Okay, this is just a brief analysis from me.
I’m not interested in music downloads, but in security technology,
conversion technology and market development. I’m a software architect.
All the tools I know of work. Almost all tools have no restrictions (300).
The fact that almost all tools work means that there has been no DRM key change.
I believe that only some metadata has been changed. More specifically, it is the Track_IDs.
If the developer has made their analysis strict and hard-coded, then a list analysis will fail because
the Track_IDs no longer correspond. After the change to the streaming service, other tools only returned
Track_ID = 1 for all parts, but did not fail the analysis. T…Fab solved the small problem within a very short time
and the Track_IDs are OK again with the patch provided. Although the analysis never failed. Furthermore,
there is no limitation (300). Now everyone can decide for themselves whether the problem could have been solved
long ago or not ;-). But as I said, I’m only interested in market events and the technology used.
Another piece of information: if a streaming service provider really wanted to prevent downloads effectively,
it could be done easily and no tool would ever be able to decrypt one of these files again,
ever ;-). But don’t worry, I have more important things to do…