Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 24th May 2010 10:45 UTC
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Member since:
2005-12-02
Actually, just to clear things up, H.264 only handles video. It has nothing to do with audio, you can pair any audio codec you wish with H.264 provided the container you choose supports that.
Your right, I was referring to the other MPEG-4 standard that do the job, ie: AAC for audio and MP4 as the container.
And by the way, it’s a shame that there’s no good open-source AAC codec...
Well, I don’t think that the end-user is taking any risk by watch h264 Video that does’t have been encoded with MPEG-LA approved codec (ie: licensing fee...)
1) They recently explain that they have never sued any end-user...
2) End user actually have been given the license to watch h264 movie
3) End-user can’t decently know whenever a movie have been encoded with a MPEG-LA blessed codec... thus as you said, this will probably hard to support any legal action for MPEG-LA...
They talk a lot... who really know the truth ??
As for money, I think this is the primary reason with end-user are safe: individually there are potentially violating a license that cost... $0! I don’t think any sane justice make big case for that...
Any way it seem that the treat is working... the Godfather way...
And the point of Nero AG is that MPEG-LA abuse of their dominant position to impose unfair licensing term.
Typically, the treat to the end-user is unacceptable...