Replication vs. Duplication:
Most players sold do not have the ability to play back recorded media, as a form of piracy prevention. This rules out duplication for anyone who is planning on playing their disc in any player that does not have modified / rolled back firmware. It is impossible to put any type of AACS licensing or any other type of copyright protection on a duplicated disc. The PS3 in recent months have started allowing burned media, and it is expected that others will follow suit.
Replication plays everywhere, on every player, because it contains the embedded AACS data, which is explained below. Other types of copyright protection can be applied within the replication process.
Lesson 1: The 4 Blu-ray specs (for movie discs)
Before anything else, you need to understand that there are 4 different types of blu-ray movie discs. These are each designed for a category purpose, such as mass distribution, or home movies.
BDAV - Blu-ray Disc Audio Video: A pop-in and play Blu-ray disc. No menus possible. (I dont know if chapter points are even possible, but never tried) Point being, its great for home movies if you are an average consumer and are only concerned about playback.
BDMV - Blu-ray Disc Movie Video ("Movie" could be motion or moving - i cant remember right now): This is basically DVD functionality, with HD content. You can have the scripts we are all used to, and have motion menus, etc. All of this is pointless though, because there is no way to replicate it, which is explained in the replication section below.
HDMV - High definition Movie Video ("Movie" could be motion or moving - i cant remember right now) This is the spec the majority of studio and all blu-ray discs are released in. It supports pop-up menus, motion menus much like DVD, only with animation on buttons, transitional effects for the menu graphics, slice (image) swapping for button states instead of overlays as in DVD, and the ability to drop in small Java applications called "Xlets" that can be designed to do basically anything any java program can do. Connect to BD-Live, play games, etc. These menus, however, are limited to 256 indexed color palettes.
BD-J - Blu-ray Disc Java This requires a java programmer, but provides the most interactive experience. I am not going to even go here. Just give up on this now, even if you do program Java, because in reality, its not even a standardized Java and you need to pay insane licensing fees just for access to documentation on the call functions needed.
Replication
If you are using anything other than the Sonic Scenarist BD suite, or Sony Blu-print software, it is impossible to go to replication due to AACS licensing issues. Software such as Adobe encore and DVD it Pro HD do not make replicatable discs. Heres why-
Let me start out by explaining the types of copyright encryption is implemented in a blu-ray disc, and more importantly, how it is enforced.
AACS:
Every disc must have an AACS number associated with it, because all replication machines by law must be connected to the internet while it processes a new disc, sending the licensing info to the AACS association and processing your licensing fees. Each and every new set of data to go onto a disc must have a unique number, so if there are any changes that need to be made, this process must be started over and paid for once more. Usually, this is charged by the replicator and there is no work on your part to apply or anything. There is no such thing as a replicator that does not require this.
No matter what any software package says or spits out in the mux, it does not ever create real AACS files either. It only creates flags that the replicator sees, then applies once approval is made online within the replication machine.
BD+
Although this was the (reported) reason that Fox and others started to exclusively use Blu-ray, this is just recently starting to get implemented in titles and is still buggy on some players.
I have not personally ever been requested to use BD+ encryption. But here is an excerpt from wikipedia about what types of piracy prevention this uses:
Quote
* verify that the player's keys have not been changed.
* execute native code, possibly to patch an otherwise insecure system.
* transform the audio and video output. Parts of the content will not be viewable without letting the BD+-program unscramble it.
If a playback device manufacturer finds that its devices have been hacked, it can potentially release BD+-code that detects and circumvents the vulnerability. These programs can then be included in all new disc releases.
The specifications of the BD+ virtual machine are only available to licensed device manufacturers
ISAN:
This is a BS thing that the big replicators tell you is mandatory, when it is not legally required. Any smaller replicator that has Blu-ray capabilities (replication, not duplication) will not require this. Its basically registration for the same international metadata id number system that distributed books use.
Blu-ray Authoring Software you probably have
If you are still reading this, its more than likely because you are trying to work with either DVD It PRO HD, or Adobe Encore. While they both supposedly support the input of an AACS number, it is completely worthless and confusing why they even put it there. They do not apply it in a bd-compllient spec by any means. Both of these software packages and all other sub $30,000 softwares are limited only the the BDAV and the BDMV spec as mentioned above. Replicators require a HDMV spec, and more importantly, an image file in CMF 0.9 or above.
This is where things get really ugly.
CMF stands for Cutting Master Format. This is the only type of file a replicator can read. Also, while these prosumer companies are claiming they have "CMF output for professional replication", they fail to mention that its CMF version 0.89 and are getting the cold shoulder when trying to license the technology. This is where Scenarist and Bu-print have everyone else in check mate right now.
So.... What now? How can you use blu-ray??
Now you know that you are limited to the BDAV, and BDMV specs. No cool blu-ray features, just the HD content. You should now be over the fact that whatever disc you make will not play on many players other than the PS3 - if you have the most recent firmware - and software players on your pc / mac. Most players are made to not allow playback of burned media.
If you just need a one-disc presentation video, or you know for a fact that every person who will have one of these discs are playing it in a ps3 and are savvy enough to keep up with their firmware updates, then go ahead and just do it yourself using DVDit Pro HD or Adobe Encore.
How to burn your discs so they will play in a PS3 or set-top that allows burned media:
Make sure you burn your discs in a file format called UDF 2.5 (as opposed to ISO, udf 2.0, etc) because its the only format blu-ray movie players can read. I highly reccomend Cyberlink's Power2Go for this. For software playback of media you created, I recommend purchasing Arcsoft's Total Media Theatre, because instead of looking for actuall AACS information, it just looks for the folder. If you are testing your project from your hard drive prior to the burn, this is important, as you can siimply change the name of the AACS folder temporarily for in-computer testing, then change it back just prior to burning your disc.
If you ever plan on going to replication - just hire me!!
I hope this clears up a lot of confusion and is of use to someone out there. I am sure there are still questions, so feel free to leave questions.
My current Blu-ray setup at work:
Lacie D2 external burner
Software: Scenarist BD Suite
Power2Go
TotalMediaTheatre
In dedication of HD-DVD: The format everyone could use


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