I see that his bug was originally posted in 2004.  I has been almost 4
years and yet there is still not appropriate fix for this problem.

It all boils down to this: the Ubuntu/Linux developers need to recognize
that file permissions on udf discs are not worth protecting.  A disc
that is unreadable by Joe's linux box does little more than annoy Joe,
and give him one more reason to switch to Windows or MacOS.  The data is
hardly protected.  As we have seen here, even simply mounting the disc
as iso9660 can allow some level of access to that "protected" data.

The ideal solution to this problem is to, by default, mount this disc
using udf and assuming that the owner of each file is the user that
mounted the disc (which is probably the case, anyway).  This is not a
"random" change or disregard of the permissions; it is in fact
"systematic."  Those users who wish to protect the permissions, the
obviously more knowledgeable ones who care about the integrity of the
udf metadata, ought to be able to manually remount the disc using the
current (more restrictive) udf file system.

Of course this is probably not as simple as editing a line in fstab.
Unfortunately, I lack the ability to make this happen.  Perhaps someone
can tell me how much work I am proposing?

-- 
DVDs with restrictive permissions are unreadable for normal user
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/10550
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