Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 26th Aug 2010 13:22 UTC
Multimedia, AV We haven't talked about this one for a while, but now there's news from the MPEg-LA camp. The MPEG-LA, known patent troll and chief supplier of FUD for well over ten years, is apparently feeling the pressure from Google's WebM project, and has done a complete 180. While promising earlier this year not to charge royalties for internet video that is free to end users until the end of 2015, they've now extended this promise to eternity. This may sound like a big deal, but it changes nothing - H264 is still a legal minefield even lawyers and the MPEG-LA itself have trouble understanding.
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RE: So
by aaronb on Thu 26th Aug 2010 17:44 UTC in reply to "So"
aaronb
Member since:
2005-07-06

MPEG LA’s AVC License Will Not Charge Royalties for Internet Video That Is Free to End Users Through Life of License


The above was quoted from "http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20100825006629/en"

So what about BBC iPlayer videos?
Videos shipped with Video games?

If it is not internet videos, or a paid for service then we will still be hit by royalty fees.

What happens what with new licenses or renewal of licenses?

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