back to article Steve Jobs: mystery patent pool to attack Ogg Theora

Steve Jobs has apparently claimed that a patent pool is being assembled to "go after" Ogg Theora, the open source video codec used by the latest browsers from Google, Mozilla, and Opera. The claim was made in an email the Apple CEO appears to have sent in response to an open source software advocate who questioned Apple's …

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  1. Stephen Hurd
    WTF?

    Responded perfectly...

    Roy said "... that H.264 is not an open standard", and the reply stated that "an open standard is different from being royalty free or open source". This directly addresses Roy's point.

    If Roy's point was that Theora is a "better" solution, Steve addressed this too. When he stated that "A patent pool is being assembled to go after Theora..." this would be a solid reason to not ship it.

    The letter was written sppecifically to remind Steve of things he may have fogotten... specifically that H.264 is not an open standards (it is) and that the FSF definition should trump that of the ITU-T (pure silliness).

    1. hugoroy
      Coffee/keyboard

      Definition of open standard

      H/264 is not an open standard. The definition of Open Standard that FSFE is using has already been used since 2003. This definition comes from the European Commission's Interoperability Framework which gives a definition of open standards. And H.264 is not an open standard! Ogg Theora is. That's all.

      See: http://ec.europa.eu/idabc/en/document/3473

      1. ThomH

        Ogg Theora isn't open according to the document you cite

        Per Florian Mueller in the article, "there's no such thing as a video standard 100% unencumbered by patents". Per the EU definition you point to, a requirement of an open standard is that "The intellectual property - i.e. patents possibly present - of (parts of) the standard is made irrevocably available on a royalty- free basis." (Page 9 of the European Interoperability Framework for Pan-European eGovernment Services).

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    El Reg seems to have missed today's other H.264 news

    namely that it's the only codec IE9 is going to support under HTML5. That kind of kicks the seats out from under Ogg and Flash video in one fell swoop, I suspect.

    1. John Bailey
      Linux

      Not quite

      A few little problems with your assertion..

      1) It's only in IE9. A browser that has yet to appear outside beta. IE's market share figures comprise of IE6-8 currently, and IE is not as quickly updated as other browsers such as Firefox/Opera/Chorme.

      Not as big a threat as you think.

      And will not be likely to see significant uptake until it is released as part of an OS. So what.. three-four years yet? A lot can happen in that time.

      2) IE9 is going to be Vista/7 only. So again, a majority sector of the Windows platform left out. With full adoption today of all computers that are capable of using it.. 40% tops. So less than Firefox, but more than Apple's single digit browser share. Perfect adoption is however, unlikely. Because of all the people who use windows, about half or more use a non IE browser. So maximum number of IE9 users would be closer to 20% Add another 10%(being generous) for Safari,and you have a minority market share of browsers who will be compatible with the same codec. HTML5 compatibility on the other hand.. With these two?

      3) IE's market share world wide is going down, has been dropping for months while others are all going up or staying the same. Chrome in particular is showing steady growth. If you check it by country with a site like StatCounter, the last month has seen pretty dramatic drops in IE use all over the world. And corresponding rises in Firefox and Chrome.

      4) While IE as a whole may still have the largest share, depending on location, it is what it doesn't have that is still very important. Firefox started gaining significant share once it became too big to ignore. About 10%? So any site that decides to use HTML5 will not see it as a good idea to ignore 30%+ of the browser traffic. And as the sticking point is only the video aspect, not a huge deal. They can still use Flash or what ever for streaming video.

      5) Silverlight.. Great success eh? How come it hasn't replaced Flash already? IE support is not nearly as much a guarantee of success as it used to be. Especially when some high profile Silverlight sites have gone back to Flash.

      In reality.. this is a committee decision. And all the major players have representation there. Not a battle of market share. And the open internet side has a very significant presence.

      MS and Apple agreeing should scare the hell out of everybody who wants an open web. So expect the iFanboys to forget who made it possible for them to use the internet without IE, and go for Mozilla next.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Thumb Down

        That'd be Apple...

        "iFanboys to forget who made it possible for them to use the internet without IE"

        If memory serves correct, Safari (no it's not 'based on Mozilla or Firefox, it was release over a year after Safari ) was first released as a bet in January of 2001 , with a full release in June 2003. The last release of IE for Mac was June 2003. The Mozilla/5.0 part of the user agent string is to 'spoof' the web server into serving Netscape compatible pages, which these days is a total irrelevance...

