 operating system are using a different registry (registry view).

    In order to access the x64 registry you have a few options:

    1. Change your platform target to x64 (Visual Studio project settings).
    2. If you are using .Net Framework 4.0 you could use the RegistryKey class and RegistryView enum to access the x64 registry.

      RegistryKey key = RegistryKey.OpenBaseKey(RegistryHive.LocalMachine,
                                                RegistryView.Registry64);
      
      string keyPath = @"Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion";
      byte[] rpk = (byte[])key.OpenSubKey(keyPath).GetValue("DigitalProductId");
      
    3. If you are not using the .Net Framework 4.0 and you do not want to set your platform target to x64 you have to use Interop (RegOpenKeyEx() Win32 API function with the KEY_WOW64_32KEY flag) to access the x64 registry.

    BEGIN EDIT

    I’ve just found an interesting post explaining why the DigitialProductId key could be null/empty:

    1. You are using an Volume License Key to activate your Windows 7 operating system. The VLC key is deleted from the registry after activation.
    2. Someone deleted the registry key (modified the content of this key) manually using the command slmgr –cpky

    END EDIT

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