Security vendors flag these tools because they exhibit behavior typical of malware (modifying system core files). While the legitimate version of KMS-VL-All (often developed by known figures in the "digital freedom" community) may be open-source and free of malware, the distribution method is where the danger lies.
KMS-VL-All-AIO stands for Key Management Service - Volume License - All In One. kms-vl-all-aio-0.47.0.zip
The specific file version, 0.47.0, denotes a release iteration that likely includes bug fixes, updated support for the latest Windows builds, or refined scripts to avoid detection by Windows Defender. Security vendors flag these tools because they exhibit
Organize your files into a logical directory structure. For an all-in-one installer, you might want a structure like: The specific file version, 0
/kms-vl-all-aio-0.47.0
/bin
# Scripts for installation, start, stop, etc.
/config
# Configuration files or templates
/docs
# Documentation
/lib
# Libraries or modules required by KMS
README.txt
LICENSE.txt