Windows Media DRM cracked
A user of the "Doom9" forums has posted software that claims to be able to remove the digital rights management scheme from Windows Media encoded music files. According to the post, "FairUse4WM" works with Windows Media 10 and Windows Media 11 and only with individualized DRAM files. The simple interface of the software allows users to load keys of licensed Windows Media files and deactivate their copy protection - I order to "enable fair-use rights to purchased media," according to the developer. Engadget has posted a walkthrough to show how the software works.

FairUse4WM interface
Will FairUse4WM cause trouble for Microsoft ? Unlikely. The creation and cracking of copy protection mechanisms always has been a cat and mouse game and that won’t change in the near future. Microsoft may issue a patch to disable FairUse4WM and calm down music publishers that use Windows DRM on services such as Napster and Yahoo Music. And ultimately, publishers such as Universal have mentioned in the past that they do not view DRM technologies as unbreakable copy protection, but rather as a way to make it more difficult for the masses to illegally distribute or acquire digital media. In that view, FairUse4WM should be of little concern for content owners, at least if Microsoft will come up with a patch in the next days.
Related article :
Universal Pictures : "DRMs do not stop piracy"
- Google, Ebay deal will create 'click-to-call' links in search lists, IM
- Plextor to ship Blu-ray burner in October
- Dell, others roll out Core 2 Duo notebooks
- Sharp announces tiny wireless LAN module with record low power consumption
- Ricoh sues Quanta Storage and Asustek for disc patent infringement
- TSMC sues SMIC for alleged breach of 2005 settlement
- High-capacitance MLCCs said to be in shortage due to Sony PS3
- Atheros releases "cost optimized" draft 11n chipset and network processor line
- LG preps a Chocolate headset
- Will Google Apps truly encroach on Microsoft's domain?
- Widescreen displays dominate notebook market in Q2 2006
- MXL Microphones promises studio quality sound in a USB microphone
- NEC starts shipping image detection chips for cars
- Corsair introduces 1111 MHz "Dominator" memory
- Intel refreshes Xeon MP series with new Tulsa processors
- Vizio and Maxent benefit from rising sales of 50" PDP TVs in North America
- Samsung to build 1 Gbit DDR2 SDRAM at 80nm
- Toshiba to launch new USB flash-memory series




