Hey all,
new user, so hello!
As it goes, I know a thing or two about this lark, it is part of what I do for a living. If you want to back-up a copy protected video then as long as you are only making a single back-up copy then you will not fall foul of the law and you have every right to circumvent the copy protection.
The real question I guess is how? Well, VHS use a copy protection system called macrovision so if you want to convert the tape to dvd then you need to get around that. To do that you will need to back-up the tapes with either a seperate vhs player and dvd recorder or by sending the signal into a video capturing card on a PC (most tv tuner cards, specialist video capture cards and some ATI video cards will allow this). The little bit of magic that really does the job though is called a Macro Buster.
Basically, you have your scart lead coming out of hte VHS player and instead of going straight into your DVD recorder / computer / etc it goes into the macro buster box. This unscrambles the signal and then sends it back out to whatever device you are going to use to do the recording.
So, it is still doable, and these boxes are pretty cheap as well.
Alternatively, you could always use a company to do the job for you and my company (as do many others) can
convert VHS to DVD for a real good price and if you only have a few tapes then it could be cheaper than buying a macrobuster.
If you fancy taking a look my site is called
Vinyl to Digtal and we convert all audio and video formats.
We are a little different to our competitors in that we also love to help people so if you fancy doing it yourself, or just want someone to capture so you can edit (with our help) then just pop by and ask a question.
Hope it helps and hopefully speak to some of you soon.
Cheers
Marcus