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Microsoft Suggests Windows 10 Pro Activation Problems Will Clear in 24 Hours

Microsoft on Friday updated its advice to Windows 10 Pro edition users frustrated by a recent activation glitch, suggesting that the problem will get automatically resolved in a day.

Here's Microsoft's latest update on the issue as of the morning of Nov. 9:

Any affected customer can continue to use Windows 10 Pro as usual, and the watermark will disappear within 24 hours as activation is automatically restored.
To manually resolve the issue: Select the Start button, select Settings > Update & security > Activation, and then select Troubleshoot to run the Activation Troubleshooter. (If the device is already activated, the Troubleshoot option will not appear.)

The so-called "watermark" is a message on the screens of Windows 10 users suggesting that they are running improperly licensed software. It'll go away for properly licensed users, Microsoft explained.

Windows 10 Pro users earlier this week had reported getting such activation problems. They complained in a Reddit Windows 10 discussion forum and a Microsoft community forum, for instance. Some users reported that their Windows 10 Pro editions were getting flagged as being Home editions.

Microsoft acknowledged the problem on Thursday, adding that such users may have received error codes 0X803F8001 and 0xC004C003. Microsoft promised a fix in "two business days."

The glitch was "a problem with the activation servers," according to Microsoft's early description in the community post. It affected users in "Japan, Korea, American and many other countries," the post indicated. While forum participants had described the problem early on as affecting the Pro edition of Windows 10, Microsoft later suggested the glitch may have affected "some customers' Windows 10 Pro and Windows 10 Enterprise machines."

The extent of Microsoft's service activation problem for users isn't clear. However, the count at Microsoft's community forum listed 1,224 respondents as saying they had the same question about the problem. So far, there's been no explanation about why Microsoft's activation servers failed to work properly.

About the Author

Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.

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