- From: Stijn Peeters <stijn.p@hccnet.nl>
- Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2007 10:48:40 +0100
Shannon, > What concerns me is that the removed OGG recommendation (specified as > SHOULD rather than MUST) was a step forward to the adoption (however > reluctantly) by corporations and governments of a set of formats that > require no royalties to encode, decode, reverse-engineer or distribute. > None of the status quo formats can make that claim. > > Several people on this list have claimed that recommending OGG would > have legal implications for vendors. It does not. Those who feel > threatened have the option to not implement it - without affecting > compliance. In nearly all cases the end-user would have been subject to > the minor inconvenience of finding an alternate source of OGG support. > What concerns me most is that the people making contrary claims know > this yet argue anyway. Their motives and affilations, to me, are suspect. > [...] > Supporting OGG now in no way prevents a better option (such as Matroska > and/or Dirac) being added in the future. Nor does it prevent SHOULD > being changed to MUST. As I said, a SHOULD requirement in the specification which will (given the current status quo) not be followed by the major(ity of) browser vendors is useless and should be improved so it is a recommendation which at least can be implemented. Changing the SHOULD to MUST means that a lot of browser vendors would not be able to develop a conforming implementation. Governments do generally not build browsers or HTML parsers so an HTML specification would likely not influence them much, and I believe they are not who such a specification is aimed at. > Some claim that recommending no baseline format is neutral ground. The > amount of outrage this triggered proves that is false. The claim that we > have not reached a decision is true (my opponents use this claim to > support their 'neutrality'). Yet it is clear to me that NOT setting a > standard is as influential in this case as setting one. Indecision with > no reasonable grounds for ending it leads to the status quo as I have > said. Is it not the purpose (and within the powers of) of a standards > body to steer the status quo? Is it not in the public interest that this > happens? Indeed it is, which is why this issue is being discussed on this list right now. > HTML4 advocated GIF, JPG and PNG even if the wording made it seem > optional. The result was full support for 2 of these formats and partial > support of the third. There is no reason to believe that putting a > SHOULD recommendation in the text wouldn't result in most browsers > supporting OGG (except IE). This in turn would give public, non-profit > and non-aligned (with MPEG-LA) organizations justification to release > materials in this format rather than Flash, WMV or MOV (all of which > require commercial plugins and restrictive licenses). As stated before, it did not advocate them, merely stated them as *examples* of image formats. Your claim that HTML4 played a substantial role in adoption of GIF and JPEG is interesting. Do you have any sources for that? HTML4 states "Examples of widely recognized image formats include GIF, JPEG, and PNG."[1], implying those formats were already widely adopted before it was published. This is different from what HTML5 is going to do, which is recommending a specific format that implementations *should* support. Regards, Stijn [1] http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40-971218/struct/objects.html#h-13.2 > Some claim pro-OGG supporters started this debate. It was Nokia who made > this a headline issue. > > Objectors claim they are working towards a resolution that defines a > MUST video format and is accepted by 'all parties'. I don't believe that > because they know this is impossible and it WILL affect HTML5 adoption. > There is no format that can satisfy their unreasonable expectations. > There never will be. We live in a world where companies claim patents on > 'double-clicking' and 'moving pictures on a screen'. How then can any > format ever meet their demands? > > I hope I have made my position clear. I hope my position represents the > public interest. I am not here just to nag (I have been on this list for > over two years and have only intervened once before). I am writing in > the hope that proper discussion takes place and that future decisions of > this magnitude are not made without public consultation - in the > interests of entrenched cabals. I would like to say I believe all those > opposing OGG have our best interests at heart - but that would be a lie. > I am too old to believe companies and their spokespeople are altruistic > (sorry Dave). > > Shannon
Received on Friday, 14 December 2007 01:48:40 UTC