- From: Manuel Amador <rudd-o@rudd-o.com>
- Date: Tue, 11 Dec 2007 18:27:55 -0500
I think you meant Vorbis, but other than a quick sed s/Theora/Vorbis/g, I see myself agreeing with you. El Mar 11 Dic 2007, Jeff McAdams escribi?: > Ian Hickson wrote: > > On Tue, 11 Dec 2007, Maik Merten wrote: > >> If keeping the web free of IP licensing horrors and being interoperable > >> with as many players as possible (commercial and non-commercial > >> entities, open source or not, free software or not) isn't much of a > >> reason things are looking cheerless for the web indeed. > > > > Actually those are pretty much the only reasons being taken into account > > here. Sadly, Ogg doesn't keep the Web free of IP licensing horrors, due > > to the submarine patent issue -- as Microsoft experienced with MP3 and > > with the Eolas patent over the past few years, for instance, even things > > that seem to have well-understood patent landscapes can be unexpectedly > > attacked by patent trolls. > > Then you need to stop work on a HTML5 spec right now because > *EVERYTHING* has a submarine patent risk to it. > > Theora was developed, by all accounts, after as exhaustive of a patent > search as is possible, and designed to not infringe on any patents. > That's as close to being sure that you're patent free as you can get. > This is the least risk option going forward. Its also the only option > that I see that can hold true to the w3c's ideals of freedom (which I > strongly support). > > Apple and Nokia's stated reasons for objecting to Theora are crap...they > don't pass the smell test. Ian, you're being taken for a ride, here. > Just revert the text and go back to Theora as the codec of choice and > end this charade of trying to look like you're taking everyone's > concerns into account because its clear that you aren't. Apple and > Nokia are, so far, getting their way, despite the huge public outcry > that you're seeing, and that should tell you something, and tell you > something loud and clear. > > Apple and Nokia's reasons for objecting to Theora don't pass the smell > test. Nokia even called Ogg "proprietary" in their white paper I've > sure you've read as well. This is so badly wrong as to have become the > butt of jokes. > > What are the real reasons that Nokia and Apple object to Theora? > Clearly the reasons that they have stated are a smoke-screen because > they don't even withstand the most basic of scrutiny. > > If you want a baseline codec that everyone supports, revert the text and > then s/SHOULD/MUST/ . Apple and Nokia may not like it, but that's the > only real option if you want a codec that everyone can support. And, > yes, Apple and Nokia *can* support it, the risk is negligible, and > technically is not hard to do. > > >> I don't exactly see why the web should embrace non-free standards just > >> because the big players made the "mistake" of licensing > >> definitely-encumbered formats and are unwilling to "take further risks". > >> (I am aware this is a pretty hard wording and that things aren't quite > >> that easy.) > > > > In the absence of IP constraints, there are strong technical reasons to > > prefer H.264 over Ogg. For a company like Apple, where the MPEG-LA > > licensing fee cap for H.264 is easily reached, the technical reasons are > > very compelling. > > Except that there are *KNOWN* IP (god how I hate that term) constraints > with H.264. At least with Theora we can avoid any known ones. All > codecs have a risk of submarine patents (though with extensive having > been done for Theora, at least that risk is lowered, if not eliminated > completely), so that argument is a wash, its on both sides of the > equation, so it cancels out. > > Is H.264 a better codec technically, yeah, ok, and Nokia and Apple are > free to support it if they wish in addition to Theora, or even to > implement all of the HTML5 spec except for Theora support and risk being > called out as non-conformant. > > >> The old wording was a SHOULD requirement. No MUST. If the big players > >> don't want to take the perceived risk (their decision) they'd still be > >> 100% within the spec. Thus I fail to see why there was need for action. > > > > The problem is that if the big players don't follow the spec, even the > > SHOULD requirements, then the spec is basically pointless. What we want > > isn't that some people support Ogg, what we fundamentally want is that > > _everyone_ support the same codec, whatever that may be. > > Then revert the text and make it a MUST. As far as I know, there are no > other codecs out there that are not encumbered. This is the whole > reason for existence of Theora, at least at the time, and I don't know > that this has changed in the few years since it was designed. > > If you want a baseline that everyone can implement without being > encumbered, then the answer is Theora. > > > Small companies aren't targetted by patent trolls. Only big (really big) > > companies are. It's a big-company concern, just like "no per-user > > licensing" is a small-company concern. That's just the reality of the > > situation, it's not intended to be a bias. > > Except that it very clearly is biasing the decision making process so > far. The language was changed because the big companies weren't > comfortable with it, moving in the direction of screwing the little guy. > That is bias. > > > On Tue, 11 Dec 2007, Manuel Amador (Rudd-O) wrote: > >>> It is intended to be exactly truthful, actually. I apologise if you > >>> believe this to be fear mongering. > >> > >> Well, the intentions certainly didn't match the actions. > > > > I am sorry you perceive them this way. > > As witnessed by the large influx of people on the list that you > referenced (admittedly including myself) that are expressing very strong > similar opinions, perhaps you should reconsider whether this is merely a > perception. I think its very clear that its not just perception. I > think you're being played, Ian. Revert the text and be done with this. > > If you really want this to be a baseline codec that everyone can > implement, revert the text and then change it to MUST. > > >> Fact: Vorbis is the *only* codec whose patent status has been widely > >> researched, nearly to exhaustion. > > > > Sadly there's really no such thing as an exhaustive patent search. > > No, but that there