![]() ![]() The work-around was always pointed at BD-R disks for the PS-3. Additionally, most players on the market do not support BDMV-REC, which means that work-around disk can't be played on the majority of players out there. If you follow the threads, the success rate is spotty - not all brands of BD burner can make a BDMV-REC disk. That Cinavia work-around is currently their only one and is designed to make a BDMV-REC disk from the original BluRay. The DVD Fab Cinavia work-around is for burned BD-R disks played on the PS-3. Is there a program that detects which files have the Cinavia DRM? I have a lot of video files and don't want to have to guess which ones are safe and which ones are "infected".Ĥ) This should have probably been question 1, but is there actually any easier workaround, like a plugin or alternative to PS3 Media Server that will disable Cinavia on the fly while it's streaming? Which one(s) are best/easiest/quickest?ģ) Which brings me to my third question. Is this true?Ģ) Some posts say you can reconvert the videos with certain programs to get rid of the Cinavia protection. So here are my questions:ġ) Some people say you can enable the optical out while still only using HDMI and that will bypass Cinavia, but in doing so you lose surround sound. Today I've been looking everywhere for more information about it. So I installed PS3 Media Server on my computer so I can stream to the PS3 and get full surround sound on my videos, but came across the dreaded Cinavia DRM. My TV can stream over DLNA, but even though it has the optical out the TV downgrades to stereo sound. So this weekend I bought a new TV, a new surround sound system, and a PS3 Slim all connected through HDMI cables and Optical out from my TV to the receiver.
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