From install to a new machine in minutes
No deep setup. No tells left behind. Here is the full flow, start to finish.
Install the launcher
Download VexVM and sign in once. Your account binds to this machine, so no one else can use your license.
Pick or build an identity
Quick launch a ready-made profile, or on Studio open a profile and shape every identifier, from serials to fingerprint, by hand or from a preset.
Launch the machine
VexVM spins up a real, isolated Windows machine with your chosen hardware, routed through your proxy with timezone and locale matched to the exit IP.
The agent self-destructs
On first boot a one-shot agent rewrites the operating-system identifiers, applies your proxy and geo, then deletes itself. Nothing is left running in Task Manager to give the machine away.
Why the disguise holds
Every layer agrees with the next, so there is no contradiction for a detection system to catch.
Coherent by default
The CPU, GPU, board, screen and locale are generated together so they match one believable person.
Applied at the source
Identifiers are rewritten at the machine level, not patched in a browser, so they survive deep checks.
No residue
The setup agent removes itself and no guest tooling keeps running inside the machine.
Every identifier we rewrite, in the open
Browser tools change a handful of values. VexVM controls 33 identifiers across all three layers, kept consistent so the machine never contradicts itself. Nothing hidden behind a tab.
Hardware identifiers
The deepest layer most tools never touch - read straight off the firmware.
- System UUID
- System SKU and product name
- Motherboard manufacturer and serial
- Chassis type, version and serial
- BIOS vendor, version and release date
- BIOS firmware revision
- Disk model, firmware revision and serial
- CPU brand string and core layout
- ACPI OEM and table identifiers
- Monitor EDID and serial
- MAC address
Operating-system identifiers
Rebuilt automatically on first boot, then the agent removes itself.
- Machine SID
- MachineGuid
- Disk GPT/MBR signature
- Volume serial ID
- Device ID
- User profile ID
- Computer name and workgroup
- Windows Update client ID
- Windows Store ID
- Windows Product ID
- Install date
Browser and fingerprint
The layer websites actually read - kept consistent with the machine below it.
- Screen resolution and device pixel ratio
- Installed font list
- Canvas fingerprint
- WebGL vendor and renderer
- AudioContext fingerprint
- WebRTC leak guard
- Timezone and locale
- Hardware concurrency and device memory
- Media devices enumeration
- User agent and client hints
- Platform and touch points
Stop looking like the same machine
Spin up a clean computer for every account. Spoof everything, leave nothing, and run as many identities as your hardware allows.