Once the virtual USB device is presented, the emulator must handle the communication. It sits between the AutoData software and the operating system's USB drivers. When AutoData sends a request (e.g., "Give me your serial number" or "Decrypt this challenge code"), the emulator intercepts this communication. It then processes the request and crafts a response that the real dongle would have sent, passing it back to AutoData. This seamless interception is the core of making the software believe the physical dongle is present.
For legacy offline versions, using an emulator typically involves several manual configurations to bypass modern Windows security features: autodata dongle emulator work
: Because emulators operate at the kernel driver level, a poorly coded emulator can cause "Blue Screen of Death" (BSOD) errors or conflict with antivirus software. Once the virtual USB device is presented, the