Go to Office.com and sign up for a free Microsoft account.
However, as we were about to save our work, one of my teammates expressed concerns about using a cracked version of the software. She pointed out that it was against Microsoft's terms of service and could potentially harm our computers.
The "cracked" software hadn't just given him PowerPoint; it had invited a Trojan horse into his system. The malware had sat quietly while he worked, systematically locking every folder on the hard drive—including the presentation he’d just finished. Even worse, the "updated" version had logged into his email and sent the same infected link to everyone in his contact list, disguised as a "Shared Document."
Go to Office.com and sign up for a free Microsoft account.
However, as we were about to save our work, one of my teammates expressed concerns about using a cracked version of the software. She pointed out that it was against Microsoft's terms of service and could potentially harm our computers.
The "cracked" software hadn't just given him PowerPoint; it had invited a Trojan horse into his system. The malware had sat quietly while he worked, systematically locking every folder on the hard drive—including the presentation he’d just finished. Even worse, the "updated" version had logged into his email and sent the same infected link to everyone in his contact list, disguised as a "Shared Document."