Yes – the tools included are freeware, open‑source, or licensed for offline recovery. Using it to bypass security on a PC you don’t own is .
When you boot from this ISO—via USB, CD/DVD, or PXE—you are presented with a familiar Windows desktop. But beneath the surface lies a treasure trove:
The x32 version is a preservationist’s tool. It supports hardware from the Pentium III era (SSE-supporting) up to early Core i-series machines. Many corporate environments still run Windows 7 32-bit on terminals, and this ISO provides the only means to recover them when vendor tools fail.