        1. Not That Andrew

          No, that would NOT be Apple...

          >"iFanboys to forget who made it possible for them to use the internet without IE"

          >

          >If memory serves correct, Safari

          If memory serves me correctly iCab (the first iProduct in 99 BTW), Mozilla, OmniWeb and Opera (among others).

          1. Anonymous Coward
            Anonymous Coward

            'fraid not old boy...

            Yes, those browsers did indeed exist at the time--HOWEVER (caps, 'cause it's a big one) in 1999 the dominant browsers on the Mac, if memory serves correct, were Netscape 6 (Mozilla--hence the Mozilla/5.0 in the browser strings...) and Internet Explorer for Mac. iCab, OmniWeb and Opera were, as they still are, relative niche players on the platform. The point is that Mozilla & Opera weren't the saviours of the internet for Mac users that John Bailey would have you believe.

      2. Goat Jam
        FAIL

        Whooosh

        You are all missing the point, which is that the widespread adoption of Firefox on Windows was the catalyst to awaken web developers who had been for far too long stuck in a "This site requires IE" stupor.

        The fact that Safari et al predated Firefox has nothing to do with that.

    2. Number6

      Pull the rug first

      Imagine a world where lots of popular video was put up on the web using any of the supported codecs except H.264 before IE9 was released. That would sort of discourage people from using IE9 if suddenly the boot was on the other foot and the IE users were the only ones who couldn't access the content.

  3. Quxy
    Unhappy

    His Steveness wants H.264: end of discussion

    Well, Apple has made this assertion before about the uncertain patent situation surrounding Ogg Theora. And while Theora supporters claim that it doesn’t violate any patents in the H.264 pool, MPEG-LA has stated that they believe otherwise.

    But probably the most worrying issue is that of "submarine" patents. H.264 would naturally also violate those patents; but if the holder of a submarine patent were to sue over H.264, MPEG-LA could countersue using the patents in the H.264 pool. In comparison, Theora users are unarmed against such an attack.

    It seems likely that Apple (perhaps through companies they've acquired) holds unpublicised patents which any modern video codec would infringe. And it's in their strategic business interests to force competitors to their preferred HTML5 codec out of the pool, either through lawsuits or simply FUD. I wouldn't be at all surprised if the "mystery patent pool" includes both Apple and Microsoft.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Stop

      Re: Quxy

      "but if the holder of a submarine patent were to sue over H.264, MPEG-LA could counter sue using the patents in the H.264 pool."

      Errr... Not necessarily. MPEG-LA could only countersue if the company infringed on MPEG-LA patents.

      Many companies have patents for things they don't actually implement (The definition of a patent troll) and it is possible that H.264 infringes some that are owned by companies that don't actually use them.

      MPEG-LA would then not be able to counter sue and have to licence the patents.

  4. Nexox Enigma

    Open Standards? Fuck'em

    """an open standard is different from being royalty free or open source"""

    So what we want is apparently not open standards, since they give us nothing at all, seeing as how people can't use them with out paying. What we need is open source and royalty-free standards. "Open Standard" is apparently just worthless marketing gibberish, since it doesn't get anyone any farther than a "Closed standard." As far as I can tell, the difference is whether a standard is open or closed is whether it's published or secret. Beyond that they're the same, and you get in legal trouble for doing anything beyond reading them.

  5. Stephen Hurd

    Re: Open Standards? Fuck'em

    Yes, an open standard is one which can be implemented by anyone who wishes to under a reasonable and non-discrimanatory licence... like NTSC, VHS, PCIe, USB, CDMA, and Bluetooth. A closed standard is one where you cannot implement it because you are unable to licence/access the specification... like the Microsoft protocols.

    Apparently you want people to design things for free and give them to Apple/Nokia/Microsoft/Whomever so that those companies can then sell/give them to you.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Flame

      Re: Open Standards? Fuck'em

      "Yes, an open standard is one which can be implemented by anyone who wishes to under a reasonable and non-discrimanatory licence... like NTSC, VHS, PCIe, USB, CDMA, and Bluetooth."

      Are you the appointed patent apologist of the day or something? Yes, you can claim stuff is "open" according to a number of definitions of the word: according to your assertion, it's "open" if you can join the club for a fat fee and promise to uphold the cartel. The whole "RAND" advocacy is all about that: impose a tax on stuff, typically stuff that has been shoved into publicly mandated standards, and exclude everybody else from not only competing on implementations, but also competing on stuff which serves the same purpose.

