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September 8th, 2008

RealNetworks: Rip those DVDs (with a dash of DRM)

Posted by Larry Dignan @ 4:42 am

Categories: DRM, Entertainment, General, Hollywood on Demand, Software Infrastructure

Tags: Digital-rights Management, RealNetworks Inc., Digital Rights Management (DRM), DVD, Consumer Electronics, Digital Media, Security, Personal Technology, Home Entertainment, Larry Dignan

RealNetworks on Monday launched RealDVD, an application that allows you to rip DVDs to your hard drive with limits set by digital rights management software. The company announced the software along with the opening of DemoFall in San Diego.

realdvd.pngRealDVD (Techmeme, statement, site) is supposed to make it easy to save DVDs to a PC or portable hard drive in a way that satisfies the entertainment industry and its concerns about piracy. That’s short hand for saying that RealDVD preserves the encryption that limits you from distributing the content widely and uses digital rights management software, or DRM. DRM puts limits on what you can do with content. Consumers can get RealDVD for $29.99 on sale (it’ll run you $49.99 usually). Additional licenses will run you $19.99.

RealNetworks is hoping that its software puts the company in the center of your desktop. If you begin digitizing your DVD library via RealDVD RealNetworks could create a decent halo effect for RealPlayer 11 and the music service Rhapsody. I might be exhibit A: I avoid RealPlayer in general, but would certainly give RealDVD a spin.

Among the key points about RealDVD:

  • The software saves an exact copy of the DVD (it takes 10 to 40 minutes and 4 to 8 GBs) and you can watch and save a DVD at the same time;
  • The DVDs you rip are encrypted so they can’t be shared or stolen;
  • The ripped DVDs can be saved on a portable hard drive and played on 5 PCs with a copy of RealDVD;
  • Watching a ripped DVD will save on battery power.

The catch: You’re limited to 5 licenses for RealDVD and Real Networks tethers your ripped DVD to its software and only a handful of machines. In other words, there’s a serious digital rights management component to RealDVD. That said RealDVD’s DRM model is similar to the limits that Apple deploys with iTunes. The big question is whether RealDVD’s user interface will be easy enough to allow folks to overlook the DRM worries.

Larry DignanLarry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and Editorial Director of ZDNet sister site TechRepublic. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 10 Talkback(s)
This is ridiculous ...
I can already make an exact copy of the DVD including all of the menus and extra content to an ISO file, then play the file directly from my hard drive or MythTV server.

So tell me why do I need this product again? wink... (Read the rest)
Posted by: MisterMiester Posted on: 10/17/08  (Edited: 10/17/08 @ 11:41) You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Scam for your money  algzdnet | 09/08/08
Can you rip to a Windows Home Server for network viewing?  BitTwiddler | 09/08/08
pointless  s_souche | 09/08/08
Just another money maker  kcredden2 | 09/08/08
RE: RealNetworks: Rip those DVDs (with a dash of DRM)  cpr | 09/08/08
Where have I seen this before  kryo11 | 09/08/08
lame RealNetworks gimmick  Linux Geek | 09/16/08
DVD ripping  CTRLurself | 09/17/08
Real is smoking crack  eric__m | 09/17/08
This is ridiculous ...  MisterMiester | 10/17/08

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