Exactly, and that's why piracy is so widespread! People are tired of the headaches and just want it to work. DRM isn't grand and they're making people into pirates with it (along with their ridiculous greed of course)! Take the Dark Knight for example: The movie studio's complain about all the money that they've lost because of illegal downloads and yet the movie has taken in over 1 billion world wide. Boo hoo!

Brian Weeden wrote:
Rip the Bluray to HD, re-encode the audio to FLAC and mux back into an mkv
file with the video and any subs you need.  Works great.

---------------------------
Brian Weeden
Technical Consultant
Secure World Foundation <http://www.secureworldfoundtion.org>
+1 (514) 466-2756 Canada
+1 (202) 683-8534 US


On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 7:32 PM, James Maki <jwm_maill...@comcast.net>wrote:

Isn't DRM just grand! It doesn't really protect the material, just makes it
difficult for us to use it, to enjoy what we pay for.

So how do you get tru-hd or dts-hd from a set top blu-ray player? The HDMI
receiver passes it on to the HDTV (which is stereo). Can't use the SPDIF
without it degrading the quality. What other options are we left with to
process the sound? This just keeps getting better and better!

Jim Maki
jwm_maill...@comcast.net

-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Weeden
There are also known issues with spdif ports and Bluray,
specifically
getting any tru-hd or dts-hd decoded.

Spdif Is not considered a protected channel for drm and thus the pc
might end up downgrading the signal.

-------
Brian Weeden
Technical Consultant
Secure World Foundation


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