By Friday, Elias wasn't worried about screen captures anymore. He was on the phone with fraud departments, wiping his hard drive, and changing every password he owned. The "free" software had cost him three days of lost work, a compromised identity, and a deep sense of digital violation.
The results were a digital bazaar. Dozens of sites screamed for his attention with flashing green "Download Now" buttons and promises of "100% Working" keys. He clicked on a link that looked cleaner than the others. The site was professional, filled with fake user comments praising the "latest portable version." Elias told himself it was just a temporary fix until his next invoice cleared.
He eventually bought the official license. As he entered the legitimate key, he realized the sleek interface was exactly the same as the cracked version, but this time, it came with something the download site could never provide: peace of mind. He never went back to the neon alleyways again.