      "Apparently you want people to design things for free and give them to Apple/Nokia/Microsoft/Whomever so that those companies can then sell/give them to you."

      No, that's your narrow-minded interpretation projected onto everybody else. In this case, you're just articulating the classic bogus argument of "tiny inventor sits at big table with big boys thanks to patents" - something which the patent system hardly ever delivers, or only delivers when the "big boys" are feeling very generous indeed.

      In fact, people just want technical progress to be made available as widely as possible so that further progress can be made, instead of everyone being milked until the incumbents can be bothered to get off their backsides and nudge the state of the art forward a bit more.

  6. Robert Heffernan
    Grenade

    >Insert Title Here<

    Why not have the browser just tap the OS's video codec pool and work out a list of supported codecs and use them. It works well enough for almost every other media playing application out there. Pointless to take out second licences for a codec when the OS already has them.

    *Grenade : A gift for patent trolls

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      re: >Insert Title Here<

      In Windows the set of decoders is handled by a part of DirectX, which now is part of the basic OS install. However, in Linux/BSD--and I believe OSX as well--the decoders are really only available at the application level.

      There are a few Linux programs that do tap a set of readily available video/audio decoders from one of the major media players, but many still have a monolitic design to them (mplayer). Quicktime also has the same monolithic design, all of the decoders are contained inside the Quicktime player. I believe OSX currently uses Quicktime as a plugin for media rendering.

      In either case there is some degree to which the user needs to have a plugin to decode the video and this is part of what the browser designers are trying to avoid.

      Personally, I wouldn't mind seeing some of the "supported" codecs fall off the map anyway. (I hate trying to install Indeo.) So I wouldn't really want web developers to have the option to use any codec they might find--or force me to install--on my system.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Stop

        RE: re: >Insert Title Here<

        "Quicktime also has the same monolithic design, all of the decoders are contained inside the Quicktime player."

        Bzzt. Wrong.

        Look in /Libraries/Quicktime

        On my Mac, I have Flip4Mac (WMV), FLV, LAMEEncover (MP3s) and Perian (loads of codecs there).

        Of course, all the default Apple ones are there too.

    2. Gilbo
      Thumb Down

      Because...

      Even if the browser did that the video stream itself would need to be encoded into the right format.

      Meaning any website embedding video into their pages would need to host the video streams in a multitude of different formats.

  7. Rob Glidden

    MPEG Issues Resolution on Type-1 (Royalty-Free) Standardization

    Of related interest:

    "MPEG Issues Resolution on Type-1 (Royalty-Free) Standardization"

    http://www.robglidden.com/2010/04/mpeg-resolution-on-royalty-free-standardization/

    Rob

  8. marcelo
    Happy

    El Hombre

    cubans say 'El Hombre' (the man) when refering tho Fidel Castro!

  9. Nordrick Framelhammer

    The reason Apple is so tied to H.264?

    It couldn't possibly be due to having a finger in the H.264 patent pie, could it?

    Why else would they so vociferously preventing anything but a patented codec being used in an supposedly open standard?

    1. Marcus Aurelius
      Alert

      I think

      Apple would rather work with a Codec where they know they have secure access to all the patents etc rather than one where they didn't. Whilst I'd rather support a completely open format myself, I can certainly see the direction he's coming from

  10. Giles Jones Gold badge

    Right to be cautious

    Given Apple tends to get targeted by patent trolls it's better to be cautious.

    Look at FAT as used by Tomtom and how they're having to pay money to Microsoft.

  11. Dr. Ellen
    FAIL

    Jobs

    Steve Jobs is being uncommonly cranky of late - apps, flash, now Ogg Theora. I think he is going emeritus.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      He's losing the plot

      I'm genuinely a bit concerned for Steve Jobs - we all know he's not been a well man, and now he's speaking out loud possibly against the best interests of Apple corp. It's a bit like watching a despot who's had too much power for too long, and is now starting to act against his country's best interests. He's starting to sound a bit Mugabe-ish. I'm concerned for him that he's speaking a bit fast and loose as he's had some bad news and doesn't really care any more.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Balderdash

        For the first time in almost 30 years Apple has the power to call the shots and shape the market for the next decade. Jobs is no fool, and recognises this.

