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'''DVD Decrypter''' is a [[freeware]] program that can create backup [[disk image|disc images]] of the DVD-Video structure of [[DVD|DVDs]]. It can be used to image any DVD, but is especially useful for [[decryption|decrypting]] [[copy protection|copy-protected]] movies. The program can also [[CD recorder|record]] images to disc. CSS decrypting software (such as [[DVD Decrypter]] [[AnyDVD]] and [[DVD Shrink]]) allows a region-specific DVD to be copied as an all-region DVD. It also removes [[Macrovision]], [[Content Scrambling System]] (CSS), [[regional lockout|region codes]], and disabled user operations (UOPs).
'''DVD Decrypter''' is a [[freeware]] program that can create backup [[disk image|disc images]] of the DVD-Video structure of [[DVD|DVDs]]. It can be used to image any DVD, but is especially useful for [[decryption|decrypting]] [[copy protection|copy-protected]] movies. The program can also [[CD recorder|record]] images to disc. CSS decrypting software (such as [[DVD Decrypter]], [[AnyDVD]] and [[DVD Shrink]]) allows a region-specific DVD to be copied as an all-region DVD. It also removes [[Macrovision]], [[Content Scrambling System]] (CSS), [[regional lockout|region codes]], and disabled user operations (UOPs).
The burning engine is being used in a new program called imgburn.
The burning engine is being used in a new program called imgburn.

Revision as of 09:48, 10 August 2006

DVD Decrypter
Developer(s)Lightning UK
Stable release
3.5.4.0 / March 21, 2005
Operating systemMicrosoft Windows
TypeDVD ripper
LicenseFreeware
WebsiteTaken down

DVD Decrypter is a freeware program that can create backup disc images of the DVD-Video structure of DVDs. It can be used to image any DVD, but is especially useful for decrypting copy-protected movies. The program can also record images to disc. CSS decrypting software (such as DVD Decrypter, AnyDVD and DVD Shrink) allows a region-specific DVD to be copied as an all-region DVD. It also removes Macrovision, Content Scrambling System (CSS), region codes, and disabled user operations (UOPs).

The burning engine is being used in a new program called imgburn. The disc images can be:

  • Viewed on the PC using software such as PowerDVD and WinDVD (WinDVD, however, can only view complete DVD-Video structures.)
  • Encoded to a smaller size and stripped of unwanted extras like film trailers with re-authoring tools like DVD Shrink and Nero Recode.
  • Burned onto optical media (DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD+R DL and DVD-RAM) to produce discs playable in hardware DVD players.
  • Exported to VCD, SVCD or DivX format and possibly recorded onto CD-R or CD-RW media.

On June 6, 2005, Lightning UK announced that he received a cease and desist letter from an unnamed company. He later stated it was within his best interests to comply with the letter, and stopped development of the program. By June 7 a mirror site was up [1], which allowed people to download the final version (3.5.4.0). On 27 November 2005, Afterdawn.com, a Finnish website, announced that it complied with a letter received from Macrovision demanding that DVD Decrypter be taken down from its site. Since only the owner of an application can demand that it be removed from a third-party site's download section, there can be no doubt that Macrovision was the company that took legal action under a 2003 British law banning the circumvention of copying prevention measures. Shortly after that, a site with no connection to Lightning UK appeared and claimed to be the "new" DVD Decrypter Site. This site has since closed down. Another site with no connection to Lightning UK, calling itself the "unofficial" DVD Decrypter site, has recently appeared.

Many American legal experts believe that under United States' Federal law making a backup copy of a DVD-Video or an audio CD by a consumer is legal. Some feel this provision of US law conflicts with the Digital Millennium Copyright Act prohibition of so-called "circumvention measures" of copy protections. In the noted "321" case, Federal District Judge Susan Illston, of the Northern District of California (see: http://dvdxcopy.afterdawn.com/thread_view.cfm/72527), ruled that the backup copies made with software such as DVD Decrypter are in fact legal but that distribution of the software used to make them is illegal. As of the date of this revision, neither the US Supreme Court nor the US Congress has taken definitive action on the matter.

On October 4 2005, Lightning UK continued the development of the burning engine used by DVD Decrypter in his new tool, ImgBurn. [2]