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Here's an interesting aftershock from Slysoft's departure. DVDFab has just announced that they will not produce a program for decryption of the new Ultra HD Blu-ray discs. http://www.myce.com/news/dvdfab-we-will-not-decrypt-or-circumvent-aacs-2-0-in-the-days...to-come-78698/
Gee, I wonder why. -
'Do I look absolutely divine and regal, and yet at the same time very pretty and rather accessible?' - Queenie
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The Next Version of AACS Copy Protection Accompanying those newly released Ultra HD Blu-ray titles is the version 2.0 of Advanced Access Content System. According to a document called AACS 2.0 Draft, the new copy protection requires the Ultra HD Blu-ray players to support two AACS 2.0 functionalities, one named “basic” and the other referred as “enhanced”. Furthermore, the Enhanced AACS 2.0 requires an internet connection upon the first playback of a specific Ultra HD Blu-ray disc. As to the reason, it is said that the live internet connection is a must to retrieve a key which is stored on the device. The document also indicates that HDCP 2.2 is required in order to fully support 4K content, and Ultra HD Blu-ray players will also come up with a new feature called Trusted Execution Environment where authenticated code can be executed, which is said to be an enhanced version of BD+.
will there be a solution to crack AACS 2.0?
Fengtao Software Inc. makes it clear that the company will not decrypt or circumvent AACS 2.0 in the days to come. This is in accordance with AACS-LA, (which has not made public the specifications for AACS 2.0), the BDA and the movie studios. Regarding Ultra HD support, DVDFab will concentrate development efforts on providing support for editing 4K/UHD content.
I do not like that: " the live internet connection is a must to retrieve a key which is stored on the device. "
Source: http://www.myce.com/news/dvdfab-we-will-not-decrypt-or-circumvent-aacs-2-0-in-the-days...to-come-78698/
No more possible to rip our own personal discs in Ultra HD Blu-ray environment?
Thanks.
Best regards.
devil (johner) -
My guess is DVDFab does not know how to decrypt AACS 2.0. Instead of looking like they can't do it and instead of having users asking everyday when they are going to add it, they decided to make the PR announcement to end the issue before it began. I would bet if AACS 2.0 was ever broken they would add it to the DVDFab program, but I would not expect them to break it themselves.
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It may be cracked down the road. The AACS 2.0 uses two encryption the first would be the easy one to get around, the second one is the difficult one Since it requires a internet connection to download a key.
Any word if AACS 2.0 would coming to Normal Blu-Rays?
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It seems as of late allot of things are becoming more and more secure.
I just liked the idea I could play my Blu-Rays on the software I want to play it on, instead of being forced to use PowerDVD. -
"Since it requires a internet connection to download a key."
Does that mean that I have to have an internet connection to play it on a standalone player or is it decrypted by hardware in the player.?Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence -Carl Sagan -
internet connection required the first time they are inserted into any device or they don't play.
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"a lot of people are better dead" - prisoner KSC2-303 -
It will try locally first if it fails it will have to connect to the net. If theirs no connection it will say failed and nothign will be played back. You only need to download the key once per Blu-ray. Unless it downloads the the latest BD database at that time.
*Note*
From my understanding it's not on all Blu-Rays just the ones where studio enforce the policy. -
YES, Hollywood once again wins, With all the things going on in the USA you would think they would have better or more important things to worry about, But since the USA takes care of the rich and the rich donate all the money for campaigning they get what they want, Best thing to do is stop going to the movies and stop buying all those movie disks and see how much money they loose then maybe they would have to live like us and see how they like that, Bring them back down to earth.
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I won't be joining the boycott. I plan to continue renting movies on physical media, buying movies on physical media, and going to a theater to watch movies. If I have a problem playing a disc, I will return it to the store where I bought it or report the problem to Red Box if it was a rental.
It isn't as if I never have a problem playing commercial discs. I rented "A Walk in the Woods" on Blu-ray a few weeks ago to watch with my mother, but it wouldn't play on her Blu-Ray player even after updating the firmware. I reported the problem and received a credit for the Blu-Ray rental and a credit to watch the movie for free on DVD, which we did the following week. -
[/QUOTE] I won't be joining the boycott. I plan to continue renting movies on physical media, buying movies on physical media, and going to a theater to watch movies. If I have a problem playing a disc, I will return it to the store where I bought it or report the problem to Red Box if it was a rental.