        Microsoft? They're history. Like it or not, Apple and Google are where the future is at. Choose your poison.

  12. Jonathan Morton
    Linux

    Patents Schmatents...

    Theora *is* covered by patents - the ones owned by On2 and irrevocably licenced to the community. Since surely the existence of a patent on something theoretically excludes the same thing being patented by someone else, Apple has nothing to fear about implementing and supporting Theora.

    But even these patents - and the MPEG pool too - are *software* patents. Which means they stand a good chance of being ruled invalid in the near future. And then there will be much rejoicing.

    1. Lou Gosselin

      @Patents Schmatents...

      The likelihood of any arbitrary new code infringing someone's patent pool is so great that it's practically futile for any software engineer to try and avoid them. Most companies just fly under the patent radar until suing them is profitable.

      "Theora *is* covered by patents - the ones owned by On2 and irrevocably licenced to the community. Since surely the existence of a patent on something theoretically excludes the same thing being patented by someone else"

      In the US, the validity of patents are unknown until upheld in court, not when they're granted. Also they can cover incremental "inventions" without being exclusive to other patents on the same technology.

      As is typical of software patents, there is a very good chance that On2's technology could infringe someone else's patents even though On2's work may be completely original. If that sounds like a contradiction, your not thinking like a lawyer.

      "But even these patents - and the MPEG pool too - are *software* patents. Which means they stand a good chance of being ruled invalid in the near future."

      Unfortunately in the US, software patents are permitted. Patent reform is badly needed.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        USA != World

        Title says it all. Move the servers somewhere sensible.

  13. Greg J Preece

    God's sake, this bullshit AGAIN?

    Someone build a firewall around America, so we can get on with technological progression while they wallow in the bathtub o' shit that is software patenting.

    1. Captain Thyratron

      We kind of deserve it!

      Much as I enjoy reading Der Spiegel and The Register from here in the US, I have to agree with you. Our legal precedents about software are just plain fucked, and it's not fair for us to ruin standards worldwide on account of it.

    2. Ken Hagan Gold badge

      Re: wallowing in a bathtub of sh...

      That's pretty much what will happen. People outside the US will, quite legitimately, develop codecs for patent-encumbered standards and use them, quite legitimately, as they like. US residents will then have to decide between obeying local laws and enjoying the same web experience as the rest of the developed world.

      My guess is that the US population will make the same decision as the Chinese population on that one, and tell their broken government and legal systems where they can stick their restrictions on pure ideas.

  14. Cowboy Bob
    Thumb Down

    @Greg

    My thoughts precisely. I can implement an H.264 codec right now because the standard is online and I won't have to pay a penny to anyone. Why? Because software patents do not apply here. Why do we care if the Americans have to pay for this license or that patent agreement? The fact is that in 99% of countries in the world H.264 IS an open and free standard.

    To the Americans - we don't care about your domestic problems. We don't care if your software industry implodes into one giant patent lawsuit. We just do not care.

    1. Lou Gosselin

      @Cowboy Bob

      As a US developer, I think your statements are a little unfair.

      Many of us in the american software industry strongly oppose the regressive nature of software patents and recognize the harm they cause world-wide.

      However we're not the one's who have imposed this chaotic system, it is the corporate lawyers and lobbyists who are responsible. Those entities are the very same as the MNCs who continue to mount well funded campaigns every year pushing to pass software patents in europe and elsewhere.

      I think it would be a mistake to let one's guard down, since it could happen outside the US too.

  15. Johnny Canuck
    Go

    F****

    Software patents are stifling innovation. I agree with Greg that the rest of the world should firewall the US (but not us Canucks). Then the rest of the world can get on with advancing civilization while the US wallows in its legal mire.

  16. Captain Thyratron
    Thumb Up

    Damned patent parasites.

    Thanks a lot, Diamond v. Chakrabarty.

    When you postulate an absurdity, you can establish anything.

    1. henrydddd
      Linux

      Re: Damed patent parasites

      I have been a programmer/systems analyst since the 70's. Originally no software was considered to be not patentable. The parasites then, via courts and legislation, made software patentable. I remember Bill Gates getting ticked off because people were copying MS-Dos diskettes, yet he essentially stole MS-Dos (not actually stealing like Apple essentially stole GUI from PARC, but paid a unrealistically low price for it). This greed has to stop. There can only be only so many bottom feeders (like Apple) on the software development chain before the whole thing collapses.

