DVDs have been around for over 20 years now. Obviously when they were introduced much of the material was copyrighted, and there was no other practical way of playing or accessing the material. Now very few people still actually use DVDs (I believe) and in some jurisdictions it may now be legal to rip the material to a more useful form (e.g. mp4) for personal viewing.
What is the situation in the UK? Perhaps it is as murky as the "rip CD" fiasco, which for a while enabled us all to explicitly rip CDs for use with mp3 players, but the legislation was reversed - though presumably it has not been in anyone's interest to pursue this apart from any people or organisations blatantly flouting this for profit.
One issue now is that the hardware end users have may "require" broadcast from a computer to a TV (e.g. via Airplay - using Chromecast or Apple TV or similar) so effectively a decrypt or rip process needs to be in place between the DVD drive and the rest of the viewing system.
What is the situation in the UK? Perhaps it is as murky as the "rip CD" fiasco, which for a while enabled us all to explicitly rip CDs for use with mp3 players, but the legislation was reversed - though presumably it has not been in anyone's interest to pursue this apart from any people or organisations blatantly flouting this for profit.
One issue now is that the hardware end users have may "require" broadcast from a computer to a TV (e.g. via Airplay - using Chromecast or Apple TV or similar) so effectively a decrypt or rip process needs to be in place between the DVD drive and the rest of the viewing system.
Comment