Ao que parece os esforços
para tornar um disco totalmente protegido e à prova de
cópia, são geralmente infrutíferos, isto porque aparece
sempre alguém para contornar os mecanismos de defesa
estabelecidos. De acordo com a SlySoft, a nova versão do
AnyDVD HD permite contornar a mais recente proteção BD+
dos discos Blu-Ray e ainda desativar a funcionalidade
BD-Live nos títulos mais recentes.
Esta é uma das poucas empresas a produzir e a vender
aplicações que contornam sistemas de proteção anti-cópia,
subsistindo devido ao fato de se encontrar nas ilhas de
Antigua, fora do alcance das leias americanas e
europeias.
Programa completo incluso em nosso
DVD Soft 2009 GOLD

Noticia em inglês!
SlySoft has been the first to crack Blu-ray’s additional layer of
copy protection, BD+, with its commercial product AnyDVD HD, but for
those who want a free alternative or want to watch Blu-ray discs
directly under Linux, they have been out of luck until now. This
will change with several Doom9 hackers working on their own Blu-ray
software player. However, rather than create another product to
strip away the copy protection measures, they are developing their
own BD+ Virtual Machine that will play the encrypted Blu-ray movie
just like with any Blu-ray set-top player.
The tricky part is making sure that the Blu-ray disc does not detect
that it is being played where it shouldn't be, as its code has
several traps to try to detect unauthorised playback. However, if
they build the Virtual Machine well enough, it should even be able
to overcome changes the studio makes to their BD+ protection. The
only thing the Virtual Machine would not be resistant to is if the
studios try to force a major firmware update for players on new
titles. Should this happen, the team can overcome the issue by
obtaining player-specific data for the new system.
While the studios will obviously see this attack as a potential loss
of sales due to more piracy, it could actually benefit the studios
by allowing consumers to purchase Blu-ray titles to play on
otherwise unsuitable hardware and operating systems where the user
already has a Blu-ray drive. Also, with Blu-ray titles taking up
25GB or more disk space, consumers are much less likely going to try
downloading HD rips from P2P, let alone share them out, especially
with ISPs now enforcing caps on how much data one may transfer up
and down each month.
Finally, while SlySoft's AnyDVD HD can already let users play
Blu-ray titles on PCs without a HDCP-compliant graphics card or HDCP
capable monitor, AnyDVD HD only runs on Windows and not everyone is
willing to fork out €79 on the software either.