Does anyone have any links for reverse engineering Spotify DRM? I didn’t necessarily need it for myself, have plenty of music, and it would be a pretty inefficient means of piracy vs. BitTorrent or like yt-dlp, but I’m curious how it works.
It always seems to me like the analog gap is particularly gaping with audio, and I wonder how far down to the metal it’s protected.
Spotify, like most legit streaming services, use Google Widevine DRM, and you don’t reverse engineer it. At least not for the level that is required for this kind of content (L3). When you stream something in browser or device, the decryption module of that device is “talking” to the license server. If the identification goes through, the decryption keys are sent and the media gets played. So what you do is you extract that decryption module from a device, and then use scripts to send requests acting as that device, tricking the license server into sending you the decryption keys.
Once set up, and with the proper script, it can actually be even more efficient than other forms of piracy.
Buy a cheap Xiaomi phone for like 50 bucks from your local semi-sketch phone repair shop and use this: dumper. I had an Android I bought to try modding it and then I found Dumper and it worked well.
Fyi, there’s many scripts out there to make WEB-DLs from many streaming sources, I don’t recall the self-host git site though, perhaps a kind fellow will link it.
It seems apps like SpotiFlyer and Spotube both use the Spotify discovery API but actually get the music from YT Music (which is already easy to download using yt-dlp, NewPipe, or another app of your choice). Kinda sad that I can’t find a way to pirate music off of Spotify yet, but YT Music is pretty good for my purposes.
I have no clue how to defeat the DRM/rip the songs. But you can just route the audio to a recording program and record it live.
Not ideal but it’s a workaround if you really need to download something off of Spoti.
Zotify can download music directly from Spotify. You can bulk download or search individual songs, playlists, artists etc to download.
You need to have an account and a having premium allows you to get full quality downloads.
What does it mean in terms of ethics when a song is not on Spotify and is not considered a song (is just a generic video) through YouTube Music? It seems to happen a lot to video game OSTs, especially Touhou music.