It probably has to do with UAC (User Account Control). The extra layer of protection for Windows Vista and Windows 7.
You'll need to request permissions to the registry.
EDIT:
Your code right now:
var keys = Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey("SOFTWARE")
.OpenSubKey("Microsoft")
.OpenSubKey("Cryptography", RegistryKeyPermissionCheck.ReadSubTree)
.GetValueNames();
Only requests the permissions on the Cryptography subkey, maybe that causes the problem (at least I had that once), so the new code would then be:
var keys = Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey("SOFTWARE", RegistryKeyPermissionCheck.ReadSubTree)
.OpenSubKey("Microsoft", RegistryKeyPermissionCheck.ReadSubTree)
.OpenSubKey("Cryptography", RegistryKeyPermissionCheck.ReadSubTree)
.GetValueNames();
EDIT2:
I attached the debugger to it, on this code:
var key1 = Registry.LocalMachine.OpenSubKey("SOFTWARE", RegistryKeyPermissionCheck.ReadSubTree);
var key2 = key1.OpenSubKey("Microsoft", RegistryKeyPermissionCheck.ReadSubTree);
var key3 = key2.OpenSubKey("Cryptography", RegistryKeyPermissionCheck.ReadSubTree);
var key4 = key3.GetValueNames();
It turns out, you can read that specific value, at least that's my guess, because all data is correct, until I open key3, there the ValueCount is zero, instead of the expected 1.
I think it's a special value that's protected.