Telesync

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Telesync is one of the multiple terms used by movie bootleggers to describe the source material that was used to make bootlegged copies, normally distributed in Video CD, SVCD, KVCD, DVD, KDVD or DivX/XviD format.

Telesync means a copy which was shot in a cinema like a cam (often with a professional camera from the projection booth), and directly connected to the sound source (often FM audio provided for the hearing-impaired, or from a drive-in theatre). The visual quality usually surpasses cam quality, which is in itself variable — the audio is potentially better, having none of a cam's usual audience noise.

Other bootleg version methods include telecine, screener, cam, and DVD-Rip.

Telesync, along with DVD-Rip, is one of the most common forms of pirated movies, and the most common form of pirating first-run movies. It is usually indicated with the letters "TS" in the movie's video file name.


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