OK here's a good one...
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Juhnny
Junior Member
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19. December 2005 @ 12:23 |
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After you make a backup copy of your dvd it has no encryption on it. Is there a way of putting one on if you want? I know what your gonna say "then why use decrypt in th first place" I just want to know if it can be done. If so how?
Thanks,
P4-3.0GHZ, 512PC3200 DDR SDRAM, 120GB Seagate HD, GeForce FX5950 Ultra 256MB DDR, Sony DRU710a 16x DVD-RW, NERO
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2005 @ 12:57 |
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It'll be a waste of time, totally useless. Sony's ARccOS and Macrovision's RipGuard are 2 of the most toughest encrypted protections and yet it failed terribly. Obviously, there's AnyDVD, DVDIdle Pro, DVD Decrypter, DVDFAB Decrypter, DVD Region+CSS Free, DVD43, VobBlanker, PgcEdit, IFOEdit, etc.
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Juhnny
Junior Member
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19. December 2005 @ 13:13 |
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I think you miss understood me. I am wondering if you can put back on an encryption once it is taking off.
P4-3.0GHZ, 512PC3200 DDR SDRAM, 120GB Seagate HD, GeForce FX5950 Ultra 256MB DDR, Sony DRU710a 16x DVD-RW, NERO
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Chavo
Member
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19. December 2005 @ 15:22 |
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I never read anything about that before.
AnyDVD and CloneDVD for life.
"I lie, and I steal.....sometimes."
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2005 @ 15:50 |
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Rather than take it off then, could you not just do a 1:1 iso read and iso write and have an exact copy of the DVD that you are backing up?
Cheers.
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Juhnny
Junior Member
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19. December 2005 @ 15:58 |
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I guess I have to ask then, by doing a 1:1 ISO will the protection stay on the backup? I have never done this before thats why I ask.
hmmm...Now that I think about it. A 1:1 ISO I don't think would fit on a DVD-R.
P4-3.0GHZ, 512PC3200 DDR SDRAM, 120GB Seagate HD, GeForce FX5950 Ultra 256MB DDR, Sony DRU710a 16x DVD-RW, NERO
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 19. December 2005 @ 16:06
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enrage
Junior Member
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19. December 2005 @ 18:17 |
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why would you want to put the encryption back on to a copy? only reason that i can think of is that your planning on giving/selling those backup copies to someone else and you dont want them cracking the encryption
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2005 @ 23:02 |
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Quote: I think you miss understood me. I am wondering if you can put back on an encryption once it is taking off.
@Juhnny
I think you're the one that have misunderstood me here. I fully understand what you're trying to say. I know you want to put a (some kind of) encrypted protection back on your DVD-R or DVD+R once you've them backed up right?
And this is what I said; "it'll be a waste of time, totally useless. Sony's ARccOS and Macrovision's RipGuard are 2 of the most toughest encrypted protections and yet it failed terribly. Obviously, there's AnyDVD, DVDIdle Pro, DVD Decrypter, DVDFAB Decrypter, DVD Region+CSS Free, DVD43, VobBlanker, PgcEdit, IFOEdit, etc."
Let me rephrase myself here, nobody else is tougher than Sony and Macrovision. With that being said, they both failed terribly because of AnyDVD, DVDIdle Pro, DVD Decrypter, DVDFAB Decrypter, DVD Region+CSS Free, DVD43, VobBlanker, PgcEdit, IFOEdit, etc.
The truth is...... if one can put an encrypted on, one can crack it.
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 19. December 2005 @ 23:02
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AfterDawn Addict
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20. December 2005 @ 02:11 |
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@juhnny
Quote: hmmm...Now that I think about it. A 1:1 ISO I don't think would fit on a DVD-R.
Yes this would require DL discs.
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Juhnny
Junior Member
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20. December 2005 @ 09:49 |
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I guess I did misunderstand you a bit ALKOHOL. Yes, there currently is not a copy protection out there that can't be broken. I think we all know that from these forums. So let' take ENRAGE and use his hypothetical situation. If you let someone borrow your backup copy without protection to watch it, they could theoretically make copies of it without you knowing it. So if someone wanted to prevent this from happening could one put a protection on a backup to prevent this from happening?
P4-3.0GHZ, 512PC3200 DDR SDRAM, 120GB Seagate HD, GeForce FX5950 Ultra 256MB DDR, Sony DRU710a 16x DVD-RW, NERO
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AfterDawn Addict
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20. December 2005 @ 10:18 |
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What's the point, it could be broken by your buddy, and you wouldn't know if he copied it anyway. Why worry, is he your buddy or not?
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Senior Member
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20. December 2005 @ 10:30 |
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I agree, if you're worried about someone copying it, don't lend them the dvd if it's that important to you.
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Juhnny
Junior Member
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21. December 2005 @ 08:44 |
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No offense guys. I am not asking if I should or should not let someone borrow a dvd. I am simply asking can a PROTECTION be put on a backup copy of a dvd so it cannot be copied without going through the original process? Yes or No. If NO then it's NO. If Yes...How???
Again No Offense...
Thanks,
P4-3.0GHZ, 512PC3200 DDR SDRAM, 120GB Seagate HD, GeForce FX5950 Ultra 256MB DDR, Sony DRU710a 16x DVD-RW, NERO
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AfterDawn Addict
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21. December 2005 @ 08:48 |
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@Juhnny
None taken at all. Just don't understand the concept. I would hazard that it would be broken again, else if you figured it out Sony would make you rich cause if you could keep it from being broken they would want it.
Don't you dare! LOL
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Juhnny
Junior Member
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24. December 2005 @ 05:46 |
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anyone else have any input???
P4-3.0GHZ, 512PC3200 DDR SDRAM, 120GB Seagate HD, GeForce FX5950 Ultra 256MB DDR, Sony DRU710a 16x DVD-RW, NERO
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Senior Member
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24. December 2005 @ 06:11 |
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This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 24. December 2005 @ 06:30
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