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iTunes DRM cracked wide open for GNU/Linux. Seriously.

Tom Warren   on 05 January 2004 - 22:02 · 92 comments & 4753 views

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Norwegian programmer Jon Lech Johansen, who broke the DVD encryption scheme, has opened iTunes locked music a tad further, by allowing people to play songs they've purchased on iTunes Music Store on their GNU/Linux computers.

"We're about to find out what Apple really thinks about Fair Use," Johansen told The Register via email.

Johansen cracked iTunes DRM scheme in November by releasing code for a small Windows program that dumps the stream to disk in raw AAC format. This raw format required some trivial additions to convert it to an MP4 file that could be played on any capable computer.

But in the best Apple ease-of-use tradition, Johansen has now made this completely seamless, integrating it with the VideoLAN streaming free software project.

View: Full Story
News source: The Reg

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#1 vetbangbang023 on 05 Jan 2004 - 22:18
He's risking going through all the same crap but I love how this guy just breaks everything on these peopel who spend millions creating it lol.
#2 vettimdorr on 05 Jan 2004 - 22:20
QUOTE
"We're about to find out what Apple really thinks about Fair Use," Johansen told The Register via email.


Christ, talk about arrogance! I mean, I don't mind the whole fact that it's cracked now. That's expcected. But the guy really seems to be cocky about it...

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