Chadder007
Diamond Member
- Oct 10, 1999
- 7,560
- 0
- 0
The "protection" companies are just racking in the money while the poor suckers at the head of the media companies fall for it over and over and over and over again.
Originally posted by: Linux23
why do these guys even bother with copy protection that will be broken in a matter of days.
Originally posted by: Linux23
why do these guys even bother with copy protection that will be broken in a matter of days.
Originally posted by: yllus
*shakes head*
Software can and always will be bypassed. The only chance they've got is in hardware-based copy protection a la console gaming systems. And as we all know, even those aren't immune...
Originally posted by: rgwalt
The only real way to stop people from copying DVDs is to make it more expensive to do the copying than to buy the original. If they raise blank disc prices to $20 per disc, or they cut movie prices to $1 per movies, then I wouldn't bother copying anything.
R
Originally posted by: MustISO
I don't see how they can implement this. By changing the security on a DVD you're no longer compliant with the standards of a DVD. They won't even be able to call it or label it a DVD. The same thing happened when they tried to protect CD's, it changed the format so it was no longer a true CD. In the end it was never used.
Either way, I would guess more money is spent trying to protect the content than is lost. A billion dollars is probably a billion dollars over estimated.
Does linux have a 3% footprint in the PC market?Originally posted by: FrustratedUser
I have a strange feeling that switching to Linux to rip them will bypass this stuff. Don't ask why, just a feeling I have.
Originally posted by: yllus
*shakes head*
Software can and always will be bypassed. The only chance they've got is in hardware-based copy protection a la console gaming systems. And as we all know, even those aren't immune...
Originally posted by: Pepsi90919
Originally posted by: MustISO
I don't see how they can implement this. By changing the security on a DVD you're no longer compliant with the standards of a DVD. They won't even be able to call it or label it a DVD. The same thing happened when they tried to protect CD's, it changed the format so it was no longer a true CD. In the end it was never used.
Either way, I would guess more money is spent trying to protect the content than is lost. A billion dollars is probably a billion dollars over estimated.
um, what? it's called "Copy Control" and is used on every "not-CD" EMI puts out in Canada.
Because a lot of movie consumers, much like people who buy cds, may have an interest in how a movie was, but not enough to spend $20 to buy it outright. That was (and still is) the problem with the music industry--they release cds with 1 or 2 good songs, and they expected you to pay upwards of $18 for it. Just cuz i rent/rip or download a movie doesnt mean i would have bought it if that were my only option. I simply wouldn't have bothered if i didn't feel it was a good movie, and the studios STILL wouldn't have that money from me.Originally posted by: tangent1138
Originally posted by: MrBond
This is retarded - how do they lose money because of these people? Because they weren't going to buy the DVD in the first place? They should go after Blockbuster and Netflix and shut them down then, because they've got to be losing tens of billions of dollars to people who rent movies rather then buy them just so they can watch them once.According to Gervin, just over a billion dollars has been lost by people who "rip and return"?consumers who rent a movie, copy it to their own digital library, and return the movie the next day.
Blockbuster should love the "rip and returners" - they allow them to have more of a movie in stock because rather than someone renting it for a week then taking it back, they're only out that copy for a night.
if they weren't going to buy it in the first place, why do they want a copy?
Originally posted by: Chadder007
The "protection" companies are just racking in the money while the poor suckers at the head of the media companies fall for it over and over and over and over again.
Originally posted by: jagec
It seems to me that they make a lot more money on THOSE people than people who just download it from the 'net without ever renting anything.According to Gervin, just over a billion dollars has been lost by people who "rip and return"?consumers who rent a movie, copy it to their own digital library, and return the movie the next day.
No kidding. Half the time when I want to rent a movie on the weekend it's not available. Renting it earlier in the week, copying it and then returning it lets me watch it when I f%$#ing have time, and gives someone else the chance to watch it at the same time. Hell, the rental companies would make more money in that case.Originally posted by: jagec
It seems to me that they make a lot more money on THOSE people than people who just download it from the 'net without ever renting anything.According to Gervin, just over a billion dollars has been lost by people who "rip and return"?consumers who rent a movie, copy it to their own digital library, and return the movie the next day.
Who the hell do they think they're kidding?
Originally posted by: Phokus
Originally posted by: Fausto
Who the hell do they think they're kidding?
Content protection company Macrovision Corp. plans to announce on Tuesday that it has developed a way to eliminate the vast majority of DVD copying.
The technology, called "RipGuard DVD," will be licensed to the company's partners?studios who are part of the Motion Picture Association of America, executives told ExtremeTech. RipGuard isn't foolproof, but the hope is that it will cut down on mainstream ripping, they said. The software will simply block rippers from working.
I give this 2 days before a workaround becomes available.
02/15/2005 02:48 PMOriginally posted by: glugglug
If it can be viewed, it can be ripped.
Originally posted by: MercenaryForHire
If it can be played, it can be cracked.
- M4H
Originally posted by: myusername
Does linux have a 3% footprint in the PC market?Originally posted by: FrustratedUser
I have a strange feeling that switching to Linux to rip them will bypass this stuff. Don't ask why, just a feeling I have.![]()