I.D. Key


The so-called I.D. key is a number (in hexadecimal format) of 8 characters length, with a hyphen in the middle, like this one:

34F2-12C2

Using the I.D key for assigning passwords is useful because it is different for each computer, so a password generated using the I.D. key will be only valid in the computer with that I.D. number. In this way your users can't share their passwords with others, neither register the publication on a second computer.

You can get the I.D. key from different places that can be selected from a drop-down list at the bottom of Protection tab, as shows the image below:

So, the I.D. may be get from:

(1) The I.D. number will change every time the disk is formatted, partitioned or the file system changes from FAT32 to NTFS (which is used in Windows NT/2000).
(2) Accessing the hardware under Windows is not as straightforward as it was under DOS, so the real disk serial number may not be retrieved under some unusual hardware combinations and the system may freeze.
We do not recommend using this option getting the I.D. key from the hard disk real number because may be 5% of the systems may freeze.

 

Read I.D. from disk C forces the viewer to read the number from that location instead of reading it from the disk on which the program is running. If your made an executable publication, and ir runs from a CD-ROM, if this option is not checked, it will read the CD-ROM serial number.

If a HyperMaker publication has pages locked and the publication author has specified that the registration method must include the I.D. Key number, the user must provide their Name, the Publication Title, and the I.D. Key number as well, to allow the generation of the Registration key.

If a user tries to share their HyperMaker publication with a friend, the publication will revert back to the locked mode, because HyperMaker viewer will notice that the I.D. Key is not the same in the two computers.