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adam044

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Jan 24, 2012
1,095
10
Boston
is there an easy way to remove the DRM (purchase info) from songs bought from the itunes songs? I have 100-300 songs that I want to remove it from. the reason for this is because im uploading my entire music collection to google play so it can be accessed anywhere but it cant upload protected media. any ideas would be great thanks!
 

JonathanK81

macrumors 6502a
Feb 7, 2006
594
105
This is kind of time-consuming, but just re-encode them using iTunes. All you do is right-click the song, and choose to "Create AAC Version." It'll create a second version of the song which does not have DRM on it.
 

blevins321

macrumors 68030
Dec 24, 2010
2,768
96
Detroit, MI
iTunes Match will do that for you. It's a yearly subscription, but you can sign up, match and redownload non-DRM songs, then cancel your subscription. $25.
 

musty345

macrumors regular
Feb 28, 2010
239
3
United Kingdom
You can also try burning these songs to about 20 CDs, and then ripping them back onto iTunes. Not only will these songs be DRM free, but you'll have physical backups of them.
 

dccorona

macrumors 68020
Jun 12, 2008
2,033
1
I was under the impression that iTunes songs are already drm free

They are, but they weren't always. The OP probably purchased the songs in question before the DRM went away.

@OP: there are programs out there that literally play the song and record the sound data into a new file, thus removing the DRM, but it's time consuming (every song has to play in its entirety), and may result in quality loss. I don't recall the name of the one I've seen in the past, but google should be able to help you find one
 

davidra

macrumors 6502
Oct 12, 2011
413
4
I just have a few CD-RW's, copy the songs onto them and re-load into iTunes. Gives you duplicates, but there's not much wrong with that. And as someone said, once you've bought it you can always re-download the DRM version.
 

adam044

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Jan 24, 2012
1,095
10
Boston
This is kind of time-consuming, but just re-encode them using iTunes. All you do is right-click the song, and choose to "Create AAC Version." It'll create a second version of the song which does not have DRM on it.

this will not work because they are protected, thats the whole point of them being protected so you cant change the type

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You can also try burning these songs to about 20 CDs, and then ripping them back onto iTunes. Not only will these songs be DRM free, but you'll have physical backups of them.

i tried it with a DVD-R but when I put the dvd back into my computer it stills knows that they are protected files. doing something wrong? or will it not work with a dvd?

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I was under the impression that iTunes songs are already drm free

yes they are NOW but a couple years ago they were not
 

FSMBP

macrumors 68030
Jan 22, 2009
2,712
2,623
this will not work because they are protected, thats the whole point of them being protected so you cant change the type

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i tried it with a DVD-R but when I put the dvd back into my computer it stills knows that they are protected files. doing something wrong? or will it not work with a dvd?

You don't understand. You have burn an Audio-cd within iTunes with the songs. Then, rip those songs back to your computer as MP3s.

The reason why that works is, iTunes is authorized to transcode your DRM-MP3s to an Audio-CD (typical Audio-CDs do not have any DRM or copy protection). This burned Audio-CD has your songs on it, but no DRM. So when you put in the burned Audio-CD into iTunes, iTunes will rip it & put it on your computer as a normal MP3.

You were burning a data DVD. The DRM-MP3s were just being copied to the DVD. The DRM is preserved whenever you copy the file. It only loses it's DRM when you transcode it to a different file (as I mentioned above).
 

adam044

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Jan 24, 2012
1,095
10
Boston
You don't understand. You have burn an Audio-cd within iTunes with the songs. Then, rip those songs back to your computer as MP3s.

The reason why that works is, iTunes is authorized to transcode your DRM-MP3s to an Audio-CD (typical Audio-CDs do not have any DRM or copy protection). This burned Audio-CD has your songs on it, but no DRM. So when you put in the burned Audio-CD into iTunes, iTunes will rip it & put it on your computer as a normal MP3.

