Go to file
apprenticeharper 91b22c18c4 Update kobo plugin to 3.1.3 with Portuguese and Arabic translations. Include .mo files in git. 2015-08-05 06:59:01 +01:00
DeDRM_Macintosh_Application Fixed plugin help file and updated readmes 2015-08-04 07:18:33 +01:00
DeDRM_Windows_Application Fixed plugin help file and updated readmes 2015-08-04 07:18:33 +01:00
DeDRM_calibre_plugin Fixed plugin help file and updated readmes 2015-08-04 07:18:33 +01:00
Obok_calibre_plugin Update kobo plugin to 3.1.3 with Portuguese and Arabic translations. Include .mo files in git. 2015-08-05 06:59:01 +01:00
Other_Tools New approach to Android backup files. Changed version number to 6.3.1 2015-08-02 11:09:35 +01:00
.gitattributes :neckbeard: Added .gitattributes & .gitignore files 2015-02-19 07:18:22 +00:00
.gitignore Update kobo plugin to 3.1.3 with Portuguese and Arabic translations. Include .mo files in git. 2015-08-05 06:59:01 +01:00
README.md New approach to Android backup files. Changed version number to 6.3.1 2015-08-02 11:09:35 +01:00
ReadMe_First.txt New approach to Android backup files. Changed version number to 6.3.1 2015-08-02 11:09:35 +01:00

README.md

DeDRM_tools

DeDRM tools for ebooks

This is a repository of all the scripts and other tools for removing DRM from ebooks that I could find, commited in date order as best as I could manage. (Except for the Requiem tools for Apple's iBooks, and Convert LIT for Microsoft's .lit ebooks.)

Mostly it tracks the tools releases by Apprentice Alf, athough it also includes the individual tools and their histories from before Alf had a blog.

Users should download the latest zip archive. Developers might be interested in forking the repository, as it contains unzipped versions of those tools that are zipped, and text versions of the AppleScripts, to make the changes over time easier to follow.

I welcome contributions from others to improve these tools, from expanding the range of books handled, improving key retrieval, to just general bug fixes, speed improvements and UI enhancements.

My special thanks to all those developers who have done the hard work of reverse engineering to provide the initial tools.

Apprentice Harper.