User User name Password  
   
Tuesday 7.4.2026 / 13:53
Search AfterDawn Forums:        In English   Suomeksi   På svenska
afterdawn.com > forums > announcements > news comments > new cinavia drm takes aim at pirates
Show topics
 
Forums
Forums
New Cinavia DRM takes aim at pirates
  Jump to:
 
The following comments relate to this news article:

New Cinavia DRM takes aim at pirates

article published on 3 March, 2010

FileShareFreak has a very interesting report out today about Cinavia DRM, which is a new audio watermarking technology that takes aim at pirates, and those trying to playback movie downloads via their PlayStation 3s. The site says the watermarking works by "comparing the source of the audio to the format in which a movie was released (ie theatrical or commercial disc), and if the watermarked ... [ read the full article ]

Please read the original article before posting your comments.
Posted Message
tin23uk
Junior Member

1 product review
_
7. May 2010 @ 10:21 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
i figured a way around the little cinavia problem and have a file protected by cinavia now playing perfectly on my ps3.
Advertisement
_
__
Senior Member
_
7. May 2010 @ 14:25 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by tin23uk:
i figured a way around the little cinavia problem and have a file protected by cinavia now playing perfectly on my ps3.
Fantastic!, and by the way I found out who created the Universe, but I'm not tell'n.... LOL
Senior Member
_
9. May 2010 @ 19:59 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
four-victor-charlie...four-victor-charlie... request target ID coordinants...
Drone programed and deployed. Proceeding to Alpha-two-four-niner-niner, awaiting termination approval code. Visual confirmation, we can see the disk. Repeat, we can see the disk. Termination code approved, EMP deployed. Direct hit. Target destroyed.
AfterDawn Addict

1 product review
_
9. May 2010 @ 20:55 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Bravo-0ne,acknowledged that. Direct hit confirmed.
AfterDawn Addict
_
9. May 2010 @ 21:37 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by cyprusrom:
Bravo-0ne,acknowledged that. Direct hit confirmed.
Target remains! I repeat target remains! LMAO
AfterDawn Addict

1 product review
_
9. May 2010 @ 22:04 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by garmoon:
Originally posted by cyprusrom:
Bravo-0ne,acknowledged that. Direct hit confirmed.
Target remains! I repeat target remains! LMAO

Ah, those damn "pirated" lightning bolts,we must've got a bogus shipmen again...Damn you DOD, shipping us counterfeited ammo again!!!
AfterDawn Addict

1 product review
_
17. May 2010 @ 03:24 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
It is just another means of making it harder on paying customers. Pirates will quickly adapt to this...and before long, we will have some kind of "Fast frame copy" that copies just the video, audio, sub, and nav data...and leaves behind this crap in order to make a perfect copy at a smaller size.

Oh, someone asked if HDCP was ever cracked. The answer is yes...it was cracked before they started selling the first commercial bluray players, but the crack is not software, but hardware...and making, possessing, selling, or transporting such hardware is illegal according to the DMCA (even though several commercial sites such as IGN have them).

BTW...I could get a bluray burner cheap if I wanted one, even retail isn't that bad anymore...but why? I can't remember the last time I burned a DVD...I have two spindles of blanks that have cobwebs over them! If I want to watch on my PS3, I have a media server. If I want to carry data around, I have flash drives. If I want to carry a lot of data around, a DL-Bluray only gives me 1/10 the space of a cheap hard drive. OH, and blurays are only $3 here in the states, and that is still more per GB than a hard drive!
Senior Member
_
17. May 2010 @ 12:08 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by KillerBug:
Oh, someone asked if HDCP was ever cracked. The answer is yes...it was cracked before they started selling the first commercial bluray players, but the crack is not software, but hardware...and making, possessing, selling, or transporting such hardware is illegal according to the DMCA (even though several commercial sites such as IGN have them).

BTW...I could get a bluray burner cheap if I wanted one, even retail isn't that bad anymore...but why? I can't remember the last time I burned a DVD...I have two spindles of blanks that have cobwebs over them! If I want to watch on my PS3, I have a media server. If I want to carry data around, I have flash drives. If I want to carry a lot of data around, a DL-Bluray only gives me 1/10 the space of a cheap hard drive. OH, and blurays are only $3 here in the states, and that is still more per GB than a hard drive!
I looked at the IGN software site and could only find old articles on HDCP solutions so I don't see anything good there. The real solutions out their involve taking an old device like a TV and tapping off the AV signal after it has been decoded and handshakeing is no longer performed. This isn't a great solution for the average person and even for a techie it's a mess. So you are not correct about it being circumvented before being produced.

No BD burner, a burner & discs is much cheaper in the long run then buying 10 500GB 2.5" (for <5TG storage, 100 movies) removable drives and the storage is much safer given proper care so your argument for storing on a expensive device that can fail is pretty flimsy at best. It's cool to have a HD server on a HDD(s) but I would still have my long term storage on optical discs hence therefore needing a BD burner. The bottom line is it's a quarter the price to use BD discs, at most, and the storage is more reliable too so it's really a no-brainer to have a burner.
rollinboy
Suspended due to non-functional email address
_
20. May 2010 @ 08:14 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
anyone confirm that this works...Quote...people with ps3's have you tryed this....I was able to watch it when I used convertxtodvd to burn the video and disconnected the PS3 from the internet. It played it just fine for me.

Last edited by yajdragon79 at 2010-05-20 12:29:12 anyone else with a ps3 who can't usually play this due to the cinavia crap confirm does this actually work ?
Senior Member

4 product reviews
_
8. June 2010 @ 01:25 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by Mr-Movies:
How about HDCP anyone busted that one yet?
Yes and no as its a hardware feature it requires you heavily modify your device. theres also a little box you but between your HDCP device and your NON/HDCP compliant device. it tricks the HDCP device into believing its hooked upto another HDCP compliant device.

HDCPs weakness is that its a point to point implementation.


teikyo30
Newbie
_
12. June 2010 @ 23:52 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Why would anyone stream from a media server to ps3 then to the tv? That makes zero sense to me. Why not just connect directly to the tv via hdmi? Or get a tv with a usb port that accepts video? My Philips plays H.264 and Divx via the USB port. I have my 500 gig external plugged into it. When I have more money for a media server I'll probably have that plugged into it. And, yes, I will get a PS3 and plug that into it, but I won't stream from media server to ps3 to tv.
Senior Member

5 product reviews
_
29. June 2010 @ 22:54 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Funny how unappealing films such as this have the most anti-piracy BS I have ever seen. There are always a way to get around a roadblock. Give it time and it will be unlocked, unrooted, or free. That's just how the internet works: to be adaptable to the masses for all to enjoy, not just to a select few who want to control everything. It was meant to be free, plain and simple.
Nemoda1
Account closed as per user's own request
_
6. July 2010 @ 22:56 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Originally posted by tin23uk:
i figured a way around the little cinavia problem and have a file protected by cinavia now playing perfectly on my ps3.
how can i play canavia protected AVI's On my ps3
rollinboy
Suspended due to non-functional email address
_
9. July 2010 @ 13:57 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
@Nemoda1 don't update your firmware on your ps3 lol
Advertisement
_
__
 
_
asharif
Newbie
_
15. September 2010 @ 08:55 _ Link to this message    Send private message to this user   
Good technology IMO, I'm all in favour of something which inconveniences the pikies / thieves...
Of course Sony are going to put some sort of anti-piracy technology into their consoles, when they have a major stake in the film industry!! *rolleyes*
 
afterdawn.com > forums > announcements > news comments > new cinavia drm takes aim at pirates
 

Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums
Music: MP3Lizard.com
Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums | Compare game prices
Software: Software downloads
Blogs: User profile pages
RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | AfterDawn in Norwegian | download.fi
Navigate: Search | Site map
About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
 
  © 1999-2026 by AfterDawn Ltd.

  IDG TechNetwork