I am not a current customer either but I registered to say I am glad to see you guys alive and kicking. The only reason I am not a current customer is because you don't have a Mac version. If you had a Mac version I wouldn't have purchased two lifetime licenses on products from DVDFab. Now that DVDFab says it won't attempt to circumvent AACS 2.0, I am looking for the company that will. I don't know what is involved in getting a Mac version together but please consider it.Hi guys it's been a while since I've posted here (and as you know I'm not a customer), but I just wanted to say I wish the dev team all the best of luck going forward with this. It would be really nice to see AnyDVD ported to Linux and even Mac as well (especially Linux though).
What a great customer-focused philosophy you guys have as well!
You could always use a Virtual Machine, or maybe Parallels would work.I am not a current customer either but I registered to say I am glad to see you guys alive and kicking. The only reason I am not a current customer is because you don't have a Mac version. If you had a Mac version I wouldn't have purchased two lifetime licenses on products from DVDFab. Now that DVDFab says it won't attempt to circumvent AACS 2.0, I am looking for the company that will. I don't know what is involved in getting a Mac version together but please consider it.
I'm from DK, and here its legal to make a backup of your movie, but its nok legal to break any copy protection to do itOk, call me stupid but I thought it was "legal" inthe States to back up a movie that you own? I always did that with the movies my boys liked to watch so they don't mess up my original.
Ok, call me stupid but I thought it was "legal" inthe States to back up a movie that you own? I always did that with the movies my boys liked to watch so they don't mess up my original.
Not "stupid" (1) backup is allowed in US but the tools to do it I guess are not
Makes sense to someone I guess LOL
Nope, it's not that simple, at least in some EU countries: Backup is allowed except there's an effective copy protection. So in fact, if you can make a backup, copy protection obviously is not effective.
I'm not a lawyer, but I've read a lot about the whole "effective" wording with regard to copy protection. Effective in this context simply means "in effect". It doesn't have anything to do with how well it works.Go ahead and try to find a judge who sees it that way. Good luck - but you'll find that is IS that simple.
Any Judge will argue, that the copy protection is effective simply because you have to circumvent it.
Ah, the logic of lawyers. Ain't it grand.It's really simple: backup is allowed - except.... when there is a copy protection.
Since a copy protection comes with every Blu-ray disc and almost every DVD, backup is effectively not allowed. As simple as that.