was an extensive attempt made make Vorbis and Theora > much safer than the alternatives. > > >> Let me rephrase your statement to be worded in a more *honest* way. > >> Vorbis provides the perfect escape for proprietary audio prisons. > >> Apple and Nokia are having problems with consumers and authors actually > >> waking up and using free, non-patent-encumbered, widely available, > >> unrestricted, non-proprietary technology. Since Vorbis directly > >> threatens their ability to sell traps, they are extorting your > >> compliance with threats of not supporting the HTML5 spec. > > > > I don't know what you base your conclusions on, but I assure you that to > > the best of my knowledge, that's not the current situation. I have been > > in this business a long time, and I've been played for a fool many times > > before. This particular issue does not have the tell-tale signs of > > players acting in bad faith. Indeed, Apple employees have probably done > > more to resolve this issue than anyone else so far. > > Really? And Nokia calling Ogg "proprietary" doesn't raise any red > flags? (merely an example) Perhaps you should take a vacation from > this, Ian, clearly your bovine excrement meter is broken. > > > and that is not an additional submarine patent risk for large > > companies. > > You've created the bias in the premise. By including the word > "additional", there, you have artificially limited the field to codecs > which are already implemented by the large companies. That is not > progress, that is one great big, huge, gigantic step backward. > > That is untenable, and is a large part of the basis for the outrage from > the public that you're currently on the receiving end of. > > > The whole point of the change was to make the point that we need > > something that will not screw you. Ogg isn't a solution, as it won't be > > implemented by Apple and Microsoft. If we require Ogg, then what will > > happen is the big players will support something else, then that will > > become the de-facto standard, and you will get screwed. What we _want_ is > > for everyone to support the same codec. We don't get that by having a > > SHOULD-level requirement for Ogg. > > Then make it a MUST-level requirement. There is no other solution. If > we give in to the big companies trying to screw us during the spec > design, then we're surely screwed, by design. At least, if we make the > spec MUST-level for Theora, we can bring pressure to bear on Microsoft, > Apple, Nokia, and whoever else by shining a spotlight on their > non-conformance to the spec. > > If we change the spec to acceed to their need to screw the end users, > then the end users will, shockingly, be screwed for sure. > > >> I am not saying that ogg should be enforced onto anyone, if nokia wishes > >> to keep using a different format, no problem, but by making it a > >> standard, we at least know that ogg will be supported by all > >> (standards-compatible) browsers, and as such it can be deployed by those > >> who are opposed to vendor lock-in or monopoly positions. > > > > We know that all standards-compatible browsers will support the > > standards, but what about all the other browsers? Surely what we want > > isn't just for a small set of browsers to support a codec but for _all_ > > the browsers to suppor the same codec. > > But since we're in a standards setting venue, non-standards-compliant > browsers (now or future) and, by definition out of scope. There will > always be non-conformant implementations, we can't avoid that. The spec > should hold true to the goals that the spec sets out to bring about. > One of those goals, from the w3c, is freedom and openness. Theora is > the only realistic choice for that. > > Theora *is* the baseline for free and open video, full stop. Everything > else reasonable is encumbered (at least to my knowledge). Assuming I'm > right, discussion over. > > >> OGG is the choice of freedom, enabling that freedom for all > >> webdevelopers is a must in my opinion, although in the same spirit, it > >> can not be enforced upon anyone, therefor the original text stating it > >> "should" instead of it "must" is probably the best way to go. > >> > >> Freedom for those who choose, the alternative for the rest. > > > > Ogg is _a_ choice, which provides freedom for some but not everyone. We > > need a codec that works for everyone. > > Then you might as well give up on HTML5 right now. > > >> Maybe Nokia would be as good as to point out which codec is better? wmv? > >> divx? mov? > > > > Sadly today there are no codecs that address all the needs of everyone > > involved; if there was, we wouldn't be having this discussion. > > If this is true, and I don't believe it is, then the HTML5 spec can > never have what you're looking for, a codec that everyone can and will > support. Theora is as close as you're gonna get. Make it part of the > spec, and I would say make it a MUST and yell loud and long at Apple, > MS, Nokia and others when they claim conformance to HTML5 and don't > implement it. > > >> My argument in favour of a "free" codec is that all browsers could ship > >> with it, without fear of being sued, this would allow users to > >> watch/listen to clips/movies/music out of the box without scouring the > >> Internet for codec XYZ for a once off use. > > > > I think that's what everyone wants. The problem is that Ogg is not such a > > codec -- Apple, for instance, can't implement Ogg without fear of being > > sued. > > Pardon me, but the sanitized version just isn't strong enough, here. > > Bullshit, bullshit, bullshit. > > Like I said, let's hear what the real reason Apple doesn't want to > support this, because this reason doesn't pass the smell test. > > > I assure you that the change was made in good faith; I (sadly) received > > no money for the change. I really wish I had. > > Then you got played. Congratulations. -- Manuel Amador (Rudd-O) <rudd-o at rudd-o.com> Rudd-O.com - http://rudd-o.com/ GPG key ID 0xC8D28B92 at http://wwwkeys.pgp.net/ Q: How did you get into artificial intelligence? A: Seemed logical -- I didn't have any real intelligence. -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 189 bytes Desc: This is a digitally signed message part. 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Received on Tuesday, 11 December 2007 15:27:55 UTC