Desperate, Marcus opened PowerShell. He typed a command he’d found buried in a 2019 Adobe enterprise forum—a command that didn’t even appear in the official documentation. Three seconds later, all 300 machines silently activated.
| Parameter | Meaning | Insider Note | |-----------|---------|---------------| | -mode silent | No UI, no popups, no errors shown | Essential for SCCM deployments | | -action activate | Trigger online activation | Alternative: deactivate or repair | | -serialNumber | The 24-char VL key | Without this, it tries retail activation |
This forcibly deactivated Acrobat Reader across an entire sales floor, causing a six-hour productivity loss. Adobe silently patched the utility in version 2023.001.20174 to require for deactivation, but activation remains SYSTEM-friendly. Adobe Acrobat Reader Activation Cmd
Start-Process -FilePath "adobe_licutil.exe" -ArgumentList "-mode silent -action activate -serialNumber XXX" -Verb RunAsUser Or using from Sysinternals:
Wait, what?
But here’s where the story gets strange: No error message. No log entry. Just… nothing. Chapter 3: The Elevation Paradox Marcus’s 2:00 AM discovery was not just the command—it was the privilege trick . Adobe’s activation utility respects Windows Integrity Levels. To activate, the command must be run under SYSTEM or an administrator account, but crucially, not an elevated admin .
@echo off psexec -s "%~dp0adobe_licutil.exe" -mode silent -action activate -serialNumber %1 if %errorlevel% equ 0 ( echo Activation success. Check pcd.log for confirmation. ) else ( echo Error %errorlevel% - run repair first. ) He’s used it three times in the last year. Each time, the GUI was broken. Each time, the command worked. Desperate, Marcus opened PowerShell
-action deactivate -serialNumber 0000-0000-0000-0000-0000-0000
Yes: Running the command in an elevated Command Prompt (Administrator: Yes) sometimes fails due to session isolation. The working method Marcus used was: | Parameter | Meaning | Insider Note |
A successful activation writes an entry like: