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Member since:
2007-07-24
I don't find it surprising that Microsoft is not supporting Theora Video. I do find it surprising that they are only supporting H.264. Microsoft media player supports the unpatented Motion JPEG codec and MPEG-1 (that may or may not be currently patented, but should have the last of the patents expiring by the end of 2012.) As well, there is the H.263 format, that was created in 1996, so patents on it should be expiring no later than 2017. All of those are are already used by either Quicktime or Media Player or both, and so the extra patent issues should be minimal. Choosing only to support H.264, which has MPEG-LA patents that don't expire until 2028 (though maybe a baseline version can be used sooner patent free ~ 2023) is limiting the options. I think this is a sad day for web freedom.
I think that H.264 will probably be better for people using Linux than Flash. I figure that eventually if H.264 becomes a defacto standard, there will be a free as in beer decoder. As in Redhat or Suse or Ubuntu or similar will pay for the decoder license, and distribute a gstreamer plugin. I also think that MPEG-LA will not sue people for non-commercial use of H.264 patents. I can think of no better way to get a backlash against software patents than to start suing individuals. I also think that Wikipedia will exert some pressure to support patent free formats since Wikipedia will not use patented formats.