Microsoft Corp. is once again on the defensive against hackers after the launch of a new program that gives average PC users tools to unlock copy-protected digital music and movies.
The third version of FairUse4M has a simple drag-and-drop interface. PC users can turn the protected music files they bought online either a la carte or as part of a subscription service like Napster and turn them into DRM-free tunes that can be copied and shared at will, or turned into MP3 files that can play on any type of digital music player.
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2 posted on 07/17/2007 10:22:41 AM PDT by SubGeniusX
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