|  | Posted by SportySpice on 01/21/06 05:28 
On Sat, 21 Jan 2006 04:59:55 GMT, Martino<martino.a@indirizzo_fasullo.it> wrote:
 
 >On Fri, 20 Jan 2006 18:37:58 GMT, Gob Stopper <Noone@anywhere.net>
 >wrote:
 >
 >>Technically, what does it mean when Brute Force Cracking Failed.
 >>Googling, I found (erroneously) that means there was no Source Media
 >>Copyright Protection" however the DVD Decrypter log clearly shows that
 >>Source Media Protection was found by DVD Decrypter for this region 1 movie.
 >>I 10:13:51 Source Media Type: DVD-ROM
 >>I 10:13:51 Source Media Region Code: 1
 >>I 10:13:51 Source Media Copyright Protection System Type: CSS/CPPM
 >>E 10:13:58 File: VTS_01_0.VOB - Brute Force Cracking Failed! - Reason:
 >>There were no vulnerable blocks.
 >
 >This is the standard error in DVD Decrypter which is no longer on the
 >market for that reason on a windows machine.
 >
 >They yanked it because DVD Decrypter failed to decrypt almost every
 >new movie due to it's inability to perform the necessary brute-force
 >cracking for even the simplest of DVD on any machine less than 3 Ghz
 >in speed.
 
 You might want to check into the background of DVD Decrypter and why
 it's no longer being developed and supported. Hint: it's not what you
 apparently think.
 
 >The only program that consistently handles the brute force cracking on
 >a slower windows machine is InterVideo DVD Copy which archives even
 >the latest cloaked vulnerable (vob) blocks like R1 Madagascar, R1
 >Bewitched, R2 Anacondas, etcetera.
 > http://www.intervideo.com/jsp/InterVideoDVDCopy_Profile.jsp
 
 What's with all the plugs for DVD Copy?
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