DivX;) Goes Legit 257
ZooB writes: "There is an article running on CNET right now about DivX and how,(and I'm sure this comes as no surprise to anyone reading this here), such a technology used so frequently for piracy can be used in a legitimate manner. The article is interesting enough, but take careful note of the comment by an MPAA representative. "We are aware of DivX and similar technologies, but it's not the technology that's the issue, it's how it is applied," said a spokesman for the Motion Picture Association of America, who declined to comment specifically on DivXNetworks. "Our concern is with technology that is marketed, promoted and used as a tool for piracy." His first sentence seems to fly in the face of the DMCA as the law is currently written and then, perhaps realizing what he has just said, the spokesman back pedals and contradicts his previous statement! It is nice to know that someone besides a politician can speak out of both sides of their mouth."
Still waiting for a hardware solution (Score:4, Insightful)
Now that it is 'legit' I'm sure it'll withstand all the lawyers the RIAA will send at it, including the incorporation of a watermark, copyright tags, limited distribution counter...
It should be interesting to watch the development as it progresses- it truly is an outstanding codec... but with all the lawyers watching for a slipup, it might just not make it.
Re:Still waiting for a hardware solution (Score:2)
Re:Still waiting for a hardware solution (Score:2, Insightful)
There are two technologies called DIVX. (Score:3, Insightful)
The original story should have said that there are two technologies called DIVX. The first is dead. The people who made the video compression software decided to re-use the name, thereby causing continual confusion.
It is difficult to find a group of people less skilfull in marketing than programmers, I think.
So, what can be done about this? (Score:2)
So, what can be done about this? It isn't just the DivX project. Many open source projects pick a foolish name. Most projects have home pages that are incomprehensible unless you are one of the project members.
Marketing is just the planning of communication. Every project needs to communicate. There is a need for a marketing sub-project in every project.
BAN EVERYTHING (Score:3, Insightful)
Naturlly the content provider's should be the ones to tell us what those things might be.
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:3, Insightful)
But.. by 'content providers' do you mean the people that actually create the content (i.e. film-makers, musicians, etc) or do you mean desk-folk and brokers that buy the 'content' from the creator and re-sell it to the 'people'.
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:4, Funny)
I think our beloved Content Providers should be trusted with this responsibility. Sort of an auxilliary government, charged with providing all services, information and communications we use on a daily basis. And we can trust them - I mean, the company that created Mickey Mouse, for example, couldn't do anything NOT in the public's best interest, right?
We'd have giant media conglomerates acting as sort of Philosopher Kings to a public desperate for what they have to sell. And nobody would do anything illegal, 'cause it'd be impossible.
I don't know if that ever made sense. But I burned off some steam ;)
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:2)
Hmmm. How long before US Government, Inc, starts selling indulgences? (Openly, that is)?...
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:1)
Your post would have been more meaningful had you included [corpwatch.org] a link [search-the-law.com].
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:2)
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:1)
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:2, Troll)
You know what. I tried to fucking post the first fucking line of this message and I got this stupid fucking message:
Your comment violated the postercomment compression filter. Comment aborted
Nice filtering that nukes real messages.
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:1)
I really want to see a congressman stand up in the house and demand bans on CDs, DVDs, video tapes, books, and anything else that can be copied, together with the associated players "which convert these tools of piracy into audio and video which can easily be copied by anyone with the right tools!"
Re:BAN EVERYTHING (Score:2)
We should just ban everything that might possibly in some inconciveable way be used for anything even remotely illegal.
What, you mean, like Guns?
After all Guns can be used to rob banks, and robbing banks is illegal. Yeah, let's ban Guns...
Now if we can only get some of the politicians to use that analogy... Then the real fun will begin.
Z.
Why MPAA won't comment (Score:1, Funny)
Fire in the hole!
;) ? (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:;) ? (Score:3, Funny)
Perhaps sniffing around for profitable oppourtunities with the MPAA et all has worn that nose clean off?
Re:;) ? (Score:1)
Re:;) ? (Score:4, Funny)
Whoever thought it was a good idea to name a piece of software with a smiley should be strapped to a chair and forced to watch sitcoms for the rest of their life.
[Off-Topic] Re:;) ? (Score:2, Insightful)
I can't believe I'm responding to a post by Jamie TheWhingeSki.
However, it's useful to note that cultural differences and the lack of modulation in text mean that often one must use creative punctuation to convey the intent of humour.
