We reported early this week that the recently-approved final AACS license included Managed Copy, enabling consumers to make one copy of any Blu-ray Disc they buy. Now additional details on the acquisition procedure and on the actual rollout of this feature have arisen. Soon, the vast majority of BDs will support Managed Copy, but studios will be able to charge for it, and new players will be needed.
The way managed copy will work is as follows:
- The Blu-ray movie has to be enabled for MC by the studio
- You will need a Blu-ray player that's compatible with MC - none of the Blu-ray players made so far are compatible
- If the movie and player both support MC, there will be a menu option on the Blu-ray movie to make the copy, either to a blank Blu-ray disc, DVD or portable devices.
- There will be online authentication before the copy can be made, and there will be limitations as to how many copies can be made (each disc will have a serial number, and so, an online database stores how many copies you have made for this disc).
- There will be additional cost placed on the consumer for discs that have MC enabled
- None of the above are mandatory, so studios and manufacturers can choose to include MC or not
The easiest way, I suppose, would be to make managed copies on your PC, since its software can be easily upgraded to allow for MC and you will need a burner or some of kind of connection (USB?) to make the copy, which many standalone players will not have. So this solves the problem of making MCs without the need to buy a new standalone, but to playback the MC (especially if burned to Blu-ray), may require special players as I don't think MC produced copies will be exactly the same as commercially made ones (or even home made ones from your own content).
Comment