Hi all....
This might have been discussed here in the past, I know it has in other forums but I'm wondering if it would be possible to provide a legal alternative to the libdvdcss issue (DVD playback) for the entirety of Linux users out there. As far as I can understand, for those of us who live in the United States, using a decryptor (or decoder) like libdvdcss is illegal under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act,) unless a licensing fee has been paid. For Windows users, this would mean purchasing an plug-in for WMP, like CinePlayer by Roxio, as a legal example. Most likely, linux users in other countries face the same restrictions under similar laws.
How about those of us who use Linux contribute money to an organization who makes a universal media player, one that can be installed on any distro or OS (I'm thinking of VLC here,) specifically so the organization can purchase a license from the copyright holder to enable copies of the player to decode DVD's legally. The organization could set up a separate fund so that users could donate specifically to that cause. Another option would be to have a paid version of the player that could decode DVD's while the free version wouldn't.
While I haven't floated this idea to any of the organizations or projects like VLC, I wanted to hear what your guy's opinions are and what could be done.
Lord willing, I would be happy to kick a few dollars towards a solution like this and I think it could help a lot of people.
Thank you for your time in reading this.
Regards...
This might have been discussed here in the past, I know it has in other forums but I'm wondering if it would be possible to provide a legal alternative to the libdvdcss issue (DVD playback) for the entirety of Linux users out there. As far as I can understand, for those of us who live in the United States, using a decryptor (or decoder) like libdvdcss is illegal under the DMCA (Digital Millenium Copyright Act,) unless a licensing fee has been paid. For Windows users, this would mean purchasing an plug-in for WMP, like CinePlayer by Roxio, as a legal example. Most likely, linux users in other countries face the same restrictions under similar laws.
How about those of us who use Linux contribute money to an organization who makes a universal media player, one that can be installed on any distro or OS (I'm thinking of VLC here,) specifically so the organization can purchase a license from the copyright holder to enable copies of the player to decode DVD's legally. The organization could set up a separate fund so that users could donate specifically to that cause. Another option would be to have a paid version of the player that could decode DVD's while the free version wouldn't.
While I haven't floated this idea to any of the organizations or projects like VLC, I wanted to hear what your guy's opinions are and what could be done.
Lord willing, I would be happy to kick a few dollars towards a solution like this and I think it could help a lot of people.
Thank you for your time in reading this.
Regards...
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