
Yes, Handbrake has offered a workaround, but I can't recommend the new release based on its lack of DVD decryption, the top reason anyone uses Handbrake in the first place. Why the change? I loved this feature, not because I want to steal movies, but because I want to rip and burn my DVDs to my Mac's hard drive so that I can watch them on flights without consuming excessive battery life, as playing an actual DVD would, not to mention the bother of lugging DVDs around with me. If you're on Linux, all you have to do is install a library.

visual-studio msvc visualstudio libdvdcss dvdcss. Note that HandBrake only seems to look for the libdvdcss in /usr/local/lib so if you install them with Homebrew as described, you'll need to copy them to /usr/local/lib to get HandBrake to use them. LibDVDCSS : libdvdcss is a simple library designed for accessing DVDs like a block device without having to bother about the decryption. If you're on a Mac, and you have VLC 0.9.x installed, you won't even notice the internal capability's gone. Unofficial LibDVDCSS with added custom native Visual Studio project build tools. we're not about to stop you from choosing to decrypt DVDs.

#LIBDVDCSS HANDBRAKE MAC OS#
HandBrake will dynamically load VLC's copy of libdvdcss if you have it in your Applications folder in Mac OS X, and if you're on Linux, and you want to live on the wild side, you can install libdvdcss on your system and get the same effect. Handbrake's author tries to put a brave face on this by offering a klugey workaround: Part 1: Prerequisites to Rip Encrypted DVDs using Handbrake - Get libdvdcss First of all, you need to download and install Handbrake onto your computer.
