Adrian Kingsley-Hughes (28. desember 2006). «HD-DViD AACS hacked». ZDNet – Blogs – Gear for Geeks. Arkivert fra originalen 1. januar 2007. Besøkt 1. januar 2007.«A hacker going under the alias "muslix64" has written a utility which is capable of decrypting a AACS (Advanced Access Content System) protected HD-DVD discs. The decryption tool, called BackupHDDVD, is a Java-based command-line utility which decrypts the .evo video files found on a HD-DVD disc and saves them to your hard drive so they can be played using HD-DVD playback software. … BackupHDDVD simply implements the AACS decryption protocol as outlined at aacsla.com (the official AACS website). Title keys, which are required to decrypt the movie files, are stored encrypted on the HD-DVD disc but this hack seems to rely on the fact that CyberLink PowerDVD 6.5 HD-DVD extracts these keys and stores them in a plain-text file on the user's PC»
Adrian Kingsley-Hughes (28. desember 2006). «HD-DViD AACS hacked». ZDNet – Blogs – Gear for Geeks. Arkivert fra originalen 1. januar 2007. Besøkt 1. januar 2007.«A hacker going under the alias "muslix64" has written a utility which is capable of decrypting a AACS (Advanced Access Content System) protected HD-DVD discs. The decryption tool, called BackupHDDVD, is a Java-based command-line utility which decrypts the .evo video files found on a HD-DVD disc and saves them to your hard drive so they can be played using HD-DVD playback software. … BackupHDDVD simply implements the AACS decryption protocol as outlined at aacsla.com (the official AACS website). Title keys, which are required to decrypt the movie files, are stored encrypted on the HD-DVD disc but this hack seems to rely on the fact that CyberLink PowerDVD 6.5 HD-DVD extracts these keys and stores them in a plain-text file on the user's PC»