Hum!

It never ceases to amaze me that this sort of questions are even asked.
As quickly as people develop electronic protection schemes other people work 
out ways to get round them.

I have just spent 2 minutes searching with Google and, could, should I wish 
(which I don't as I don't own any DRM or other-wise protected media files), 
undo the protection "lickety-split".

Presumably Apple, in their "infinite wisdom", have protected their media files 
just exactly so that everybody, including RR programmers and end-users, cannot 
play them.

However, as Runtime Revolution works with Quicktime, it should play any file 
that Quicktime can play. It is probably necessary to 'tell' Revolution to play 
DRM audio files using the Player object as if they were video files; i.e. 
define DRM audio files with videoClip rather than with audioClip. A few years 
ago I authored a CD-ROM for Scottish High Schools on music education; I 
converted all the original sound files into MOV files (using a blank image as a 
dummy video file); this allowed for a good level of end-user control via "play 
videoClip at xx,xx".

Personally I object to the following:

I am legally not allowed to make a backup copy of a DVD I own
(bl**dy silly when it gets damaged),

similarly with music CDs,

I am legally not allowed to transfer data from gramophone records I own to home 
made music CDs for my own use,

I am legally not allowed to transfer data from cassette tapes I own to home 
made music CDs for my own use,

I am legally not allowed to transfer data from VHS tapes I own to home made 
DVDs for my own use.

As a result my home is full of gramophone players, cassette players, VHS 
players and so forth, taking up an awful lot of space. I am a child of the 
1970s who grew up with a cheap cassette recorder and an even cheaper 
record-player: my friends and I "cross-copied" without being aware of doing 
anything 'naughty'. We all spent quite a lot of our parents' hard-earned money 
on records.

So why on earth I should pay money for a DRM-protected piece of music I cannot 
pop onto a CD to listen to on a picnic, or, even, transfer to another of my 
machines so that I can listen to it in another room, I don't know.
____________________________________________________________

A Thorn in the flesh is better than a failed Systems Development Life Cycle.
____________________________________________________________



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