You were burning a data DVD. The DRM-MP3s were just being copied to the DVD. The DRM is preserved whenever you copy the file. It only loses it's DRM when you transcode it to a different file (as I mentioned above).

ok that does make sense. I just didnt know if a dvd would work or not so i gave it a shot since they all fit on 1 dvd and took about 5 minutes. thank you. wish there was an easier way other than copying all of them to cds
 

gnasher729

Suspended
Nov 25, 2005
17,980
5,565
is there an easy way to remove the DRM (purchase info) from songs bought from the itunes songs? I have 100-300 songs that I want to remove it from. the reason for this is because im uploading my entire music collection to google play so it can be accessed anywhere but it cant upload protected media. any ideas would be great thanks!

Make a backup of your computer (you did that anyway, didn't you? If not, run to the nearest store, buy an external drive, and backup your computer). Just in case something goes wrong. Create a new library (open iTunes on a Mac while holding the option key pressed, check on winrumors.com how to do it on a PC), then download all your purchased songs. They will be downloaded without DRM. Start iTunes again with option-key pressed to get back to your old library; import the songs from the new library, then delete the old duplicates. Obviously try it with a single song first.
 

adam044

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Jan 24, 2012
1,095
10
Boston
is there any way to make itunes think that it is copying to a cd like a virtual cd drive or something so I dont need to burn all the songs to cd?
 

stroked

Suspended
May 3, 2010
555
331
is there any way to make itunes think that it is copying to a cd like a virtual cd drive or something so I dont need to burn all the songs to cd?

Yes, there is an app for that, but you have to buy it. I can't remember what it is called, but if you Google DRM and iTunes, you should find it.

I tried burning to a CD, but none of the meta data would be on the copy, so you would have to manually type what each song was. I gave up and just used torrents.
 

Daveoc64

macrumors 601
Jan 16, 2008
4,074
92
Bristol, UK
This is kind of time-consuming, but just re-encode them using iTunes. All you do is right-click the song, and choose to "Create AAC Version." It'll create a second version of the song which does not have DRM on it.

I'm pretty sure you can't legally remove the DRM from your songs unless you upgrade your music to iTunes Plus format.

Even if you use iTunes Match or iTunes Plus, some tracks that are no longer on the iTunes Store cannot be "upgraded".
 

terraphantm

macrumors 68040
Jun 27, 2009
3,814
663
Pennsylvania
is there any way to make itunes think that it is copying to a cd like a virtual cd drive or something so I dont need to burn all the songs to cd?

Honestly you will lose a lot of quality that way... To the point where it's not worth it IMO. In your shoes I'd probably just torrent the music. I know it's not legal, but it's not like the artists didn't make money off your original purchase.

If you're not willing, I'd just pay $25 for match and do any songs that are NLA via the burned cd method
 

adam044

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Jan 24, 2012
1,095
10
Boston
will using itunes match remove the purchased by and account name and stuff like that. the stuff that comes up when you click get info.
 

Roessnakhan

macrumors 68040
Sep 16, 2007
3,518
510
ABQ
will using itunes match remove the purchased by and account name and stuff like that. the stuff that comes up when you click get info.

No. In fact, if you re-download lower quality songs in the iTunes plus format (e.g. download the matched files) it'll add your account e-mail to those files that previously did not have them.
 

adam044

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Jan 24, 2012
1,095
10
Boston
No. In fact, if you re-download lower quality songs in the iTunes plus format (e.g. download the matched files) it'll add your account e-mail to those files that previously did not have them.

so i have other members of my family's music in my library will itunes match work with that since its authorized to play on my computer? will it changed their email address to mine?
 

Roessnakhan

macrumors 68040
Sep 16, 2007
3,518
510
ABQ
so i have other members of my family's music in my library will itunes match work with that since its authorized to play on my computer? will it changed their email address to mine?

It will match it, to make it display your e-mail you'll have to delete it (but don't check the "Delete from iCloud" box) then click the download icon next to the greyed-out track. For example, this is what I did.
 

adam044

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Jan 24, 2012
1,095
10
Boston
purchased itunes match. didn't realize how many of my files are under 256, about 4,000. so i can delete all the files under 256kbps even if they arent purchased and then download them from icloud and they will be 256kpbs?

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to answer my own question I can delete anything under 256 and then re download it from icloud at the higher bit rate. amazing
 
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