The various types of humour include:
Of these, the kinds generally understood by the People of the United States of America are... anything accompanied by a laugh track.
Re:;) ? (Score:2)
I use the smiley on infrequent occasion in posts to Slashdot when I can forsee the possiblilty of what I say being taken the wrong way, partly to avoid giving offence to someone who doesn't happen to be reading in the same tone of voice as that in which I am writing, and partly to forstall replies from enraged jerks and idiots.
Re:;) ? (Score:2)
The solution to that is straightforward: before writing -- learn how.
It could work... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It could work... (Score:4, Interesting)
When I hear DivX, I think of two things, actually. A pirate video format, and a failed marketing
experiment by the fine folks at Circus City.
I've always been annoyed with the name. Why go out of your way to choose a name that matches an existing (crappy) video standard. Not only is the name the same, but I've run into enough conversations where there is at least some ambiguity.
Seriously, I hope the people that came up with that name are forever getting pissed off by people mistaking their work for the failed Circuit City format. It'll teach them a lesson to pick names more carefully in the future.
Then again, they may rename it to something worse, like DeeVeeDee. :)
Even more surprising is the number of people I've talked to that don't even know that there was a previous video format called DIVX. Is the collective memory of the internet community that bad?
Well, that is interesting. (Score:1)
My favorite quote: (Score:5, Insightful)
In other words: Microsoft is your true solution for legitimate video and audio codecs. If you any other codec, then we'll assume you're a pirate, because why would you need another codec when you have DRM/XP/Passport enabled technologies?
Because anything not blessed off by the RIAA/MPAA is automatically copyright infringement. I honestly think this is what they think....
The arrogance of these people is really sickening.
Re:My favorite quote: (Score:1)
Re:Mod this crap down. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Mod this crap down. (Score:2)
no - read it again. There is no 'my analysis of this'.
He states his FUD and paranoia as facts. Plain and simple.
Re:Mod this crap down. (Score:2)
Did you just arrive here from AOL or are you just irretrievably stupid?
The author expressed his OPINION. I read it, and understood immediately that this was an OPINION.
He may be right; he may be wrong. Either way, he is allowed to express his opinion. You, as the reader, are supposed to understand that when somebody says something, it is an OPINION.
In fact, the OPINION he presented was a completely valid interpretation of the MS lackey's asinine comment, and I suspect you know this, hence your idiotic "FUD FUD FUD" bleatings.
Re:Mod this crap down. (Score:2)
Bold/italic mine.
Try brushing up on your reading comprehension, and maybe take your ritalin before posting.
Re:My favorite quote: (Score:5, Insightful)
So, your comment appears to be nothing more than standard anti-MS zealotry. I agree, sickening.
You are conveniently forgetting the fact that it is MS's WET DREAM to completely own the codec space. Why WOULDN'T MS want to be the single source for codecs?
step 1: they could easily lock out other OS's from having functional media players
step 2: they could rigidly enforce their own defacto SSSCA [216.110.42.179]
step 3: they could make sure the only online (and offline for that matter) multimedia content is MS/TimeWarner/AOL/MSNBC approved.
I assume you think this is a good thing. How sad.
If not, I am going to guess you are another pathitic MS astroturfer.
Re:My favorite quote: (Score:3, Informative)
The version of "DivX
The version of DivX (no smiley, I think...) called "4.x" or known as "OpenDivx [projectmayo.com]" is completely legal to use, and is probably the one that is "going legit."
Interesting to note that OpenDivx (4.x) aims to be completely MPEG-4 ISO standard compatible, whereas M$ MPEG4 v3 is not by any means.
MPAA Talking out of both sides of its mouth? (Score:1, Funny)
Either that, or they're just a bunch of lying snakes. Your call.
Irony? (Score:5, Insightful)
kind of ironic, when that's exactly what the original DIVX did
Re:Irony? (Score:2)
Re:Irony? (Score:1)
I think it wasn't a terrible idea, but I only rent movies I don't buy them.
Re:Irony? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Irony? (Score:1)
The largest complaint about Divx was that it would become the only option for viewing DVD movies, because all those greedy companies like Disney had plans for unlimited rental-based revenue. Can't you imagine you're five year old kid... "Daddy, Daddy. I want to watch Winnie the Pooh again" - for the hundreth time. Can you say, "Cha-ching"?
Doesn't that immediately strike you as highly analogous to Microsoft's plans for going to the rental software model?
