Hi, Although I have only a general question regarding the recording of films or series.
Everyone knows who you are trying to record Netflix movies, creates a black picture and makes it impossible to record this film.
My question is which of the providers blocked because the function to record the respective movie. Is it Netflix itself or for example Obs, Shadowplay and such.
Or, Netflix pays the particular company that locks it to function.
I think it's more of a protection of netflix even whale with other recording programs can't record any content and I do not think the netflix paid all but good I do not know, of course
It would have to be the player blocking it.
The content is played under DRM and so that it is played at all, the player must support it. This probably also includes the recording by software.
It's the same with Android. For example, In a screenshot the content is hidden, but not the controls from the player. It's like this with Netflix, Prime Video and more.
I have no problems with recordings.
What are you trying to absorb?
I try to record anything, I was just curious I saw yesterday a post about private copying and recordings, and was then considering how something is programmed to block the locks to protect against that no one shoots unauthorized films.
In Blu-Rays, I know such locks (makes the software, but there are players that are not as strict), but streaming? Did they say that? Is not true then. Or is video dependent (that's why I asked for the title, I would have tried it).
I mean it's about trying to record a movie on a streaming provider like Netflix, for example with a recording software program, the picture gets black
This is then a kind of protection against private and pirated copies, I'm interested, however, which of these two providers Netflix or the recording software uses this system recognizes that someone is trying to record just this movie
But the picture does not turn black.
I already said that.
Grad times children's heads 2 recorded: https://vimeo.com/.../316674315 and that with OBS, which everyone can use.
So neither Netflix. Still OBS. Other recording programs that I have show no black.
So that you can record that is very funny, with me immediately creates a black screen or the program ends by itself. Is now just a guess, if it could be because you still use Windows 7 and I Windows 10?
So on the Netflix site is the one that uses a DRM to protect copies, but I have no idea how it can be that they can record it.
Well, who knows.
My PC is old, so 8-9 years.
The copy protection for black images is the HDCP protocol.
Earlier, when Amazon started with Prime Video, because I could not watch movies because of the HDCP, was always ne message. Series only went in SD.
Then I had changed something, I do not know what, and then went synonymous films and everything in HD.
But I think that was a pure display problem of PC to monitor / TV (have both s.PC). This probably has nothing to do with the recording (the cabling to the display devices - both now DVI-I).
Netflix and Maxdome are also no problem.
But recently freenet video tried and because I could not start anything because of HDCP error.
Maybe this protection does not work properly on my old hardware and Freenet is stricter than the rest.
Windows 7 is hard to imagine, Microsoft would have fixed that.
I still have a laptop with Windows 8, which is 4 years. Could it try on that.