what happened to the dvd ripping forums

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  • uufta
    Digital Video Expert
    Digital Video Expert
    • Dec 2005
    • 635

    #76
    Originally Posted by admin
    I'm guessing the **** means CLAP. Or maybe LOVE.

    bigpimpin_1978, you've been banned for being a complete ****

    Last edited by uufta; 3 Aug 2007, 04:57 AM.

    Comment

    • blutach
      Not a god of digital video
      • Oct 2004
      • 24627

      #77
      Well, somebody's got the clap!

      Regards
      Les

      Essential progs - [PgcEdit] [VobBlanker] [MenuShrink] [IfoEdit] [Muxman] [DVD Remake Pro] [DVD Rebuilder] [BeSweet] [Media Player Classic] [DVDSubEdit] [ImgBurn]

      Media and Burning - [Golden Rules of Burning] [Media quality] [Fix your DMA] [Update your Firmware] [What's my Media ID Code?] [How to test your disc]
      [What's bitsetting?] [Burn dual layer disks safely] [Why not to burn with Ner0] [Interpret Ner0's burn errors] [Got bad playback?] [Burner/Media compatibility]

      Cool Techniques - [2COOL's guides] [Clean your DVD] [Join a flipper] [Split into 2 DVDs] [Save heaps of Mb] [How to mock strip] [Cool Insert Clips]

      Real useful info - [FAQ INDEX] [Compression explained] [Logical Remapping of Enabled Streams] [DVD-Replica] [Fantastic info on DVDs]


      You should only use genuine Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden media. Many thanks to www.pcx.com.au for their supply and great service.

      Explore the sites and the programs - there's a gold mine of information in them

      Don't forget to play the Digital Digest Quiz!!! (Click here)

      Comment

      • soup
        Just Trying To Help
        • Nov 2005
        • 7524

        #78
        I don't know, I wasn't feeling the love for it to be clap or love.

        Comment

        • MikeyBK
          Digital Video Maniac
          • Feb 2006
          • 1131

          #79
          Originally Posted by mmmthmtskier
          To all those who posted the FAQ's and tutorials in the past, a hearty "Thank You!". I just skimmed over the posts and I see a lot of disappointed people but not much acknowledgement over the loss of a lot of people's hard work, done on their own time, and without payment, going down the drain. I wish you all well in the future and hope to see a day when those valuable deleted items will be returned to the benefit of all who care to learn.

          This is also something that saddens me...all the hard work people put into guides, and program plugins, are all swept away...I used to suggest some of the guides from here, but now cannot.

          It breaks my heart to see the once prominent DVF reduced to a shadow of it's former self. You know, the one that use to challenge forums like CDF on the correct info on certain knowledgeable things.
          I still log on from time to time out of loyalty, but I see the decline in those who log on. Many, if not most, of the regular members hardly log on anymore. It's just not the same caliber that it used to be. I hope that some day this forum will return to it's 'Glory Days'...

          It is not against the law to create copies of our purchased DVDs so that we can protect our investment, it is just illegal to copy them for the purpose of distributing them for profit or not ,or playing them in public for a fee.
          And it surely is not illegal to merely discuss these things!!

          Anyways, that's my feelings.....but in the end it is Admins site and he is under no obligation to all those who had put in so much time and effort to build up this forum to the caliber that it had attained...he needs to think of his and his forums survival, the best he knows how to...
          MBK

          Antec 900 ATX Mid Tower
          Antec True Power Trio 650W PSU
          ABIT IP35 Pro LGA 775 Intel Motherboard
          Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 2.4GHz CPU (Overclocking @ 2.9GHz)
          XFX GeForce 8600GT 256MB GDDR3 Video Card
          Patriot eXtreme Performance (2 x 1GB) DDR2 SDRAM
          Seagate Barracuda(Perpendicular Recording) 320GB SATA 3.0Gb

          *SAMSUNG 18X LightScribe SATA SH-S183L DVD±R
          *Sony DRU-810A IDE DVD±R
          *BenQ LS DW1655 IDE DVD±R

          Comment

          • Chewy
            Super Moderator
            • Nov 2003
            • 18971

            #80
            let me explain the law a little, the software that circumvents the protection is what is illegal, supporting it in a forum has become an accessory to this

            it's all relative to which countries laws come into effect

            It is not against the law to create copies of our purchased DVDs so that we can protect our investment
            that's the catch 22, backing up your dvd's might be legal under "fair use" but the software isn't
            Last edited by Chewy; 3 Aug 2007, 12:34 PM.