God bless,
-Toby Reyelts
DIVX could extend rental period indefinitely (Score:2)
all those greedy companies like Disney had plans for unlimited rental-based revenue. Can't you imagine you're five year old kid... "Daddy, Daddy. I want to watch Winnie the Pooh again" - for the hundreth time. Can you say, "Cha-ching"?
Wrong. All DIVX players had an option to extend a disc's rental period indefinitely (i.e. until the DIVX program ended) for US$25.
Re:DIVX could extend rental period indefinitely (Score:2)
And I'm certain that if the format had come to dominate, that they would never have altered those terms to remove the "purchase" (actually, perpetual rental for as long as DivX remained viable, which, fortunately, wasn't very long). Not.
Re:DIVX could extend rental period indefinitely (Score:2)
Regardless of my getting the color right, I definatley remember there were discs that did not allow enabling the rental perminently, and any that you could only enabled them for your exact player - buy a new one, pay a new fee.
Re:DIVX could extend rental period indefinitely (Score:2)
Let's see, $5 to rent the disc in the first place, and another $25 to "buy" it. So for $30 you can "own" a movie. I pay less than $20 for my DVDs. Which is the better deal? Not to mention you couldn't play the discs on the player in your bedroom, or loan them to a friend. Nor could you play them on any future player you might buy. If your current player broke, you'd just be out the $x thousands you spent on your movie collection.
This conversation is moot, though, since DIVX was squashed. Most consumers were smart enough to refuse to adopt a pay-per-view format like this. These "new" ideas of doing similar things with MP3s and CDs won't fly, either.
Wrong target... *sigh* (Score:5, Interesting)
Go after the small fry, sue the hell out of him, then taken their technology. Notice how mp3 companies are now now servants of the RIAA?
Sue MS? How can they? THey provide the OS? Go after apple or realnetworks? Can't either. Big mmedia companies who use their technologies. What does DiVX
Re:Wrong target... *sigh* (Score:1)
Drinking and writting don't mix. The MPAA uses nothing that DivX
DivX is not legit (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:DivX is not legit (Score:2)
Re:DivX is not legit (Score:5, Informative)
Prove it. It may be based loosly on the MPEG-4 standard, but it is decidedly not MPEG-4.
which needs per-copy license fees which haven't been paid by anyone
Hunh? No patent, no fees. If they were walking on someone else, you better bet they'd have been sued by now.
got with replacing all of Microsoft
They never had Microsoft's code. It was a binary hack that killed some quality issues. Also, that was another version.
and MoMuSys's code
Which was a sample implementation, free for all to look at and play with. Just like the sample code that started LAME.
Methinks you should start paying attention, mukund.
Re:DivX is not legit (Score:2, Informative)
It uses patented technology. The MPEG-4 standard collectively as a whole is not patented. Various algorithms which form the MPEG-4 visual FCD are patented. OpenDivX uses these algorithms. Go through the source code, if you want proof. MPEG-4 AAC Audio also contains many patented processes. FAAC (a similar but audio project) stopped distribution [sourceforge.net] after Dolby complained.
FYI, Microsoft's source code is available as a reference implementation from CSELT. Divx
MoMuSys's code is a reference implementation, which is one among two reference implementations of the MPEG-4 FCD (the other one is Microsoft's). Both are copyrighted (please go through the comment headers of files in the source code for proof). FYI, the dist10 "sample code" reference implementation which started LAME was also copyrighted, which is why LAME was distributed as a patch for so long.
"Hunh? No patent, no fees. If they were walking on someone else, you better bet they'd have been sued by now."
Maybe you haven't been paying attention. Project Mayo is a commercial company, and they intend to release OpenDivX as "DivX Deux" (a formal product), once the quality of source code reaches a certain stage. They might license the patented technology involved. Still, DivX
ProjectMayo is a wrong project for an opensource developer to spend time on. It is plagued with various issues.
Regards,
Mukund
Re:DivX is not legit (Score:3, Informative)
DMCA violations (Score:5, Funny)
Anti SSSCA Petition (Score:5, Interesting)
From Wired magazine: "The SSSCA and existing law work hand in hand to steer the market toward using only computer systems where copy protection is enabled. First, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act created the legal framework that punished people who bypassed copy protection -- and now, the SSSCA is intended to compel Americans to buy only systems with copy protection on by default."
