There is a solution available for VLC Vanilla at -bluray.whoknowsmy.name/ but the people I have talked to so far have not been able to make VLC Portable recognize these two files (plugin + config-file) correctly.

making anything in windows play a blueray movie is impossible period because microsoft windBLOWS is to cheap to buy the license to allow them to play blue ray from sony. literally there may be a way to download the codec but if it exists I havent found it to be an easy task to locate and apply the fix


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1 - It isn't impossible. I've got this working and the instructions are below.

2 - This thread is about VLC, not Windows.

3 - Using insults as names accomplishes nothing other than riddling your commentary with Ad Hominem fallacies.

4 - That is also the False Dilemma fallacy. You are making a very big assumption by insisting that MS is too cheap to license Blu-ray playback.

A much more likely option that you arbitrarily excluded from your rant is that MS sees the declining sales of Blu-rays in conjunction with the increasing popularity of streaming services and decided that it didn't make sense to license a dying technology that very few of their users (and declining) will take advantage of.

Not sure if you're still looking for an answer but if you are, all you should need to do is make sure you have at least VLC Portable v3.0 installed then put the "Keys database" in the instructed location. I believe 3.0 comes with the "AACS dynamic library" by default so you shouldn't need to follow that part of the instructions.

Yes, I am still looking for a solution! This is how my situation looks now: I have vanilla VLC Player 3.0.7 x64 installed on my x64 Windows 10, and following the instructions on vlc-bluray.whoknowsmy.name I can play BluRays perfectly. When I try it with the current VLC Portable (3.0.6, don't know if this is x86 or x64) on the same system (but from a different folder of course) I get the following error message:

Also, another question: Having to put the keydb.cfg into the folder C:\ProgramData\aacs\ means that my VLC Portable is not fully portable anymore. Is there any way to tell VLC Portable to look for that file on another location (i.e. somewhere on my USB stick) rather then on the system drive?

Funny enough, I was renting some Blu-rays that I was testing with but I literally returned them a few hours before you posted. That means I can't do any more tests until I rent some more movies which won't be for another week or so.

I just checked and found that my copy of VLCPortable does have a copy of libaacs.dll installed but it's also clear that I installed it there a while ago. Downloading a fresh copy of VLC Portable shows that it does not come with that DLL. I can't test whether this is still needed right now but your experience seems to say it is. Are you putting that DLL in the correct place though? It is installed in the folder "[location of VLC Portable]\App\vlc\". You would need the 32-bit DLL.

As for the key file, John just took care of that problem. Just update to v3.0.7 and follow his instructions below. That version also implements my suggestion for supporting the discs' menus: . Finally, not sure if you're aware of this but you can find a more recent and actively updated key file from here: -db.bplaced.net/

Thank you John. Just want to check if this is correct though. This is because the DLL is supposed to be placed in VLC's root folder, not that AACS folder. I don't see any code in the Launcher's INI files to move the DLL there while running.

It's most likely you've missed something. Don't have any Blu-rays I can test right now but I highly doubt anything has changed in the last 4 versions to break this. The keydb is probably not being deleted and you're mistaking VLC Portable moving the file to %ALLUSERSPROFILE%\aacs as this. My best guess is that you've either installed the wrong DLL or put it in the wrong place.

On a PC there are underlying code mechanisms to verify and play BR media and Kodi will leverage those frameworks. There is no equivalent on Linux (there are no Legal or certified players for Linux) hence libaacs exists and attempts to plug the gap. Unlike Windows where everything just works, libaacs depends on someone making the effort to dump the keys for a disc and submitting them to the database

Thanks chewitt, I appreciate you taking the time to reply and explain the difference as to why it might be working on windows. I'll keep trying though. I've put in 25 blu rays now and all have failed!!!!!! Do you think it's worth my trying a clean build too? I haven't done a clean build for a couple of years, just been upgrading from my existing one.

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