Wolf-man (post: 1406612) wrote:No the reason Cleanflicks got shut was because they were selling and making money off the copies and not getting permission to do so by the creators. I own the movies therefore I have the legal right to make as many copies as I want so long as I do not distribute them nor sell them. There is no law against editing movies for private use. Actually there is no law against editing movies period so long as you do not sell/give them away nor take credit as your own work. So what I am doing is perfectly in my legal rights to do so.
Yes. Ripping your own movies for personal use is legal. Same as music, and even Games, technically. There are just all sorts of things that complicate that. I plan on making some "parent friendly" versions of some of my favorite movies (and some movies THEY would love themselves, such as Bruce Almighty and Shawshank Redemption) Editing MPEG-2 is nasty business, though. Thankfully my parents aren't videophiles. They grew up with 7 inch, Black and White family TVs. They don't care if there's a bit of artifacting and low quality.
Mithrandir (post: 1405959) wrote:If you are editing "your own movies" meaning you have the raw footage, edit using that. Don't rip from a DVD - that's already compressed.
Problem is you can't FIND "raw footage" at the consumer level anymore. Consumer Mini-DV is dead, in favor of compressed (and impossible to do REAL editing other than simple cutting) video on harddrives, and worse, DVD and Bluray cameras...
I bet in 10 years, the Camera industry will decide to take image stabilization away from consumer cameras because everyone loves those shaky digi-cam vids, or maybe they'll make sure all camcorders are the size of iPod shuffles. Yeah, THAT'LL be progress.