You are not allowed to play the copy privately and charge admission or even use the original disc for that matter in that way. It is illegal to distribute that copy to your friends, family or strangers in any way. If you own a copy of a Blu-ray, it becomes you personal property, you have the right to protect it and if you make a copy of it in order to protect it, then that is legal. It's a grey legal area and it falls under the term "fair trade use". The fact remains though, an ISO copy of a Blu-ray can not be played on a lisenced player _ the AACA file has to be defeated in some way. So I had a look at the description of PowerDVD 15 and it is deceiving, claiming that ISO playback of a Blu-ray is now possible. After a few minutes DVDFab/copy issued a pop-up that said that I would have to buy copy or. To answer your question, dual monitors can give problems with HDCP protection, but not always, so try using one with the original disc, and then try both monitors with the original disc _ not the ISO. Hello - Please clarify I just tried to decyrpt/copy a dvd. Also, DVDFab HD Decrypter (Win version) has been reported to run fine on. but the DVDFab HD Decrypter which you need for DVD and Blu-ray ripping. You have no idea what you're talking about, if you make a 1 to 1 copy of a Blu-ray and leave AACS in tact, it will not play in Power DVD because it is a licensed player _ it's that simple.Īnd if you play an ISO copy of a Blu-ray in an un-licensed player such as MPC-HC, it will not work there either because AACS is still in tact. Maybe avast had a problem with their virus definitions yesterday that caused. Currently, WinX DVD Ripper Platinum is my go-to for DVD rips, but its free DVD.
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