Linked by Eugenia Loli on Sat 1st May 2010 22:17 UTC
UPDATE: Engadget just wrote a reply to this article. The article says that you don't need an extra license to shoot commercial video with h.264 cameras, but I wonder why the license says otherwise, and Engadget's "quotes" of user/filmmaker indemnification by MPEG-LA are anonymous...
UPDATE 2: Engadget's editor replied to me. So according to him, the quotes are not anonymous, but organization-wide on purpose. If that's the case, I guess this concludes that. And I can take them on their word from now on.
UPDATE 3: And regarding royalties (as opposed to just licensing), one more reply by Engadget's editor.
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Member since:
2006-11-27
I was reading the 2008 opinion by the US Supreme Court in Quanta v. LGE, and it certainly seems possible that MPEG-LA's patent rights are exhausted when the camera gets sold:
http://news.swpat.org/2010/05/mpeglas-patents-exhausted/
Edited 2010-05-04 09:56 UTC