Today I will describe a small “apple” life hack - the note is small and does not deserve a separate number, but it may seem to be useful to users of iOS devices. It is considered that copying the tracks purchased in the Apple online store can only be done on a computer using the proprietary iTunes program or third-party utilities. This is not quite true: some players are able to play songs from the library, i.e. applications have access to it. I thought that the manufacturer did not allow in the AppStore allowing to extract music from the regular player of the program and only now found out how deeply mistaken.

Hacking the device is not necessary: it is enough to install
iZip Pro archiver from the App
Store or its
free version .
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The application has access to the device’s music library, but does not allow opening files from it in other programs - songs can only be played, sent by e-mail or archived.

The created archive is placed in local iZip files with which the user can do anything, for example, open
Documents by Readdle in the file manager or transfer the
AirDrive HD to the wireless flash drive.

The method is not the most direct, but I have not found other applications that can do this trick without connecting a tablet or smartphone to a desktop computer. If readers are aware of such programs from the AppStore (the solution should work without jailbreak), then the author of the note would be grateful for the links to them in the comments - I am particularly interested in file managers.

PS You should not take this text as a guide for pirates - we are talking about the natural right of the consumer to copy legally purchased music to other devices belonging to him. Fixed, by the way, in
articles 1272 and 1273 of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation. If we take into account that the Constitution of the Russian Federation is cooler than codes, then all other laws, by-laws and other licensing agreements no longer have any meaning.