ok so I bought this Samsung BD-E5400 a few weeks ago and took the update and now I'm getting that stupid Cinavia issues there has gotta be some way around that stupid issue? pls tell there is? I really love this blueray player
He can't. Cinavia is embedded deeply inside audio stream, so even if you repeatedly use lossy conversion such as MP3, Vorbis, AAC, etc it is still there. Media server doesn't work either.no way he can convert the files?
Do they work on media player classic or vlc? I dont remember any media encryption thats taken a long time to crack.He can't. Cinavia is embedded deeply inside audio stream, so even if you repeatedly use lossy conversion such as MP3, Vorbis, AAC, etc it is still there. Media server doesn't work either.
No one has found a way to remove Cinavia. Some have found some ways to bypass it, but bypass is not universal. For example, in PS3 you can intentionally set the time backward to get more playtime (by default Cinavia on PS3 kicks in 20 minutes). In some earlier Blu-ray players you can use DVDFab which will add some dummy files to trick them, but modern players don't fall for that trick.
Unlike AACS and CSS, which were poorly designed, Cinavia actually doesn't have any big loophole at the moment.
Which is why I say you either have to remove the audio portion, or use an old Blu-ray player. Cinavia was introduced in 2010 and mandatory in 2012, use that as a guidance to find a player.
Cinavia is not an encryption, it is part of the audio. It is inaudible, but it is there. It works by placing inaudible pitch inside the audio portion (audio watermark). When a hardware player detects this audio watermark it will also run various detections to determine if the content is legit or not.Do they work on media player classic or vlc? I dont remember any media encryption thats taken a long time to crack.
I see, no way to remove it with a audio program like mixcraft or even premier pro or something?Cinavia is not an encryption, it is part of the audio. It is inaudible, but it is there. It works by placing inaudible pitch inside the audio portion (audio watermark). When a hardware player detects this audio watermark it will also run various detections to determine if the content is legit or not.
No one has found a way to accurately locate it and remove it.I see, no way to remove it with a audio program like mixcraft or even premier pro or something?
Thats crappy thanks for the info.No one has found a way to accurately locate it and remove it.
Just skim through it and nothing in there helps.Might be a work around for your player. Worth a shot at least.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Cinavia
CinEX at this point is very early. I tested it, and while it does remove Cinavia it heavily distorts the audio.I found a solution for Cinavia on http://www.dvd2hd.com They have released their prototype called CinEx. A great software and it works. Got it from myce.com where they confirmed it after testing it.
So no bypass or hooking, just removing Cinavia.