Quote:
Originally Posted by Modular
Whatever anti-pirate measures are developed, there'll always be those who consider it a challenge to crack them and then pass the info into the public domain. Manufacturers are well aware of it...
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Im a bit of a techno phobe myself, I had no idea that copying a DVD at home was done on such a casual and regular basis by, it would seem, many people. I guess it makes sense to have a back up copy of Spiderman or whatever so that you don't have to fork out for a new disk when the kids mash it up or play frisbee with it, I guess its a pity less scrupulous people make large amounts of money out of copying and selling discs, though I would assume the film companies would not differentiate that much from the thousands of home users making discs as a simple back up, from those entering into full scale commercial piracy? My feeling is that discs should be impossible to copy to erradicate commercial piracy, not convenient for those of us who want back up copies for the kids, but I can't think of another way to stamp it out. If one of my DVDs gets damaged I just buy another one, DVDs are so cheap in comparrison to going to the cinema (15 each in London) and DVDs on release are normally £12-£15? and one month or so later are in the special offer bin at £5-£7?.....or less. If discs were impossible to copy it wouldn't be the end of the world if the ikids mashed it, you could just buy another in the same way that you might replace a broken toy except hopefully the DVD would have come down in price and maybe the kids would learn to handle the DVDs more carefully......

.....good luck with cracking the code on 'Spiderman 2' Aaryk! if you can't crack it and you really need another copy you can get a brand new one from £2.50 on amazon.co.uk, thats less than a pint of beer where I live!........