In short: It’s a label used by pirates to indicate that a particular cracked copy has been tested (”verified”) to bypass licensing checks.
The term in this context usually refers to the integrity of the software installation (ensuring it is a legitimate, unaltered copy) or, more commonly in security operations, the "Acunetix Verified" certification mark applied to web applications that have passed a rigorous security scan. This write-up explores the significance of Build 105 and the implications of a "Verified" security status.
Why specifically version 105? Later builds (110+) introduced stricter telemetry, making "verification" harder. Version 105 offers a sweet spot:
Acunetix is a Dynamic Application Security Testing (DAST) tool designed to identify over 7,000 security weaknesses in web applications. It crawls a target site and simulates attacks—such as SQL injection and Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)—to find exploitable vulnerabilities.
The phrase "Acunetix 105 verified" refers to a specific status in the Acunetix Web Vulnerability Scanner