Am Di 04.10.2005 09:08 schrieb Marcus Meissner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > On Tue, Oct 04, 2005 at 08:55:20AM +0200, houghi wrote: > > Ah, so if there would be a legal version of libdvdcss2, that would > > cause a > > problem? Somehow I do not think so. To build an installer around > > that > > should not be too hard, be it deb, rpm, tgz or even a binary. > > Well, can you guarantee that this will always enable Macrovision > protection > for Video Out of your graphics card?
What does this mean exactly? I read a bit about Macrovision protection. But how shall this be implemented? If I understood Wikipedia correctly, this would mean that what I am doing is illegal, too: Playstation2 (DVD player) -> TV Card (SVIDEO) -> TVtime -> Nvidia binary driver -> TVout (SVIDEO) -> Beamer If that is illegal because I could capture the video stream and TVtime would not add that Macrovision stuff to my video file, that would mean that any TV application is illegal which is able to capture a stream on SVIDEO or Composite. So, now my question: What exactly has to be done in order to build a legal DVD player for Linux? Dani --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
