NO Sound After ripping Wedding Crashers in IFO mode

Boney

Member
Aug 10, 2005
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Well i just got wedding crashers and I wanted to put it on my iPod. So like all my other dvd's I loaded up DvDDecryper, put it on IFO mode - enabled stream processing - and then selected the first video and audio stream like i always do.

The problem is that after the ripping is complete ... the video is fine but there is no sound what so ever. I tried all the different audio streams, even the Director's commentary and what not but nothing makes a peep. Can anyone solve this?
 

RampantAndroid

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2004
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This will likely be locked: by ripping it your are breaking its copy protection - which is illegal. If I'm wrong, cool...
 

Boney

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Aug 10, 2005
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Im not actually trying to share / sell / or distribute anything - im simply trying to put a dvd that I bought on My iPod - which is the whole geist of getting a "video" iPod
 

malvare1

Member
May 11, 2005
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what format do you use for the video (vcd,svcd,divx,xvid etc...) ?
I might be able to help but i need more info...
 

Triggerhappy007

Golden Member
Jan 6, 2001
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Originally posted by: Boney
Im not actually trying to share / sell / or distribute anything - im simply trying to put a dvd that I bought on My iPod - which is the whole geist of getting a "video" iPod
but using DvDDecrypter is illegal. :)

 

RampantAndroid

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2004
6,591
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Weddingcrashers will have encryption on it. By laws in place, breaking that - even for a backup - is 100% illegal.
 

RampantAndroid

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2004
6,591
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PC World
Illegal DVD-ripping software is flourishing, despite well-publicized wins by DVD piracy foes and laws against copying Hollywood movies.

Although U.S. copyright laws outlaw the sale of software that bypasses DVD copy protection, many companies continue to make the software packages available.

BlazinDVD of Jamaica, New York, is one of a dozen U.S. firms that PC World found on the Internet selling such software. BlazinDVD's offering was called Perfect DVD Copy, and a photo of the software's CD jewel case displayed on the company's Web site claimed the program would "Override All Copy Protection". A week after PC World contacted the company to discuss this statement, Perfect DVD Copy was no longer available. A company spokesperson said BlazinDVD wasn't aware the software violated any laws.

Surplus Computers of Santa Clara, California, and JB Software, based in South Bend, Indiana, both sell a software title called Video Studio 4000 Pro, which is published by an overseas company called Hakku. The software title contains tools for copying DVDs, also known as "ripping."

Owners of both of these companies say they were not aware the software title contained DVD-ripping software. "As far as I know, that software was perfectly fine to sell," says Bobby Hanby, owner of JB Software.

However, the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act bans providing information or tools to evade copy-control technology, including the Contents Scramble System that's used in DVD media. Companies that sell DVD-ripping programs and U.S. users of the software are breaking the law, according to copyright attorneys.