My BF just bought a mp3-compatible cell phone because I told him we could just convert our iTunes files to mp3 and then he could listen to the music on his phone. I know we can convert all files from actual CDs we have put onto iTunes but I am now learning that any iTunes-purchased music cannot be converted. Is there any way to get around this?
All files downloaded from iTunes are protected by Digital Rights Management (DRM) so you can't share the files for free like we once could in the early Napster days. Basically, it's just a layer of encryption added to every file by Apple so that the artists get paid for their music. This was the only way the record companies would agree to make their music available on iTunes. My apologies if you already know this, but maybe somebody else reading this doesn't.
The only way to remove DRM from music purchased from iTunes without compromising quality is with 3rd party software like JHymn http://hymn-project.org/.
OR
You can create a playlist in iTunes, burn your DRM protected (iTunes purchases) files as a music CD, then take the songs on that CD and import them again as MP3 (check/change your burn and import settings in your preferences before you do these 2 steps). I would select the highest quality MP3 import settings possible if file size isn't an issue. Theoretically, sound quality will still be compromised after double encoding, but you might want to give it a try to see if it's acceptable to you before you go the JHymn route.
Good luck and let us know how severely the quality deteriorates if you try double encoding.
Thanks for your answer, roxy. I thought that was what my options were but I wanted to check. It is my BF's phone, and he is being lazy, so I don't know when or if he will even try it.
hey roxy, thanks for the jhymn link. it appears that anything bought with itunes v6.0 and beyond can't be stripped of its DRM. do you know where i can get previous releases of itunes? i upgraded to 7.something recently