There is a more technical method that's been discussed in reverse engineering communities. Think of the decryption process as a river. The encrypted video flows through a channel, and at some point, it passes through the DRM decryption module that turns it back into a raw, playable video stream. The idea is to "dam" or tap into that river just after the decryption point, right before the video is sent to the screen for playback. This is known as API hooking.
Unlike brute-force hacking tools that attempt to guess cryptographic keys—a process that would take modern computers billions of years—ThunderSoft and similar DRM removal tools utilize more practical, architectural workarounds. 1. Authenticated Key Extraction (The Hooking Method)
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: The software includes anti-copy settings designed to block most standard screen recording and screenshot tools.
: It decodes the encrypted stream and re-encodes it into a standard, DRM-free MP4 or MP3 file.
While ThunderSoft includes anti-screen recording features, some users attempt to use high-level capture cards or specific recording software to record the content as it plays.