A related question is Dealing with questions that openly imply software piracy, and Robert Harvey states:
Close and flag these types of questions as too localized.1
Yes, I know it's a bit of a contradiction. We do the same with
copyright infringements; moderators are not equipped to deal with
copyright claims (copyright claims should be directed at SE Corporate,
in the form of a DMCA takedown notice), and routinely decline such
flags. We do, however, close and delete such posts on the grounds
that plagiarized content is not a good fit for the site.
Questions that ask for help with cracking someone else's software are
in violation of Stack Exchange's TOS anyway. See
https://stackexchange.com/legal, Section 3(C).
And the relevant excerpt from Section 3(C):
Subscriber represents, warrants and agrees that it will not contribute
any Subscriber Content that (a) infringes, violates or otherwise
interferes with any copyright or trademark of another party, (b)
reveals any trade secret, unless Subscriber owns the trade secret or
has the owner’s permission to post it, (c) infringes any
intellectual property right of another or the privacy or publicity
rights of another,
Asking how to apply a crack is not the same as asking how to crack (i.e., reverse engineering) software. The question is off-topic because it's asking how to install software, by illicit means. It's likely that the question would've been downvoted and closed. It doesn't require moderator intervention.
- The most appropriate close reason I can see in this case is:
Questions about general computing hardware and software are
off-topic for Stack Overflow unless they directly involve tools used
primarily for programming.
Or a custom close reason:
[This question appears to be off-topic because] it's asking about how to install software, via illicit means.
You could try to edit the parts about piracy out if the question is salvageable.