I take it back. DVDFab Passkey worked at first. However, when the trial period expired, it reverted to only being able to play certain Blu-Rays, which did not include Star Wars (the only Blu-Ray I've tried so far). I decided to try the MakeMKV route, and that has worked. I tried the suggestion above of just creating a couple copies of libmmbd.dll in the VLC folder, but when it got to the part where it had been showing artifacts, it crashed altogether. What did work was starting up a stream in MakeMKV, and then opening the network location http://127.0.0.1:51000/stream/title1.m2ts in VLC. Technically I watched the movie through http://localhost:51000/stream/title1.ts , but localhost is the same as 127.0.0.1, and it appears that the .m2ts streams more features, like being able to select subtitles and so on. The .ts location just streamed the video, with no right-click menus or anything. Neither one allows skipping forward or backward (at least not using the normal VLC controls), which is a little inconvenient.Thanks for your suggestion. This worked for me as well. AnyDVD HD (trial) also worked. I just bought a DVD drive to play Star Wars Blu Rays, and found that a couple minutes into the movies, they would start displaying large artifacts, a few per second. Large gray areas would appear on the screen, as well as bands across the video that look like extremely compressed video. Perhaps these are the supposed BD+ copy protection artifacts, as DVDfab Passkey Lite appears to have gotten rid of them. I haven't watched a whole movie yet, but over several minutes there are no problems.
My configuration: Windows 7 64-bit, 32-bit version of VLC, libaacs (from here and libbdplus (extracted from the archive here), along with their corresponding %appdata% entries. VLC crashes without libaacs, and gives a BD+ error without libbdplus (for the Star Wars discs).
Code: Select all
; host certificate v43
| HC | HOST_PRIV_KEY 0x88B245EA25315F46E6E99D9D521EB1194454A82D \
| HOST_CERT 0x0201005CFFFF800000C400005BF6843ED1AA9C9D \
0xEEFEAD8174479C72AB5457691EEB75669105BB19 \
0x5D4B9133069A18FD5357797116CEC22D7FE8F366 \
0xC2A092E1D00DB770E9E01DB687456B6FBFA28C96 \
0x2D88F05DD43F584ECC821AF7 \
| HOST_NONCE 0x2923BE84E16CD6AE529049F1F1BBE9EBB3A6DB3C \
| HOST_KEY_POINT 0x8A60C80BD60C23605FBE90B27BF96B2DB38195C1 \
0x801F54EB29E0F6EC57AC2B9168E88B2D56977508
Enable GPU in the codec page of the tools->preferences menu.
I also tried DVDFab's Free Media Player. Name seems misleading, because installing it has a window pop up saying that I just started the "trial period." And I was disappointed with the thing. (It feels bare bones, won't play some disks and sometimes the disk menu won't respond.)Failed to open disk or folder
The disk or folder has not been identified as a valid DVD or Bluray.
Failed to open J:/
See analyzer console (4748) and application log.
Thanks for sharing. AppreciatedTook me ages to find this:
The libaacs.dll that is available online (at time of writing) only works up to VLC 2.2.4
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