  17. Chronigan
    FAIL

    Patents and Trade

    The reason other countries care is because of the WIPO and WTO. If countries start ignoring one another's patents it could very likely lead to a trade war. Suddenly people who want to sell to America can't. American companies won't be able to sell to other countries, and entire manufacturing and distribution channels would be destroyed. The world is simply to interconnected to through a hissy fit and take your ball home.

    1. Mark 65

      Errrr

      I'm not sure this really applies. After all, the Chinese really don't seem to give a shit for a start.

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Big Brother

    Put up or shut up

    As with Microsoft saying that they 'believe' linux infringes on 'some' patents without ever saying what these patents are, this is more BS.

    Steve, I know you're reading this and you can not help yourself from responding with another 1500 word essay on the company's website.

    Either put up, or shut up.

    1. Quxy
      Unhappy

      But Theora developers have been saying that for over a decade...

      When Monty Montgomery (founder of Xiph.org, the body overseeing Theora development) was recently asked about MPEG-LA's Theora-is-not-patent-free assertions, Montgomery was fierce in his reply:

      "For 15 years, Xiph.Org has carefully 'played by the rules', fully within the bounds, intent, and letter of intellectual property and patent law. For the past ten years we've informed the entire world, including MPEG LA, of our specifications and algorithms in detail. We've requested in open letters that any group believing we are infringing to inform us so that we make take immediate corrective action."

      "I predict that MPEG LA may counter that they know groups have been pressured into licensing patents in order to use Theora. This has been a recent back-room assertion. You might want to ask point blank if MPEG LA itself or any of its constituent members has engaged in this practice, thus manufacturing the evidence that 'vindicates' their patent allegations. I beg you - tell me immediately if you get a straight answer (or good video of any squirming)!"

      "I'm sure you can tell I'm a bit peeved; this has been going on for over a decade. It's amazing they've never been called out on it."

    2. hahnchen

      Re: zef

      I totally agree zef, let's get this shit out into the open, so that the Open Source community can work around it, or fight.

      What we're left with right now, are H264 licensors spreading FUD to protect their licensing revenues. Let's see what they actually have, so it can be addressed.

      There should be protection for open source projects against submarine patents. In open source software, everything is available for anyone to see, there should be no excuse for the existence of submarine patents. In the same way that trademarks are ruled invalid if they are not defended, so should software patents against open source software.

  19. Ray Simard
    Thumb Up

    Movie: "Patent Absurdity"

    http://patentabsurdity.com/

    Downloadable directly or with Bit Torrent. The HD version is a pretty good demonstration of the performance of Ogg/Theora/Vorbis.

    The MPAA and kindred won't like you getting this by P2P either...but for reasons quite different from the usual.

  20. Ray Simard
    Grenade

    From wariness to antagonism

    There seems to be rather little notice here of the change in tone from Jobs' earlier objections to Ogg/Theora/Vorbis. The "uncertain patent landscape" concern sounded like caution--on the surface, anyway. This sounds more like open antagonism. "Going after" it? Sounds like this bunch intends to sink it, or at least try. Why?

    1. frank ly

      Reason

      "Sounds like this bunch intends to sink it, or at least try. Why?"

      I think you'll find that money is involved. Lots of it.

  21. sleepy

    Try a straightforward interpretation of what Jobs says

    I usually find Steve Jobs' public statements to be straightforward and difficult to argue with, yet they always seem to be considered "controversial" or "arrogant". Try interpreting his statements as truthful and rigorously logical (but of course, in Apple's interests too). Here he has said something interesting, that this "open" video standard is not unencumbered by patents, and if adopted is likely to actively be opposed by a pool of patent holders. In other words he's saying better the H264 devil we know, than something with unknown patent encumbrances.

    Patent trolls go where the money is, and that nowadays means Apple. If Apple implements Theora, it's Apple that gets sued. Until Apple implements Theora, it's probable there won't be any action from these opposing patent holders, and we won't know what their claims are.

    It's pretty clear that a cornerstone of Apple's defeat of the Microsoft monopoly has been to enforce content standards licensable by all without constraints. And it's worked. AAC has defeated WMA. Apple's Webkit work has been freely given, and adopted by Google, Nokia, RIM and others, and it's a major part of ending Microsoft's browser dominance. H264 is well on the way to defeating Flash and other video formats. HTML5/Javascript is well on the way to defeating proprietary offerings from Adobe and Microsoft.