Donate, Donate, I can wait 3 months until it comes out on disk to rent which the movie industry still makes money but not as much or another several months it will be free on TV. -
usually_quiet, I'm (truly!) glad you apparently find satisfactory compensation with your bad disc transactions, but things are rather less pleasant for those of us who regularly buy movie collections or (especially) TV season sets. It is more than a little outrageous that 20 years after the debut of DVD, the studios STILL cannot get their collective acts together on reliable standards and disc consistency *at the authoring stage* - never mind their ongoing disc manufacturing QC follies.
There is no acceptable reason whatsoever to botch a TV season set so completely that exchanges are pointless (because all samples of the set have the same embedded authoring or production flaws, and a remaster will never happen). A Red Box rental of a popular movie that goes wonky is a minor annoyance: if the disc is problematic it will show up on a stream or cable eventually (or you have a shot at it being remastered). But rare or niche-interest titles mangled by studio incompetence are infuriating, because we know its likely the only version that will ever be available to buy.
I'd estimate a good 20% of my TV season sets are plagued with immediate defects in authoring or mfr, while another 10% seem fine at first only to inexplicably decay months later. Exchanging for another set typically just trades flaws or repeats the same ones. The only workaround is to use AnyDVD to "heal" the defects while ripping a backup. This doesn't always work, success rate is perhaps 75%, but its better than nothing. So with AnyDVD gone, a huge hole opens in my salvage toolkit. We can hope the final AnyDVD will still work on the ebbing flow of future DVD releases, but the clock is ticking on forward BD compatibility.
Then again, the tide might be indirectly turning in collector's favor. As consumer interest in physical discs dies off, more and more new releases get shifted from pressed mass production to order-on-demand recordable discs. The on-demand discs tend to have less-convoluted authoring, far less incidence of physical mfr defects, and can be backed up by obsolete decryption utilities. -
This will be a major inconvenience for home users with legitimate uses for the software, but it's a total joke to suppose that this will have any serious impact on the continued, wide dissemination of copyrighted content. Right now, you can find plenty of scene site downloads available for just about anything -- up to 1080P, in professional-grade quality -- with many of these indicating that they were derived from streaming origins. So, whatever is being used to protect said streams is not even slowing these folks down. It seems a safe bet that this trend will only increase.
When in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form. -
See below.
---> https://forum.slysoft.com/threads/no-fox-no-job-no-future.68331/
---> https://forum.slysoft.com/threads/slysoft-closed.68304/page-4#post-423889
Thanks.
Best regards.
devil (johner) -
I haven't managed to keep up on all of this news . . . but was there some mention of Fengtao also closing up shop, getting bought off, ceasing development, or something of that nature ? If so, it wouldn't be a huge surprise either: Big Content has had them in its crosshairs for a long time now.
When in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form. -
Oh, and one other thing, just out of curiosity and my not really having stayed in the loop on this, but didn't one or the other of these products -- in their more recent versions -- claim to have finally beaten Cinavia ? If so, was that a true breakthrough ? In view of a few threads here on that subject which grew tiresome, I don't want to beat a dead horse, but I'd like to find out.
When in Las Vegas, don't miss the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum http://www.pinballmuseum.org/ -- with over 150 tables from 6+ decades of this quintessentially American art form. -
Streaming hasn't killed the video physical media yet although it did hurt it, for two raisons, 1- Streaming quality is lower especially for Videophiles' taste. 2- Data caps on internet render streaming a distant option for households with several devices in the home, Until those two inconveniences eliminated we'll probably see the death of the Blu-ray/UHD Blu-ray just like the CD/SACD/DVD-Audio did.
In my opinion streaming/OTA/Cable/Satellite will purposely always be inferior in quality compared to the physical disc to keep movie sales going. -
Silly indeed, who needs a crappy quality cam capture when you can pay few dollars a month and stream it with decent quality, the whole idea of fighting copy protection removal software is they don't want you to have a full blast studio quality copy of the movie with losseless audio track, they can care less about video shooting your projection screen, there is simply no desire for it.
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Fengtao still in business last I heard. What they announced is that they will not attempt to break encryption on 4K Blu-ray discs. It doesn't bother me too much because every single DRM effort going all the way back to VHS, has been broken. Someone will step in and offer that ability. And honestly I'm just fine with regular Blu-ray. My worry is that the AACS 2.0 will work its way into regular Blu-ray and DVD.
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For those that don't know, the (re-named) forum has been moved to https://forum.redfox.bz/
And some good news regarding a new release of AnyDVD: https://forum.redfox.bz/threads/key-server-ips-instructions.68345/page-4#post-425505
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