Skip to main content

Easeus Data | Recovery Wizard 11.8.0 Hosts.rar

EaseUS frequently runs 30-50% discounts on Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and New Year's. A one-month license is often cheaper than the full year. Paying $49 for peace of mind is vastly cheaper than paying $500 to a data recovery lab—or losing your data forever because a cracked version failed.

What happens if the scan finds your files but the crack fails, and the software asks for a key again? You have no recourse. The pirate who uploaded the .rar won't help you. EaseUS support certainly won't help someone using a cracked version. EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard 11.8.0 hosts.rar

The hosts file is a system file (C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc\hosts on Windows) that maps domain names to IP addresses. Crackers modify it to block the software’s online activation servers. For example, adding lines like: EaseUS frequently runs 30-50% discounts on Black Friday,

127.0.0.1 activation.easeus.com
127.0.0.64 easeus.com

This tricks the software into thinking it’s registered. The “.rar” archive (often named hosts.rar) contains a patched executable, a fake license key generator, or a script to replace the hosts file automatically. This tricks the software into thinking it’s registered

Before using any tool, stop writing to the affected drive. Use a live Linux USB (like Ubuntu) to mount the drive read-only and try simple copy commands. Sometimes the files are still visible but marked as deleted — TestDisk can repair partition tables.

Pirated recovery tools are a favorite hiding spot for malware. Since users run them with administrator privileges (to access raw disk sectors), a tainted crack can:

In 2020–2021, security researchers found over 15,000 systems infected by fake EaseUS cracks distributed via torrent sites and file forums.