And the DMCA be damned...
Here are a few free Mac programs I've recently come across that make it
easy to exercise your rights to fair use. Which is to say, these are programs that
allow you to backup, timeshift, spaceshift, or quote digital media that you
have bought and paid for but that the Content Cartel would rather you not
be able to manipulate. Windows users will have to find their own
equivalents (they're bound to be out there) or just break down and buy a
Mac.
- DVDbackup: A
program that copies a DVD to disk. It can also change or remove region
codes, remove the Macrovision Analog Protection System that
prevents copying DVD movies to video tapes, and decrypt the Content
Scrambling System (CSS) that prevents copying of commercial DVD
content to another digital storage media. Simple drag-and-drop
interface. Freeware. Note that some uses of this program may be illegal in
the U.S. or any other country that has granted legal protection to any
business model that can be encoded in digital rights management
technology.
- OpenShiva: Convert a
VOB (DVD video) file to MPEG-4 with AAC audio codecs. This will reduce the
size of a full-length feature film from about 4.7 Gigabytes to only 1
Gigabyte without substantial loss in quality. Simple interface, and lots of
options including cropping and scaling of the final output. Open source
(GPL). Note that for commercial DVDs you will need to use something like
DVDbackup to decode the CSS encryption first.
- WireTap
1.0.0: This program goes right to the sound drivers and records any
audio playing on your Mac. This includes sound snippets from DVD movies,
games, iChatAV conversations, or Internet radio. Free product provided by
Ambrosia Software, the people who
make the SnapzProX
video/screen capture software.
Posted by bug to Media Technology at August 16, 2003 11:35 PM
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