"The company claims that DVD X Copy doesn't actually break the CSS on commercial DVDs. Instead, the program intercepts the video and audio stream after a DVD player has decrypted the disc's CSS code in order to show the movie. Because the program intercepts the signal after decryption but before the video is rendered, it doesn't run afoul of the DMCA, according to 321 Studios' Sedlock."
		
		
	 
	
	
		
		
			From what I understand of it and I can be wrong is that when you load it up it asks if the DVD is a rental or if your own it. If you choose rental then it says something like the fact that you can't do that, but if you choose you own it, it will make a perfect image of the DVD along with the CSS protection.
		
		
	 
That's just the cover their ass tactic, they have to say they made due diligence to keep the users legal, if the user decided to copy something he doesn't own it's not the fault of 321 Studios. And none of their products burn copies with CSS, they don't have a license to use CSS in that manor.
	
	
		
		
			You only need to break the CSS protection when you rip it not when you make an image of it.
		
		
	 
And 99% of the DVD movies out there need to be ripped because they're larger than the 4.7G consumer discs available, you need to be able to discard all the features you don't care about like the other language streams, subtitles, etc to make it fit on 1 disc. You can span it across discs, but then you have to change discs half-way through which sucks.