This gave me a chuckle. Of course, the only reason I'm doing this is due to idiotic devices enabling HDCP when no protected content is being played back (I'm looking at you, Apple).pic.twitter.com/c8Zlj98fzu
If it gets HDCP input then the device just spits out an error message replacing the normal video. It actually has two modes, one where it'll negotiate HDCP (and show the error) and one where it just pretends not to support HDCP. The latter works with noncompliant splitters.
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The reason they have those two modes is -again- stupid Apple devices always enabling HDCP opportunistically. But my use case involves an HDCP compliant HDMI matrix switch along the way and that always advertised HDCP, hence why I need a stripper behind it.
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You mean like Sony did on ps3
End of conversation
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