The beauty in this is that it's just
not entirely true.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rooting_%28Android_OS%29#United_States
Rooting and jailbreaking is permitted under copyright law since
2010 as it was ruled as legitimate (DVD encryption falls into the
same realm). You are authorized to view your purchased DVD's in
any device you desire. The media and the device are separate
entities (as well as the licensing) and if you must use a third
party software to view your "licensed to view" DVD (which is what
you buy when you buy the DVD), you are free to do so.
You still, however, are not permitted to decode the DVD and make
illegal copies. The archival clauses of fair use *do* apply if you
are making a backup of the DVD itself. However, a "back up" is a
mirror image, so you must include the encryption in your backup.
(To do so on Linux, you can use DD to make your backup instead of
a DVD ripper tool.)
That's my two cents and I'm sure it would win in a court of law.
On 03/02/2013 08:16 AM, Lyle Tuttle wrote: