I am in a situation described several times by SuperUsers in their posts, for example here. Basically, many years ago, I copied some music from a CD to my system using the WMA format, unintentionally and unfortunately with DRM. When I changed computers years later, I never noticed that those audio files became locked due to the DRM. The old computer is long gone.
But I still have the original CD! As my luck would have it, however, it's badly scratched. I am able to burn 7 of the 8 tracks successfully (this time without DRM!) but the eighth track copies poorly.
I would prefer if I could "unlock" the old file if I could only find a way to pull a license key or something from the CD.
Question: is there a way to do this--"unlock" an old copy of a DRM'd WMA audio file using the original CD which is scratched?
Thanks!
EDIT: Thinking out loud, I understand that my old Windows Media Player stored something like unique, one-time license keys to those old files somewhere in its directories, so without the WMP application, I have permanently lost access to my files. Or, could it be the other way around--do the files have written into them something like keys so that files + original CD = success?
I am searching around, hoping for some alternative solutions. For example, peraps I will be able to burn the CD again with DRM and swap the new track for the old track, then be able to play it in such a DRM setting. Then while streaming, I would copy the file. Perhaps even use a program to remove the DRM all together--that would be ideal.