Mar 19

In most areas around the world it is not legal to rip DVDs even though you own it. Technically it is OK to make personal copies, but the US’s Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) makes it illegal to break the copy protection on the DVD which is required to copy it. I don’t think anyone has yet been charge for making personal copies of their DVDs yet and don’t think the movie makers want to go after individuals. Just don’t share them on P2P sharing networks and you’ll be OK.

Making copies of DVD’s is actually not protected under the Fair Use laws as most people are led to believe. Fair Use law was implemented long before the ability to make personal copies of legally owned originals was ever possible. Fair Use typically covers the use of copyrighted material in specifc situations including education, quoting material, and a few other things (such as showing a clip of a movie on a news broadcast). This protected users of the material from lawsuits from the copyright holder for using a small snippet of their work. Most notably, Fair Use law is determined on a case-by-case basis and the ruling of one instance of fair use does not constitute another situation no matter how similar. However, it is possible that making copies of your DVD’s could fall under Fair Use law. There is just no blanket statement that says that copying your DVD’s is protected by law.

What most people are referring to is the Audio Home Recording Act (AHRA) which made it legal for people to make permanent digital recordings of their music for personal use. The act also refers to the selling of devices specifically made for the purpose of making said permanent recordings. Interestingly enough, the act also gives the right to copy television shows for viewing at a later time using a “time shifting” device such as a VCR. It does not have a specific clause for movies shown on television.

Many people just assume that because the ability to copy DVD’s exists, it falls under the same law as CD’s. However, there is no specific law giving a legal right to make personal copies of DVD’s like there is for music.

I will reitterate what others have said: the likelihood that you would ever be proscecuted for making personal copies is unlikely.

But honestly! When I buy a CD, i use iTunes to rip it so I can play on my iPod. I don’t see a difference with DVDs. I bought it, I own it, why shouldn’t I be able to rip it so I can watch it on my PSP or iPod?

There are many programs out there that can help you rip DVDs, some are free and some are not.

The Best Paid Software:

ImTOO DVD Ripper (Download for FREE Trial)is an awesome tool for ripping DVDs to any format, it also has a bunch of editing and custumization features.

Best Free DVD Ripper:

Handbrake is the best free software to rip DVDs and it works great, but you do need DVD43 to crack the encryption for Win.

Tagged with:
Mar 02

Everyone who has been on an airplane before knows how long and boring the trip can be. I always tend to get anxious or restless and cannot wait for the flight to end. I found one good way to kill time so I do not have to suffer as much as the other fellow passengers. I watch those movies in my PSP.

By no means am I encouraging people to pirate movies, but I do believe if you own the movie already, then you are free to view the movie the way you chose, whether you want to view it on your iPhone/iPod, PSP, or simply on your computer, then you should have the right to do so. I get so irritated when I buy a DVD and I can’t put it on my PSP, so my only option is to buy the movie again for my PSP.

Then I want to recommend one cool DVD tools, which gives me the freedom to convert a protected DVD to play on pretty much any multimedia device; it can even copy the ISO image to duplicate the DVD.

This type of software is somewhat controversial because there is no doubt people are using it for piracy purposes. This is just inevitable though, just look at music CDs and how easy it is to rip and copy CDs.

I like to use this software to put movies and clips of movies on my PSP and iPhone. Being able to convert selected segments is extremely useful, because most of the time, there’s just that one really funny part which I want to put on my PSP to watch when I get stuck in a traffic jam or in a boring trip.

Like I said before, I am completely against piracy, but if I bought a movie, I should be able to enjoy it by whichever medium I choose. Xilisoft’s DVD Ripper helps make that happen.

download DVD Ripper

Software ScreenShot:

dvd ripper

Software Reference:
 
Supported Video and Audio Formats:
Output Device Support
iPod, iPod nano, iPod classic, iPod shuffle, iPod touch

iPhone, iPhone 3G, Apple TV

PSP, PS3

Xbox, Xbox 360

General 3GP mobile phone, BlackBerry, etc.

General MP4 players: Archos, Creative Zen, iRiver, etc.

Window Mobile device: Pocket PC, Dell Axim X51, HP iPaq hw6500 series, etc.

Input File Format Support
DVD-Video, DVD folder, DVD IFO file, ISO image file
Output File Format Support
Video AVI, MPEG, WMV, MP4, FLV, H.264/MPEG-4 AVC, DivX, XviD, MOV, RM, ASF, MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, Super Video CD Format, Video CD Format, VOB MPEG2 PS Format
Audio MP3, WMA, AAC, WAV, OGG, FLAC, APE, M4A, RA, AC3, MP2, AIFF, AMR, SUN AU Format
Image BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG
Software details:
Tool Name: Xilisoft DVD Ripper Ultimate
Version: 5.0
License: Shareware
Price: 55.95$
Trial Limitations: convert 5 minutes of the original video
System Requirements: OS Microsoft Windows XP (SP2 or later), Windows Vista, Windows 7
Processor 1GHz Intel/AMD processor or above
RAM 256MB RAM (512MB or above recommended)
Free Hard Disk 30MB for installation
Graphic Card Super VGA (800×600) resolution, 16-bit graphics card or higher
Tagged with:
preload preload preload