    It may be that Apple patents are included in that "pool being assembled" against Theora, but if it comes to a showdown, Apple needs to keep its leverage on both sides of the battle. Of course they aren't going to unilaterally support Ogg Theora.

    1. Charles 9

      But as someone already said...

      ...Theora is based on On2's VP3, which is already patented...and contractually released to the community royalty-free. If someone attacks Theora with a patent, couldn't Apple counter with the VP3 patent? The only way to beat VP3 would be to present a patent on something underlying (and thus older than) VP3; otherwise, VP3 wins and the challenging patent is invalidated. And VP3's underlying MO is DCT: pretty well-known stuff to anyone using an MPEG-4 codec. Might MPEG-LA try to challenge the VP3 patents with their own MPEG patents? Otherwise, how might VP3 be attacked without potential collateral damage to the MPEG-LA patent pool?

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Flame

      Re: Try a straightforward interpretation of what Jobs says

      "Try interpreting his statements as truthful and rigorously logical (but of course, in Apple's interests too)."

      No need to take Steve's word for it. Just remember that Apple has to control everything or at least as many things as possible: suppliers, partners, retailers, users.

      "It's pretty clear that a cornerstone of Apple's defeat of the Microsoft monopoly has been to enforce content standards licensable by all without constraints. And it's worked. AAC has defeated WMA. Apple's Webkit work has been freely given, and adopted by Google, Nokia, RIM and others, and it's a major part of ending Microsoft's browser dominance. H264 is well on the way to defeating Flash and other video formats. HTML5/Javascript is well on the way to defeating proprietary offerings from Adobe and Microsoft."

      When Apple fans (often faithful to the origins of that word) give too much credit to their corporate idol and portray them as some kind of maverick or the Rebel Alliance - pick your metaphor - it's hard to know whether to be amused or just disgusted. Sure, Apple did work on WebKit, but that work originates from KDE, and I think Firefox has done substantially more to "ending Microsoft's browser dominance" so far than WebKit. Meanwhile, H.264 is part of Flash's codec support, so you're trumpeting a non-victory - the only losers are Adobe who will surely learn now that it was a mistake to prop up Apple during Apple's leanest years.

      This latest missive from Jobs is just another veiled threat. It's quite possible that Google will adopt Theora more widely, and then the hardware partners (like HTC) will follow. Apple and Microsoft's recent lawsuits are all about those companies' diminishing leverage and the fact that they can't counter Google's continuing rise by suing Google itself.

  22. Dodgy Dave

    @Lou Gosselin

    You're damned right. Such a lot of obviousness is patented nowadays that it's pointless to even try avoiding it.

    The fact is, the patent system refuses to acknowledge independent invention of the same or similar things, but in reality it happens all the time. Why, in absolute terms, is that a bad thing?

    What really sucks is that you don't own intellectual property by thinking of it, you own it by employing lawyers.

  23. Anonymous Coward
    Coat

    Software patents fuel the executives' myopic "buzz rush"

    It's purely short-sighted, to propose as if a software industry could exist in a market constrained with patent litigation. Nonetheless, it must give the stumps in the boardroom quite a rush, to hear their company's patent lists run over again. (Do they even understand patent law? Do they even understand basic math, for that matter?)

    Mine's the one fit for riding a Chopper bike with - something to really run things over with.

    Anonymous because [expletive deleted]

  24. tempemeaty

    It was only a matter of time...

    So the Corporates full on attack on open source begins...

  25. yargnad
    Jobs Horns

    Take him out already

    We will all end up like the audience from the 1984 Mac commercial soon. BTW, why is there still no Borgsian Jobs icon? I think Steve well deserves it now.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      FAIL

      @yargnad

      Did you read the part of the article that says "it's unclear whether Apple is part of the pool"

      If Apple incorporate Ogg stuff into their web browser and then it turns out to infringe on someone elses IP, do you know what would happen? They'd get sued - obviously Jobs wants to avoid that.

      Admit it, you didn't read the article, did you?

  26. Bruce Ordway

    Dirac?

    While reading up on Theora I noticed a reference to dirac.

    A BBC codec that is supposedly open and free.

    It sounded too good to be true.

    Anybody familiar with this one?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirac_%28codec%29

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Dirac?

      David Cameron will shut that down, worry not

      1. Not That Andrew

        Too Late!

