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Nvidia Drivers Enforce Macrovision's Rules

Ant writes "According to 'Nvidia Macrovision DVD-TV rules forced on consumers', Nvidia drivers 41.09 and onwards include 'stringent checks' to comply with Macrovision requirements. That could mean if you have a TV encoder that does not support Macrovision, you may well get an error message depending on what DVD software player you are using, the company has said."

5 of 306 comments (clear)

  1. This has been here for a while by PhrostyMcByte · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those of us with older nvidia cards, this means we can't watch dvds anymore! thankfully you can use DVD Idle to get around this.

  2. Just wait by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 5, Informative

    Somebody will keep hacking the reference drivers and put them online.

    Right now I'm using a different tool to circumvent various dvd protections.
    DVDIdle, no regions, no Macrovision, no nothing and it even lets me skip those annoying warnings "Thou shalt not reproduce this disc"

    --
    This is the sig that says NI (again)
  3. This is news? by Jarnis · · Score: 5, Informative

    The article is over an year old. (March 20, *2003*)

    Current nVidia drivers are 56.xx series.

    'News' indeed...

  4. Re:ATI Radeon DVD Player and copy protection by DgWatters0 · · Score: 5, Informative
    P.S. I wish there was a digital freedom fighters group with a PayPal account.

    How about the good old EFF? They claim to be "defending freedom in the digital world" which is exactly what you wished for. You can join or just donate and choose paypal as payment method.

  5. Re:ATI 4 life! by Curtman · · Score: 5, Informative

    I have heard, that ATI somehow "supports" opensource communities - or at least gives them more information, than NVidia team.

    Used to support the open source communities would be more like it. I've been using ATI cards for as long as I can remember.

    There was a time when ATI did things for us like funding Precision Insight to develop the open source Radeon driver in the first place. They used to be very good about providing specifications, although under an NDA which for some bizarre reason they require developers to sign, but allow them to publish drivers based on their contents. At the time they were the underdog in the 3D graphics market though.

    Now a days though, they don't fund any OSS development, and provide a binary driver instead. They will not give you specifications for any cards until they are close to their end-of-life. DRI and Gatos have done great work despite this, but ATI shouldn't be congratulated on today's treatment of the open source community.

    They still do have specs available from the developer relations page under NDA. But I doubt you'll get anything from them that would be considered current hardware.