In Reply to: Re: DVD-Audio to FLAC posted by tiberian on December 12, 2005 at 16:39:31:
DVD Decrypter breaks DVD-V encryption. But DVD-A was designed with more secure encryption. If it had actually become popular, some hacker may have tried to break it. But with a couple hundred titles out, it remains secure. Sort of like SACD. Never reached a critical mass to interest pirates.What the original questioner is missing is that both SACD and DVD-A were designed from the ground up to be unrippable. The record companies like to blame most of their problems on the fact that everyone with a computer can copy CDs. Maybe it has hurt them, maybe it hasn't. But they hate it.
So in introducing new audio formats, they made sure that ripping to a computer was very difficult. Their hope was to grab market share with a secure format and start the hard transition back to controlling their content again. But they didn't grab much market share.
So SACD and DVD-A remain secure. As an above poster said, if you have a DVD-A without copy protection and without MLP, then yes, you can rip it and probably compress into a flac format. But that's a small minority of DVD-As, hardly seems worth the trouble.
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Follow Ups
- won't work on DVD-A - tunenut 10:25:05 12/13/05 (3)
- Re: won't work on DVD-A - Christine Tham 13:49:10 12/13/05 (2)
- did not know that - tunenut 16:28:23 12/13/05 (1)
- Re: did not know that - Christine Tham 18:21:59 12/13/05 (0)