Coopervid wrote: ↑Fri Dec 06, 2019 7:51 pm
I think the answer is quite easy. Making a protected ISO and then mounting it with either Windows 10 or any other tool gives us the opportunity to decrypt it with whatever software that is capable to decrypt this disc first. Be it your software or your competitor's. Sometimes your program is first, sometimes the competition is first.
The ISO format has no means to save key-related metadata from the disc, and without such metadata it is impossible to decrypt the ISO when bus-encryption is not disabled (with LibreDrive for example).
My first question is whether AnyDVD uses some sort of extension to save such metadata, and whether CloneDrive or whatever can use such metadata and emulate the protected disc. I honestly don't know, but I doubt it.
When making a non-decrypted backup with MakeMKV, all disc key-related metadata is saved to the file discatt.dat . Without this file decryption is often hard or even impossible. I wonder how it is handled in case of "protected" iso.
The second question - are there any different results when opening a mounted ISO versus File->open command in MakeMKV (it can open ISO files directly, just in case). If they are, I ought to make a support whatever ISO extensions AnyDVD uses.