If you have a minute and oppose SSSCA, please sign the petition opposing this drafted legislation at:
http://www.petitiononline.com/SSSCA/petition.html [petitiononline.com]
call it the S3CA for brevity (Score:1, Offtopic)
that acronym is way too unwieldy. Let's call it the S3CA. That way, it's still a four-letter word like "DMCA" and "fork"
Re:call it the S3CA for brevity (Score:1, Offtopic)
Eh, I prefer $$$CA.
Re:Anti SSSCA Petition (Score:2)
Re:Anti SSSCA Petition (Score:1)
Re:Anti SSSCA Petition (Score:5, Informative)
Yes it is a nuclear bomb that has already been launched!! Do you think it is an accident that two Senators introduced this? One of them is the chairman of the commerce committee, for Christ's sake. Good God, man, are you really in denial this bad? Wake UP!!!
Right now the score is 0-2 in the Senate. Game is 51 (including the VP).
We have to act NOW to defeat this piece of fascism.
You need to write and call your representative and senators NOW. If you haven't done this in the next 48 hours, then you are a chump who deserves to have your computer given to the MPAA. The big media are preparing a heavy lobbying campaign to get this passed.
Talking points:
1) The bill is fascist. Keep the government's hands off my computer.
2) A mandatory security standard will direct all security applications to a single point of failure
3) Consumers hate "Digital Rights Management" and won't buy it. PC sales will stagnate even more.
4) Trusted client is provably crackable. If you try to shove this down consumer's throats, I guaranty it will be cracked quickly.
5) The "Copyright Industry" is harming America, because they are clinging to business models that require a police state to work.
6) Copyright is teetering dangerously close to illigitimacy because the government isn't listening to the people.
7) Reject Copyright Fascism.
Re:Anti SSSCA Petition (Score:2)
However, I'm a big fan of the secondary market, so for me -- as long as the law stays away from secondhand products -- this new draconian consumers-as-cash-cows law does in fact promote activities I'm "for". Why buy a new, overpriced, PC when hundreds, thousands, hundreds of thousands of perfectly capable PCs are, weekly, going to auction [rossauction.com.au]? These unwanted laws (a strange concept in itself) will only hasten the demise of the unsustainable business models that the RIAA and MPAA cling to.
There's an early scene in Soylent Green [imdb.com] where people purchase small coloured boxes only to dispose of them once they get home -- it keeps the economy going. While I'm sure the respective heads of the aformentioned organisations cream their pants while watching that, I doubt the rest of the population is going to let things get much closer to that point than they already are.
Re:Anti SSSCA Petition (Score:2, Informative)
Wired Article [wired.com]
Slashdot Discussion [slashdot.org]
kuro5hin Discussion [kuro5hin.org]
Text of SSSCA [politechbot.com]
Additional Information Regarding Implications of SSSCA at politechbot.com [politechbot.com]
Re:The SSSCA is going to be passed - NOT. (Score:5, Insightful)
John Hancock
Button Gwinnett
Lyman Hall
Geo. Walton
Wm. Hooper
Joseph Hewes
John Penn
Edward Rutledge
Thos. Heyward, Junr.
Thomas Lynch, Junr.
Arthur Middleton
Samuel Chase
Wm. Paca
Thos. Stone
Charles Carroll of Carrollton
George Wythe
Richard Henry Lee
Th. Jefferson
Benja. Harrison
Thos. Nelson, Jr.
Francis Lightfoot Lee
Carter Braxton
Robt. Morris
Benjamin Rush
Benja. Franklin
John Morton
Geo. Clymer
Jas. Smith
Geo. Taylor
James Wilson
Geo. Ross
Caesar Rodney
Geo. Read
Tho. Mckean
Wm. Floyd
Phil. Livingston
Frans. Lewis
Lewis Morris
Richd. Stockton
Jno. Witherspoon
Fras. Hopkinson
John Hart
Abra. Clark
Josiah Bartlett
Wm. Whipple
Saml. Adams
John Adams
Robt. Treat Paine
Elbridge Gerry
Step. Hopkins
William Ellery
Roger Sherman
Samuel Huntington
Wm. Williams
Oliver Wolcott
Matthew Thornton
Those with a keen sense of history will note that these names are the ones that match the signatures on the Declaration of Independance.
That's right. They were "criminals" by the very act that declared our sovereignty from England.
Sometimes laws and rule are dead wrong on so many counts that it is the people's responsibility to remind those that govern that they are as such.
Just because it's a "law" doesn't make it right or that it should even be allowed.