            Comment

            • MikeyBK
              Digital Video Maniac
              • Feb 2006
              • 1131

              #81
              Originally Posted by Chewy
              let me explain the law a little, the software that circumvents the protection is what is illegal, supporting it in a forum has become an accessory to this

              it's all relative to which countries laws come into effect

              I was not aware of a law that stated that by-passing the movie indurtries encryption 'schemes' were illegal??
              MBK

              Antec 900 ATX Mid Tower
              Antec True Power Trio 650W PSU
              ABIT IP35 Pro LGA 775 Intel Motherboard
              Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 2.4GHz CPU (Overclocking @ 2.9GHz)
              XFX GeForce 8600GT 256MB GDDR3 Video Card
              Patriot eXtreme Performance (2 x 1GB) DDR2 SDRAM
              Seagate Barracuda(Perpendicular Recording) 320GB SATA 3.0Gb

              *SAMSUNG 18X LightScribe SATA SH-S183L DVD±R
              *Sony DRU-810A IDE DVD±R
              *BenQ LS DW1655 IDE DVD±R

              Comment

              • NightTran
                King of Digital Video
                King of Digital Video
                • Aug 2005
                • 4224

                #82
                Originally Posted by Chewy
                let me explain the law a little, the software that circumvents the protection is what is illegal, supporting it in a forum has become an accessory to this

                it's all relative to which countries laws come into effect



                that's the catch 22, backing up your dvd's might be legal under "fair use" but the software isn't
                is there any software that consider legal at all?

                Thanks
                sigpic

                Comment

                • Chewy
                  Super Moderator
                  • Nov 2003
                  • 18971

                  #83
                  we have even implemented internation treaties
                  Laws regarding DRM
                  Digital rights management systems have received some international legal backing by implementation of the 1996 WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT). Article 11 of the Treaty requires nations party to the treaties to enact laws against DRM circumvention.

                  The WCT has been implemented in most member states of the World Intellectual Property Organization. The American implementation is the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), while in Europe the treaty has been implemented by the 2001 European directive on copyright, which requires member states of the European Union to implement legal protections for technological prevention measures. In 2006, the lower house of the French parliament adopted such legislation as part of the controversial DADVSI law, but added that protected DRM techniques should be made interoperable, a move which caused widespread controversy in the United States
                  Digital Millennium Copyright Act
                  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) is an extension to United States copyright law passed unanimously on May 14, 1998, which criminalizes the production and dissemination of technology that allows users to circumvent technical copy-restriction methods. Under the Act, circumvention of a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work is illegal if done with the primary intent of violating the rights of copyright holders.

                  Comment

                  • MikeyBK
                    Digital Video Maniac
                    • Feb 2006
                    • 1131

                    #84
                    So then, all copying and authoring programs must also be considered illegal if it has anything to do with DVD content??...Including DVDFlick?

                    What about the First Amendment rights to fair use?

                    At least we can discuss this....no?
                    MBK

                    Antec 900 ATX Mid Tower
                    Antec True Power Trio 650W PSU
                    ABIT IP35 Pro LGA 775 Intel Motherboard
                    Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 2.4GHz CPU (Overclocking @ 2.9GHz)
                    XFX GeForce 8600GT 256MB GDDR3 Video Card
                    Patriot eXtreme Performance (2 x 1GB) DDR2 SDRAM
                    Seagate Barracuda(Perpendicular Recording) 320GB SATA 3.0Gb

                    *SAMSUNG 18X LightScribe SATA SH-S183L DVD±R
                    *Sony DRU-810A IDE DVD±R
                    *BenQ LS DW1655 IDE DVD±R

                    Comment

                    • MikeyBK
                      Digital Video Maniac
                      • Feb 2006
                      • 1131

                      #85
                      also...

