SlySoft Defeats Blu-ray's BD+ DRM Scheme Again
Slysoft, the developer of the
The latest updates on the BD+, Blu-ray's Digital Right Protection (DRM) technology, seemed to be harder to be bypassed and Slysoft anticipated that it would be able to break it not earlier than February, according to a post at the company's forum earlier this month.
"Today's AnyDVD HD 6.5.0.2 release decrypts copy protection on all current Blu-ray movies and, in turn, ensures that consumers may continue to backup and enjoy their Blu-ray movie purchases even when using computer monitors that are not HDCP compliant," reads Slysoft latest announcement.
AnyDVD HD decrypts commercial Blu-ray releases on the fly without requiring users to rip first to their hard drives.
Slysoft released the first version of its software capable of cracking BD+ last year.
The latest updates on the BD+, Blu-ray's Digital Right Protection (DRM) technology, seemed to be harder to be bypassed and Slysoft anticipated that it would be able to break it not earlier than February, according to a post at the company's forum earlier this month.
"Today's AnyDVD HD 6.5.0.2 release decrypts copy protection on all current Blu-ray movies and, in turn, ensures that consumers may continue to backup and enjoy their Blu-ray movie purchases even when using computer monitors that are not HDCP compliant," reads Slysoft latest announcement.
AnyDVD HD decrypts commercial Blu-ray releases on the fly without requiring users to rip first to their hard drives.
Slysoft released the first version of its software capable of cracking BD+ last year.