From what I see, Cinavia is a very robust system, and will probably never be broken/defeated by the current methods of signal manipulation. But as one man said (I think it was Gen. George S. Patton), "Anything created by man, can be overcome by man."
One thing that seems to be missing from all the tech discussions about how to defeat Cinavia, is what actually triggers the mute protection, BUT looking at it from a different angle. Let me explain.
Fact: A non-decripted, native Blu-Ray disk works without triggering Cinavia.
Question: WHAT mechanism is used by the native disk to "tell" the player that this disk IS a valid disk?
* Obviously the Cinavia "signal" is present on the original soundtrack, but there's "something" that prevents it from either being looked at, or just shuts off Cinavia.
* Digging further, is there some "trigger" on a native disk, NOT related to the source (audio) file that shuts off Cinavia. I'm sure many folks notice on some disks that there's a small image that quickly flash's for probably a few frames before the movie begins. Probably not related, but worth mentioning anyway.
* Is the Cinavia "signal" embedded in all "channels" or is it only on one (i.e. the center channel, LF sub channel, etc.)?
The question that needs to be answered is how does a commercially mastered native disk (audio tracks we all believe) differ from a disk (or video file) that has been re-encoded, primarily for size reasons (for me at least). In other words, what flips and keeps the Cinavia switch OFF.
Thanks for listening,
Bill
One thing that seems to be missing from all the tech discussions about how to defeat Cinavia, is what actually triggers the mute protection, BUT looking at it from a different angle. Let me explain.
Fact: A non-decripted, native Blu-Ray disk works without triggering Cinavia.
Question: WHAT mechanism is used by the native disk to "tell" the player that this disk IS a valid disk?
* Obviously the Cinavia "signal" is present on the original soundtrack, but there's "something" that prevents it from either being looked at, or just shuts off Cinavia.
* Digging further, is there some "trigger" on a native disk, NOT related to the source (audio) file that shuts off Cinavia. I'm sure many folks notice on some disks that there's a small image that quickly flash's for probably a few frames before the movie begins. Probably not related, but worth mentioning anyway.
* Is the Cinavia "signal" embedded in all "channels" or is it only on one (i.e. the center channel, LF sub channel, etc.)?
The question that needs to be answered is how does a commercially mastered native disk (audio tracks we all believe) differ from a disk (or video file) that has been re-encoded, primarily for size reasons (for me at least). In other words, what flips and keeps the Cinavia switch OFF.
Thanks for listening,
Bill
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