Ive been wanting to make my own home media server for a bit now along with doing some other things, but how do i do it can i use any tech device as a media server, do i buy a bunch of dvds and digitize them. what exactly are the steps that need to be taken?

  • boots@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    https://www.makemkv.com/

    Is great for getting the video files from the disc, read the documentation for drive compatibility though, especially for 4k bluray. Here is the doc page for emby, and Jellyfin. I think Jellyfin is a fork from Emby that stays 100% free/open

    Note youll need a computer to be there server, and a client that is plugged in to the tv/smart tv app/apple tv box running the client. Accessing your server outside of your local network is another layer of complications. The server needs to transcode the video stream if you need to downscale it so that the network can handle it, or if the client can’t handle the format of the original video file, and that will dictact how fast a server you’ll need.

  • dart@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Run Jellyfin locally and put all of your digitized files in there. Jellyfin is open source, unlike Plex, so you won’t have to worry about getting locked into a walled garden.

    • Em Adespoton@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I tried out all the major media servers and settled on Jellyfin specifically because it lets me self-host all my own DVD rips and home videos without the risk of the content getting mixed up with stuff from elsewhere.

      I use Jellyfin for video and photos, and Calibre for books. I haven’t found a good solution for music yet; Jellyfin supports it, but not well (yet).

  • Arghblarg@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Look into building a Linux or Windows (or Android TV box) ‘Kodi’ media server. Add a cheap external HDD to it and you’re good to go. Insofar as content …

    My knowledge here may be out of date, but at one time Canada’s copyright laws were very different from the USA. We as Canadians did (and may still) pay taxes earmarked for compensating all copyright holders; it was at one point totally legal to download anything, it just wasn’t technically legal to upload that same content for others to download. A weird situation, but maybe the DMCA’s been extended since via treaties to make that illegal even in Canada now.

    At least for the 1990s through the early-to-mid 20x0s, Canadians have always paid a copyright levy on any blank media (CD-Rs, DVD-Rs, hard drives and USB keys) that could conceivably be used to store copyrighted content. The media companies did their best to hide this from Canadians, but in effect, every Canadian was already paying SOCAN, ASCAP/BMI, Hollywood etc. for copyrighted content even if they never stored such content on their purchased storage media such as blank discs, hard drives or USB keys!

    As for ‘torrent’ and ‘magnet’ files, broadband providers in Canada must forward DMCA notices to downloaders if the copyright holders send them, but last time I checked these notices were basically toothless in Canada, and nothing more than scare tactics.

    Disclaimer: IANALNDIPOOTV (I Am Not A Lawyer, Nor Do I Play One On TV). Not legal advice. Sales Taxes Apply Where Required. Some Assembly Required. Contents May Settle During Shipping.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I get you.

    By the letter of the law, you can make backups of your own media for yourself, so anything you legally own a copyright for, you may take a backup of the original media for yourself.

    To stay 100% legal, you may never share this content with anyone.

    Practically, however, after the whole RIAA lawsuits, which got a lot of press, it’s actually cheaper and more profitable for companies to make the media available to civilians through legal means, than it is to sue them. The RIAA found that out the hard way, so actually getting caught and sued for having/sharing pirated media is pretty much not going to happen. You’ll get scary sounding letters from your ISP (who is legally required to forward them to you from the MPAA), but that’s about it. It’s unlikely to ever go further than that.

    Still, you should use a VPN if you’re going to go that route…

    That’s your options, do whatever you want with that information.

    • ShySpark@lemmy.fmhy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      I dont really have the money to spend on the things i want epecially mounthly things and ive never had a job before and i still dont becasue im trying to get thru school and such. so is there something else that i can do and stay safe while doing so>

      • buckykat@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        A good VPN is five bucks a month. Certainly cheaper than any legal method of acquiring media, except 480i library DVDs.

      • afatparakeet@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Really the only safe, cheap and sustainable way nowadays is to use docker + gluetun + mullvad VPN (or your preferred VPN.

        VPNs are cheap and they’re worth it.

        • Polendri@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Mullvad is dropping support for port forwarding as of July 1st (a lack of which cripples torrenting), so this actually no longer a good option. I’m miffed about it since I just set it all up a couple weeks ago. I haven’t done my research to see if there are any trustworthy VPN providers left which offer port forwarding.

        • learning2Draw@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Haven’t used docker myself yet but keep seeing it talked about with servers, am I right in that if you have a working configuration if docker gluetun (with a vpn) you could share some sort of file that would let others setup theirs in the same way semiautomatically?

  • Tmastergamer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If you’re scared of downloading online, you could borrow from your library and burn dvds like it’s 2003

  • Tom_Bombadil@lemmy.caB
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    1 year ago

    If you are good with computers install Plex/jellyfin in a vm or docker. You can copy your own DVDs to it