Showing posts with label dvd tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dvd tips. Show all posts

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Popular DVD Ripping/Copying FAQs

Ripping DVD videos is never as straightforward as you thought, especially for starters. But never mind, there are always some guides that can instruct you to get DVD backups or MP4/MKV extracts. To save your time to searching for the DVD ripping/copying tips, here we have gathered around some top and effective tutorial on DVD backing up. Hope you can find what you want in the corresponding categories.

dvd ripping copying

DVD Encryption

There are four types of copy protection that are used on commercial pre-recorded DVD discs. These are Analog Protection System (APS) scrambling, Content Scramble System (CSS) encryption, Region codes and a system involving corrupted disc structure. Recordable DVD discs are also sometimes copy protected using Content Protection for Recordable Media (CPRM) encryption. We will go over each of these schemes in turn

Analog Protection System (Macrovision)

The Analog Protection System, popularly known as Macrovision after the company that developed it, is a protection system that is applied to the composite analog video signal coming out of DVD players. By manipulating the signal level of the composite video, Macrovision fools the automatic gain control of most video recorders resulting in annoying shifts in color and brightness in the recorded video.

Macrovision can be defeated by passing the composite video signal through a hardware device that restores the proper video signal levels. With the demise of analog video and the widespread availability of digital decryption tools, Macrovision protection has largely become irrelevant. Macrovision Corporation renamed itself Rovi and now promotes other copy protection technologies.

Content Scramble System (CSS) Encryption

CSS is an encryption system that is the main copy protection scheme used on pre-recorded DVD discs. CSS utilizes a proprietary 40-bit cipher that is used to encrypt the data stored on the DVD disc. When the disc is inserted into a player or computer, a series of "authentication" handshake key exchanges occur between the DVD drive and the player software. At the end of the "authentication" process, the drive allows access to the encrypted DVD data and the player can use the key it has obtained to decrypt the DVD data and play the disc.

Many DVD drives have a tendency to completely lock out access to an encrypted disc until the drive has been "authenticated". In addition, many DVD drives will refuse to complete the "authentication" process and provide a decryption key if the disc and drive are not from the same region. Both of these situations can cause strange behavior and odd error messages on computer systems.

DVD Disc Corruption

After the CSS protection system was cracked, the movie industry looked for a alternative copy protection scheme that would be compatible with the large number of existing DVD players in the marketplace.

Borrowing a (failed) technique from the video game industry, they settled on a scheme in which portions of DVD discs are deliberately mangled in such a way as to render them unreadable. When the disc is played, these corrupted areas of the disc are skipped. When the disc is copied sequentially, however, these corrupted areas cause the drive to hang up and get stuck.

This copy protection scheme has been marketed under a variety of names, including ARccOS (by Sony), RipGuard (by Rovi), Disney X (by Disney), etc. For cost and convenience reasons, it is not applied to all commercial DVD releases.

DVD disc corruption is a nuisance, but most of the more sophisticated DVD copy tools can handle it. Some tools maintain a database of corrupted areas on DVD discs that contain corruption, while other tools attempt to analyze the DVD structure to find areas of the disc that are never accessed.

Region codes

Almost all commercial DVDs that are sold have region code, which only allows the DVD to be played on DVD players that have this region code, and the only DVD players that typically do have this region code are those sold in that same region. Following is a color-coded region map for DVDs:

Region code map for DVD

When you want to play DVD of region 1,2,3 on your DVD player freely or on your region-locked PS3/PS4/Xbox One/360, you can refer to the following guides:

DVD Ripping/Copying Tools

There are many DVD Ripper/Copier software floating over there. Popular DVD ripping tools include MakeMKV and DVDFab DVD Copy. The gold standard decryption tool is, however, the on-the-fly tool Pavtube ByteCopy and Pavtube BDMagic. You can read their comparison article MakeMKV vs ByteCopy vs DVDfab or look at their difference in the chart below.

DVD Backup Tips

To manage DVD movies conveniently and protect DVD discs from scratching, people usually backup DVD discs to digital version. There are too many choices you can choose to store your DVD backups, like NAS, Media Server, Cloud Storage, External Hard Drive, USB Stick, etc. Different choices lead to different results. For example, when you migrate DVD to Clous NAS devices, you can play DVD movies on any DLNA-enabled devices freely while you put DVD backups to external HDD, you can carry your DVD movies anywhere as you want. Choose the guide you want below:

DVD Audio Extracting

Sometimes, you love the background music in the DVD movies. When you can't find the audio online, what can you do is to extract the audio from your DVD discs. If you don't know how to do it, just visit the guides below:

DVD Subtitle Issues

Have you got chagrined when you can't understand the plot for the foreign language? Do you have the need of extracting the subtitle from your favorite DVD, BDMV folder, M2TS files and ISO images? Or maybe you want your movies to displaying the subtitle only when the actor saying a foreign languages?

DVD Lossless/Multi-track Ripping

When you want to lossless backup DVD, it means you don't want any video quality loss in the DVD copying. Multi-track backing up DVD can make you keep multiple subtitle streaming and audio tracks so that you can switch the sound channel as you need.

DVD to Media Player

Except DVD Player, even powerful as VLC can't play DVD movies directly. So when you want to play DVD movies on various media player and portable devices such as Windows Media Player,QuickTime, etc, you need to rip DVD to digital file.

DVD to Devices

When you want to stream DVD on TV, PS3, PS4, Xbox One without using DVD Player, you also can choose to copy DVD to NAS, USB HDD, Home Server for TV DVD streaming.Thus,since your portable devices don't have one DVD player so create a digital copy of DVD can ave you view DVD movies on your iPad, Galaxy phone/tablet, etc.

DVD to Video Editor

Through DVD ripping, you can edit your DVD movies or a fragment on some popular video editor software.

DVD Ripper Software Comparison

Below is a chart to give you an intuitionistic exhibition on the difference between some top DVD Ripping software.

 

Software Compare Pavtube ByteCopy Pavtube BDMagic

DVDfab DVD Ripper

MakeMKV

Input Support        
DVD Disc
Y
Y
Y
Y
DVD Folder
Y
Y
Y
Y
DVD ISO
Y
Y
Y
Y
DVD Ripping Function
Decrypt the Encryption
Y
Y
Y
Y
Full Copy DVD
Y
Y
Y
N
Directly Copy DVD
Y
Y
Y
N
SD/HD MP4/AVI/WMV Output
Y
Y
Y
N
DVD to Multi-track MP4/MOV/AVI
Y
N
N
N
DVD to Lossless MKV
Y
N
N
Y
Forced Subtitle Preserving
Y
Y
Y
N
GPU Acceleration
Y
Y
Y
N

2D-3D/3D-2D

Y
Y
Y
N
Customize Output Video
Y
Y
Y
N

Verdict:

If you have some other DVD ripping/copying needs and can't find the solution here or you have other useful tutorial, leave a message at the comment area and we will update the article regularly.