2015-05-25, 11:56
I am now unsubscribed form this thread and wont be replying to this inflammatory and age old conversation which is utterly pointless. No one is making you do anything. If you so concerned with legalities stop using Kodi
(2015-05-25, 11:56)uNiversal Wrote: I am now unsubscribed form this thread and wont be replying to this inflammatoryI thought you already unsubscribed. And inflammatory? No one used any language stronger or more incendiary than you did in the first place. You sure don’t like being spoken to the way you speak to everyone else...
(2015-05-25, 11:56)uNiversal Wrote: and age old conversation which is utterly pointless.You started this conversation champ... Is it now pointless because the answers you got were not what you wanted to hear? Or because you failed to understand them?
(2015-05-25, 11:56)uNiversal Wrote: No one is making you do anything.
(2015-05-25, 11:56)uNiversal Wrote: If you so concerned with legalities stop using Kodi
(2015-05-23, 18:32)uNiversal Wrote: I would like to understand is why some clever and talented developer hasnt added or started adding support for libaacs and whatever other necessary lib so that just like DVD's are currently handled in Kodi by dvdcss you would just insert a Bluray and not need makemkv or some other hacking around to play the bluray.
Maybe in a few years then.
(2015-05-26, 10:13)teeedubb Wrote: You started this conversation champ... Is it now pointless because the answers you got were not what you wanted to hear? Or because you failed to understand them?
(2015-05-25, 10:39)teeedubb Wrote:(2015-05-25, 09:51)uNiversal Wrote:(2015-05-25, 05:46)teeedubb Wrote: Sigh... I think you need to spend less time highlighting text and more time reading about the past... Let me phrase it this way for you - all the required libs "so that just like DVD's are currently handled in Kodi by dvdcss you would just insert a Bluray and not need makemkv or some other hacking around to play the bluray." are already included - except for the part that will get your house raided, computers and electronics seized, your ass dragged through the courts by a entity that has deep pockets and possibly get you thrown in jail.
I hope that helps you get the point....
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jon_Lech_...rosecution
Sigh... I think you need to spend less time highlighting text and more time reading about that's its not illegal in all countries. Currently in UK its now allowed to make copies of what you own, so laws chnage all the time and quoting stuff from 12 years ago isnt necessarily the point either.
FACT 1 you can pop a retail DVD in Kodi and it will be played.
FACT 2 you cannot pop a retail Bluray in Kodi and play it (without hacking around with this crap)
Of which my post again is about making FACT 2 to as easy as FACT 1 without incurring the wrath of these sort of replies.
* uNiversal usubscribed
But its not legal to break DRM:
Quote:Media such as DVDs are often protected by anti-copying technology to guard against copyright piracy, and this is protected by law. Copyright owners will still be able to apply this protection. However, if copy protection is too restrictive, you may raise a complaint with the Secretary of State.
So do you agree that you need to break DRM to play a bluray on a unlicensed player?
*uNiversal misses the point again
(2015-06-04, 12:03)robo989 Wrote:(2015-05-25, 10:39)teeedubb Wrote:(2015-05-25, 09:51)uNiversal Wrote: Sigh... I think you need to spend less time highlighting text and more time reading about that's its not illegal in all countries. Currently in UK its now allowed to make copies of what you own, so laws chnage all the time and quoting stuff from 12 years ago isnt necessarily the point either.
FACT 1 you can pop a retail DVD in Kodi and it will be played.
FACT 2 you cannot pop a retail Bluray in Kodi and play it (without hacking around with this crap)
Of which my post again is about making FACT 2 to as easy as FACT 1 without incurring the wrath of these sort of replies.
* uNiversal usubscribed
But its not legal to break DRM:
Quote:Media such as DVDs are often protected by anti-copying technology to guard against copyright piracy, and this is protected by law. Copyright owners will still be able to apply this protection. However, if copy protection is too restrictive, you may raise a complaint with the Secretary of State.
So do you agree that you need to break DRM to play a bluray on a unlicensed player?
*uNiversal misses the point again
Actually it's you that's missed the point.
DVDs - Play
Blurays - No Play
DVDs are protected exactly the same as Blurays in most countries.
makemkvcon info dev:/dev/sr0
https://www.dropbox.com/s/75xdduupddbaxno/lib.multimedia.makemkv-6.0.0.zip?dl=0
(2016-07-26, 23:16)nick777818 Wrote: Hi All
I trust you are well.
I was wondering if anyone could assist me or steer me in the right direction. Basically I have xbmc running on a version of ubuntu headless and I need to be able to connect to it remotely using a mac book or another linux distro. I would need to see the full xbmc screen come up, I don't need to move around on it, I just need to see what everyone else sees as if they were plugging a screen directly into the machine running xbmc. I have tried literally everything and I am not sure where I am going wrong.
If anyone could help that would be greatly appreciated, Thanks a million!
(2016-07-22, 04:36)teeedubb Wrote: Installation on Ubuntu 16.04 (though will probably work for other versions):
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:heyarje/makemkv-beta
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install makemkv-bin makemkv-oss
cd /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/
sudo rm libaacs.so* libbdplus.so*
sudo ln -s libmmbd.so.0 libaacs.so.0
sudo ln -s libmmbd.so.0 libbdplus.so.0
sudo nano /etc/apt/preferences.d/libbdplus
Package: libbdplus*
Pin: version *
Pin-Priority: -1
sudo nano /etc/apt/preferences.d/libaacs
Package: libaacs*
Pin: version *
Pin-Priority: -1