        The Beeb effectively disowned it when they Open-Sourced it. Since then, development appears to have slowed considerably, although it is still undergoing. One of the lead developers was doing work on Theora for Mozilla the last I checked, although he still contributes to Dirac.

  27. Anonymous Coward
    Big Brother

    FSF

    "Watching two proprietary software companies deeply opposed to computer user freedom lob accusations back and forth about who is more opposed to freedom has been surreal, to say the least. But what's been crystal clear is that the freedom these companies are arguing about is their own, not that of their users. And what they are calling freedom isn't freedom at all—it is the ability to control those users."

  28. F1reman
    Thumb Up

    Thank you

    I cannot contribute because I know nothing about US patent law or EU standards definitions but what I can say is thank you to all of you who've posted some very informative comments. It's been a very interesting read.

    For what it's worth I'm falling behind Jobs and H.264 (i.e. Sleepys comment).

  29. alan buxey
    Thumb Up

    DIRAC

    @Bruce - yes, been following Diracs progress via BBC Backstage for quite some time now

  30. The Saint

    Steve Jobs Die Already

    Steve Jobs always talks like Apple has 50% market share than 5%. Why do people listen to him?

  31. heyrick Silver badge

    I'll tell you what...

    In the US, do whatever.

    Outside the US, you can implement a choice and let the rest of the world's users pick their own preferred codec. Microsoft (etc) used to have to do it with crypto modules (re. "LSA Shell (Export Version)", so...

  32. March Warden

    If there are infringements...

    then why are we not seeing them be disputed in court now (these claims are getting a bit long in the tooth now) and failing that why is Jobs (rather foolishly/arrogantly) giving them an early warning?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Unhappy

      it's really quite simple

      They want to wait until HTML5 is officially out and Theora is included. At that point, the lawsuits ensue. WHY?

      Because then the cost of using a 264 license will skyrocket to gazillions. Want to defend yourself in court on the very good chance you have non-infringing code? Spend more gazillions. Take your choice.

  33. henrydddd
    Jobs Horns

    Copywrite laws

    Both the copyright and patent laws are going to have to be rethought out. Works, such as commercially produced movies, currently have a 120 year copyright and companies exist that patent every idea that they think of, even though they never produce or care capable of producing a product. The framers of the US Constution never intended for this to happen! The arts are hurt as many older movies are never produced again. The only revenue that they generate is that produced by the recording industry going after the little guys in their copy right sweeps of the Internet. These movies, rather that being remembered, are often forgotten. The patent companies create patients for non-existent products that they don't have any idea how to create!

    Change these rules, in the name of fairness, to limiting copyrights and patents to 20 years and a patent can only be issued for a product that has been designed and produced!

  34. Stuart Duel
    Jobs Halo

    standards

    I think what Steve Jobs is driving at is that H.264 is an ISO standard (somewhat incorrectly referred to in layman's terms as an open standard) with very firm foundations in development progression and patent holdings. Ogg/Theora/Vorbis is none of these things.

    Apple since Steve's return has been very interested in pushing ISO / open standards so people aren't locked into one platform to access content. It's in Apple's interest and the public interest to champion this approach. The alternative is the Microsoft approach of pushing their own closed "standards" which will only partially work on competing platforms - if at all.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Flame

      Re: standards

      "I think what Steve Jobs is driving at is that H.264 is an ISO standard"

      Yes, one of those things whose texts generally aren't free or freely redistributable. And if you think that the ISO is the knight in shining armour for standardisation, you haven't been paying attention over the last few years.

      "with very firm foundations in development progression and patent holdings."

      Very vague: what is "development progression" supposed to mean? And patents are unethical tools to stop people doing similar (not necessarily the same) stuff or even doing things they have discovered independently (without reading the paid-for publications of the ISO).

      "Apple since Steve's return has been very interested in pushing ISO / open standards so people aren't locked into one platform to access content."

      Hilarious! Are you even on the same planet as everybody else?

  35. Number6

    Encryption, anyone?

    It took the US a long time to realise that the rest of the world was happily ignoring US rules and developing their own encryption technologies, and US companies were trading at a disadvantage because they weren't allowed to compete due to their rules. If there's a thriving video codec industry outside the US that ignores the US software patents (some of which might not even be valid) then the only companies to suffer will be the US ones, unable to develop and compete, and the people who suffer will be the residents of the US, who won't have access to it all.

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