                      Originally Posted by DMCA
                      if done with the primary intent of violating the rights of copyright holders.
                      If it is done to violate the copyright holders rights...which means copying and distributing them to deny the copyright holders ability to sell their content to as many consumers as possible if not for these illegally distributed copies...

                      Just wondering if thats the meaning that was actually conveyed?? What do you think?
                      MBK

                      Antec 900 ATX Mid Tower
                      Antec True Power Trio 650W PSU
                      ABIT IP35 Pro LGA 775 Intel Motherboard
                      Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 2.4GHz CPU (Overclocking @ 2.9GHz)
                      XFX GeForce 8600GT 256MB GDDR3 Video Card
                      Patriot eXtreme Performance (2 x 1GB) DDR2 SDRAM
                      Seagate Barracuda(Perpendicular Recording) 320GB SATA 3.0Gb

                      *SAMSUNG 18X LightScribe SATA SH-S183L DVD±R
                      *Sony DRU-810A IDE DVD±R
                      *BenQ LS DW1655 IDE DVD±R

                      Comment

                      • Chewy
                        Super Moderator
                        • Nov 2003
                        • 18971

                        #86
                        dvd flick does not circumvent any protection, it's perfectly legal

                        fair use has been effectively killed

                        Comment

                        • MikeyBK
                          Digital Video Maniac
                          • Feb 2006
                          • 1131

                          #87
                          Originally Posted by Chewy
                          fair use has been effectively killed
                          LOL

                          But if we cannot by-pass CSS on DVDs, how can we use something like DVDFlick, how are we to get the DVDs contemt onto the PC?


                          But what about this? 'If' is a strong if...IMHO...

                          Originally Posted by MikeyBK
                          also...



                          If it is done to violate the copyright holders rights...which means copying and distributing them to deny the copyright holders ability to sell their content to as many consumers as possible if not for these illegally distributed copies...

                          Just wondering if thats the meaning that was actually conveyed?? What do you think?
                          Last edited by MikeyBK; 3 Aug 2007, 01:13 PM.
                          MBK

                          Antec 900 ATX Mid Tower
                          Antec True Power Trio 650W PSU
                          ABIT IP35 Pro LGA 775 Intel Motherboard
                          Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 2.4GHz CPU (Overclocking @ 2.9GHz)
                          XFX GeForce 8600GT 256MB GDDR3 Video Card
                          Patriot eXtreme Performance (2 x 1GB) DDR2 SDRAM
                          Seagate Barracuda(Perpendicular Recording) 320GB SATA 3.0Gb

                          *SAMSUNG 18X LightScribe SATA SH-S183L DVD±R
                          *Sony DRU-810A IDE DVD±R
                          *BenQ LS DW1655 IDE DVD±R

                          Comment

                          • admin
                            Administrator
                            • Nov 2001
                            • 8920

                            #88
                            Any tool that circumvents copy protection is illegal under the DMCA, regardless of how effective the copy protection is (although some countries do require "effective" copy protection for the law to apply) or whether you use it for commercial gain or not. The DMCA is very clear on this, all you need to do is the try and break digital copy protection, and you are in violation and could be subject to a fine (if you are in the US, of course, but most countries have similar laws now, including most of Europe and Australia).

                            There is the fair use laws in the US, that really conflicts with the DMCA, but DMCA has more money behind it and so it wins (and some countries like Australia do not even have fair use laws). Unless something major happens and the trend reverses, you will see a lot more sites start removing content from their websites (Afterdawn, for example, removed ripper downloads back in 2006).

                            DVD editing/authoring tools are fine, but as long as they only edit non protected stuff. That's why tools like DVD Rebuilder, DVD2one, Nero Recode do not have rippers in them, and why DVD Shrink is a no go (has built in ripper, and as I've explained numerous times, it's association with RipIt4Me has sent it down). Not sure why you are concentrating on DVD Flick - DVD Flick's main purpose is to turn AVI files into DVDs, not to re-edit existing DVDs (there are better tools like DVD Rebuilder or Nero Recode for that). Just like the DMCA is very clear, it is also very clear what it does not cover, and that's anything you do with the material after it has been ripped (as long as it does not break any other copyright laws, for example, as long as you don't distribute it).

