QUOTE(Mini Moose 2707 @ Sep 26 2006, 03:37 PM)
It isn't "legal" to do so. Use something that burns songs as mp3s when you copy music off CDs or only download mp3s.
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It just depends on what wma files you are talking about. Not all have the protections put on the files. For example, you can rip using Windows Media Player and have it not apply the protections if you disable the option for it. I've easily converted such wma files to mp3 before. Of course, it should only really be converted if you actually need it in a specific format, since you lose quality that way.
BTW, the program I used is called "dbPowerAmp" which at the time I downloaded it, supported converting to mp3's on the free version. For it's wma conversion, it only supports converting to and from unprotected files.