I've managed to stay completely DRM-free in my music. (Exception: I ripped one CD to the X360's HDD to see what that was like. When I first got my Dell PC, I started ripping CDs to WMA without realizing that DRM was on by default. I've since re-ripped all that properly, and not to WMA.) So this sort of happening is the only way I get to find out how DRM affects the rest of the world. Notice the bit about "secrets"? That's what I was referring to, when I talked about DRM applied to mass media being a flawed concept. The hardware and software need to know the crypt code and keys, all over the very public world. All a hacker needs to do is figure out how to intercept those digital conversations, not become a cryptologist. Encryption is only really secure when the keys are known only by limited, secretive participants, not devices or software.