                            In other words, most of you have been sold out by your politicians when it comes to your own rights. It's too late to do anything about it, and even if it's not too late, it's too expensive to fight Hollywood, who spends millions on lobbying in Washington DC (and other capitals around the world, take a look at what happened to Canada recently for example).

                            While the DMCA is one thing, remember that the first CSS case centered not on the DMCA, but rather, reverse engineering/breaking of trade secrets. This is one of the many avenues in which companies can sue when the DMCA does not apply - break our copyright protection engine, you have used our product in a unlicensed way, you cause us to lose money => lawsuit. I can't say what has happened on Digital Digest, but there's more information available on this case if you do a search or have a look at Doom9 and other places.
                            Visit Digital Digest and dvdloc8.com, My Blog

                            Comment

                            • admin
                              Administrator
                              • Nov 2001
                              • 8920

                              #89
                              And I would just like to say again, some people seem to think that I made a conscious decision to remove certain stuff from the forum under no pressure from anywhere else and that somehow I can bring that all back just by choosing to do it. Some other sites choose to remove certain stuff to *avoid* a problem, I removed stuff because the problem was already here.

                              I can certainly choose to bring back all the content, but a few days or weeks later, I will have to close down the entire site and then probably go bankrupt in the process. Is that what you really want me to do, just so you can look at some articles that many other sites already cover?
                              Visit Digital Digest and dvdloc8.com, My Blog

                              Comment

                              • blutach
                                Not a god of digital video
                                • Oct 2004
                                • 24627

                                #90
                                As I said a few years ago on this forum, Fair Use has a very bloody nose at the hands of the DMCA and it's only getting bloodier.

                                I suspect consumers whose DVDs can't play (eg damaged disks) are SOL legally-speaking. What's bad is that the DVD may not be in stock when they need a replacement. Yes, a backup strategy is the logical way to go. But, strangely enough, this is unlawful in many jurisdictions.

                                Conversely, it is not the fault of the retailer/distributor/studio if a disk is damaged by your (grand)kids or otherwise by you. There is no right of replacement in these cases and nor would you expect there to be. However, if a disk just "goes bad" within a normal warranty period, it should be replaced under fair trading laws. How easy it is to get your disk replaced is another thing. Again, having a lawful backup would seem the easy answer but politics and business dictate that consumers come last.

                                Yet the consumer has the power, believe it or not. It is you who has the power to buy or not buy a DVD. If you're worried about disks going west, rent them instead. Eventually, messages get thru in sales numbers.

                                As for copy control technology, I am sure that many companies see decrypters as directly affecting their business units. Companies like Macrovision and SONY DADC derive revenue from selling their technology to smaller production houses, who are eager to protect their digital material since pirating would severely affect these houses' profits. So decrypters affect not only these technology companies but the small production houses, too.

                                And to MikeyBK, we may have changed, but hopefully, are not out for the count quite yet. I very much share your wish that some of the material can be restored in time, while not causing issue to any company who has legitimate concerns regarding ripping.

                                Regards
                                Les

                                Essential progs - [PgcEdit] [VobBlanker] [MenuShrink] [IfoEdit] [Muxman] [DVD Remake Pro] [DVD Rebuilder] [BeSweet] [Media Player Classic] [DVDSubEdit] [ImgBurn]

                                Media and Burning - [Golden Rules of Burning] [Media quality] [Fix your DMA] [Update your Firmware] [What's my Media ID Code?] [How to test your disc]
                                [What's bitsetting?] [Burn dual layer disks safely] [Why not to burn with Ner0] [Interpret Ner0's burn errors] [Got bad playback?] [Burner/Media compatibility]

                                Cool Techniques - [2COOL's guides] [Clean your DVD] [Join a flipper] [Split into 2 DVDs] [Save heaps of Mb] [How to mock strip] [Cool Insert Clips]

                                Real useful info - [FAQ INDEX] [Compression explained] [Logical Remapping of Enabled Streams] [DVD-Replica] [Fantastic info on DVDs]


                                You should only use genuine Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden media. Many thanks to www.pcx.com.au for their supply and great service.

                                Explore the sites and the programs - there's a gold mine of information in them

                                Don't forget to play the Digital Digest Quiz!!! (Click here)

                                Comment

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