This is a dubious statement in itself. You are making a 1:1 backup without the protection kicking in nothing can every be perfect if it was then the studio would make make it no Protection from the start but that is something they never will do in any case. And in case of DVD CSS was broken and BD well that's a work in progress but it's far better when they first started and only get's better. BD will take time but then again so did DVD CSS as well and now it's broken. I've done my many far shares of DVD and BD into 1:1 and CloneDVD compress and they all so far worked find and played back in pre 2012 BD standalone as though they were the original with no problem.There are none. You won't ever be able to make a perfect 1:1 backup and play it on any Blu-ray player.
Playing on an HTPC with AnyDVDHD gives you great quality.
The only other known solution is CloneBD with AnyDVDHD which re-encodes the originally audio to AC3.
There is, the only problem is there isn't a huge market for it, if there is a lot of money put into it firmwares will be cooked few days after the official release, these guys mod firmwares, not sure how their business model is though, you buy the CFW and you get free updates or you have to buy every customized new firmware, but yeah they do some of the new Blu-ray players but not the newest.There are none. You won't ever be able to make a perfect 1:1 backup and play it on any Blu-ray player.
Just to clarify so someone doesn't get the wrong idea, those are NOT the only two "known solutions." There are many older players that do not detect Cinavia, and newer ones with custom firmware available (such as Oppo 105). There is also a third party program that downloads and muxes in an AC3 Cinavia free audio track that is a higher quality than AnyDVD is currently able to produce.
I just purchased a 103 and it comes with Cinavia. You mentioned the pricier model (105) and it does include Cinavia as well. The way your post is written, I'm not sure if you mean it is Cinavia free when it has a custom firmware.
Does the player implement Cinavia watermark detection?
Yes. This is mandatory for all Blu-ray players starting in 2012. You cannot produce a Blu-ray player under license without it.
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Is there a work-around?
We have reports that Cinavia detection is working only for BDMV backups, not for MKV or M2TS copies. Cinavia detection does happen for MKV files on optical disc, but not for those on a USB device, or over SMB or DLNA.
It is hard to believe this will be allowed for long.
I'm not sure if you mean it is Cinavia free when it has a custom firmware.