How to Deauthorize a Computer in iTunes
How to Deauthorize a Computer in iTunes
Apple puts a limit on how many computers you can use with some of your owned iTunes and App Store content, including music, movies, apps, TV shows, books, iBooks, this process is known as . Most users dont pay much attention to this, but if you own multiple Macs or PCs concurrently or over the years, youll eventually hit the 5 computer authorization limit in iTunes, often when trying to access iTunes content or restore an iPhone, which then prevents you from accessing that iTunes Store and App Store content until another computer has been deauthorized, and then the current computer authorized.
The solution to this is to deauthorize a computer from iTunes, a process which can be necessary in both Mac OS and Windows. By deauthorizing a computer, it removes that particular computers ability to access purchased and downloaded content from iTunes, iBooks, the App Store and apps, music, movies, and then frees up that computers slot within the 5 computer authorization limit. This is a good but it can also be necessary if you have hit the 5 computer limit and need to deauthorize one computer so that you can use a new computer with your own iTunes and App Store downloads and purchases.
Deauthorizing a single computer is very easy, assuming you have access to it: Note that by Deauthorizing the computer, nothing is deleted or removed from the computer or from iTunes, it simply prevents that computer from further accessing some bought and downloaded iTunes, iBooks, App Store, and other content. The steps to deauthorizing a Windows computer in iTunes is the same. However, you may need to repeat the reauthorization process multiple times because you may need to repeat the process multiple times for it to fully deauthorize.
That probably reads a little funny, but seriously, that is advice directly on how to use their own deauthorization process in iTunes for Windows: Windows users If you didnt deauthorize your computer before you re-installed Windows or upgraded your RAM, hard disk, or other system components, your computer might be using multiple authorizations. Try to deauthorize your computer a few times until its no longer authorized, then authorize your computer again. After you do this, it will use only one authorization. Use the steps outlined above to deauthorize a specific computer while you have access to it.
If you need to deauthorize an old computer, or you need to deauthorize a specific computer you no longer have access to, you cant do that. Instead you must deauthorize every computer that has been authorized, and then that you want to use with iTunes one-by-one, again. Perhaps some day iTunes will gain the ability to selectively deauthorize a specific computer remotely or that you no longer have access to, but that has yet to materialize. Instead, you must deauthorize them all, and then reauthorize selectively on the computers you do have access to. Happy iTunes deauthorizing!
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