Amazon.com uses all DRM-free music.
DRM free music stands for: Digital Right Management- free. It means there are no digital rights embedded in the file. That does not mean you are free to use it as you please though. Be careful when using so-called DRM free media. It may not really be DRM free and you may find yourself in trouble.
There is a list of free drm remover software, you can use them to remove drm from videos.
yes, you can use a drm media converter to remove drm from bearshare music.
Here are some free drm removal software, you can use them to remove drm from audio books.
Any music (or movie, game etc.) that you purchase is for your own private use. You are not authorised to distribute or broadcast the music in anyway unless you are licensed to do so by the holder of the copyright and distribution rights.
Bearshare downloaded music is DRM-protected .wma tracks which can not directly add to Zune.Zune plays .mp3 .wma .aac music and DRM'ed .wma from Zune marketplace with exclusive DRM system.So you have to use a 3rd party DRM removal software to strip DRM protection from the downlaoded bearshare songs first.Look into the tutorial bellow, it can answer your question
Yes, you can use a WMV DRM remover software to remove DRM.
DRM Converters are not allowed to use in most of countries.
No, Ipods are not compatible with the Rhapsody service, unless you download a DRM free MP3 track from Rhapsody and then convert it to the Ipod format using the Itunes software.Another method is to remove DRM protection from Rhapsody player downloads and convert Rhapsody to plain MP3 or M4A that supported by iPod. I use Daniusoft Music converter.
People think that because they have already bought the data it is fair to be able to do what they want with it. Most of these people are recopying the item (such as a film) and selling it as thier own or just giving it out free. This however costs the original owner lots of money and customers and DRM prevents this.
Digital Rights Management (DRM) is a generic term that covers many types of protective measures used to prevent the copying and distribution of digital media. As such no individual or company invented DRM. Copyright holders have always sought means to control the illicit copying and distribution of their products. With the arrival of digital media it was possible for users to create perfect copies of the media and so many companies devised schemes to prevent copying. The earliest forms of DRM, from around 1996, limited the use of the physical disc that held the digital media. Film companies imposed a Content Scrambling System to films released on DVD and record companies, most notably Sony, introduced CDs that secretly installed software on a users computer to prevent the duplication of the CD. This software only worked on computers running the Windows operating system and was found to compromise the security of the computer. It has since been abandoned. With the coming of the Internet it became increasingly easy to illicitly duplicate and then distribute media files and a system of protecting individual files was created first by Microsoft with their Windows Media DRM in 1999. When Apple launched the iTunes store in 2003 the record companies insisted on a DRM system to protect their material and so Apple added their FairPlay DRM to files supplied from the iTunes store. Apple has since convinced the record companies this was a bad idea and has dropped the use of DRM protection from the music files.
DRM (Digital Rights Management) is a generic term for technology that prevents you from playing music files on unauthorized players or giving them away to others. Such files are tied to your iPod and iTunes and cannot be easily transferred elsewhere. If you want to be able to use the music on a portable media player other than an iPod, or if you want to burn the files to a CD, it is recommended that you do not purchase copies with DRM technology.