Re:The SSSCA is going to be passed - NOT. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:The SSSCA is going to be passed - NOT. (Score:5, Insightful)
They knew it, too. Every man who signed that paper, every member the governments who sent them there, and every last soldier and camp follower of the armies that fought for them, were ALL guily of treason to the English Crown.
If they had failed, they would have died for it--which means that what they fought to achieve was worth dying for.
Sometimes laws and rule are dead wrong on so many counts that it is the people's responsibility to remind those that govern that they are as such.
Correct. It is your right and duty to petiton the government for a redress of your greviances, and your option to break through civil disobedience what laws are passed who's punnishment is so grossly overdone that your action would still the hearts of righteous men (and women.)
But don't go forgetting that Ghandi, Washington, and King were all willing, and for a great portion did, suffer the legal consequences of their moral actions.
If you break the DMCCA or this SSSCA, you should be willing to risk suffering the consequences of breaking the laws. If you aren't, then you're not someone with moral high ground--you're just a punk who wants stuff for free.
Just because it's a "law" doesn't make it right or that it should even be allowed.
Not a laws are ethically or religiously correct. A lot of them aren't, even if most of them are. This is done to accomidate the various ethics and religons that rise and fall apart from a government; it's the flip side of the seperation of church and state.
As for "being allowed." We the people elected the lawmakers--every last person with a legal choice for go/no go for any law ever passed--and letting them make laws that conform or contradict our ethics is simply letting them do their jobs.
We should make it clear that we do not think they are doing their jobs correctly when they do things like this--but that doesn't mean that we shouldn't let them do their jobs.
Willing to suffer the consequences??? (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't know where you read about the history of the "Revolutionary Sit-In", but in my history books George Washington led a whole lot of men with guns attempting to kill anyone who tried to enforce those legal consequences.
Just a little perspective, before you get too harsh on those people who are still merely trying to avoid getting caught breaking unconstitutional laws.
Re:Anti SSSCA Petition (Score:2)
Flash-free version. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I have one question (Score:1)
Actually, I find it quite ironic that what they call the "printer-friendly" version is usually the most "reader-friendly".
DivX and m$ (Score:3, Funny)
Translation: All of your codec are belong to us.
Re:DivX and m$ (Score:2, Insightful)
Strange...... It`s looks exactly the same tactical approach as Microsoft have been using for more than 10 year: Try to copy Apple technology and re-branding it as it`s own. And now, someone have done someting the same way as Microsoft is used to do to everyone and they don`t like ité That means they belive they are the only one allowed to do this. CRAP!
The format isn't the problem (Score:3, Insightful)
It absolutely amazes me that we keep going back to blaming a format for piracy problems. It's simply foolish, really. By the laws of Internet probability, someone will come up with a compression scheme to transmit data. That scheme will naturally contain little if any copy protection scheme, because why copy protect something you want to disseminate?
The only way to truly win that war is to create a format that works better and includes a level of copy protection that is both secure and doesn't impeded normal operation. Unfortunately, this seems to be a holy grail that companies aren't able to reach yet. Encrypted CDs aren't the answer, because they don't work on PCs or some players. Neither are proprietary forms of encoding, because no one wants to spend $400 on a special player to play one lousy movie or CD.
Wish there was an easy answer to this issue, but as long as there is data, there'll always be a way to compress and send it.
Re:The format isn't the problem (Score:1)
Re:The format isn't the problem (Score:1)
There's no "yet" about it. The reason this hasn't happend, and the reason it will never happen, is it is impossible.
Consideration of the age-old history of cryptography (I recommend The Code Book by Simon Singh [simonsingh.com]) strongly suggests this. Code makers and code breakers are in a race, and one or the other may be ahead at any given time, but sooner or later, the other has always managed to catch up.
Re:The format isn't the problem (Score:2)
The unbreakable cryptography assummes both parties in communication are interested in keeping the contents of the message secret. This is not true for entertainment.
Mouth? (Score:4, Funny)
I agree, but you got the wrong orifice.
Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
Bullshit.
This is not about piracy. This is about the content providers using "piracy" as a means to justify threatening and bullying an uninformed public into letting them help themselves to a bigger slice of the pie. They want a system where you pay to see the movie in the theater, you pay to aquire the DVD, you pay if you move to another region because you need to purchase another player to watch movies for sale in that region, you pay for the privledge of watching it on your PC. You pay...and pay...and pay... Hell, they'd probably like us to pay royalties on the memories we have in our heads!
Re:Bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sure you're right on the money about some of those publishers. But how can we on
Why paint all content producers as just a bunch of greedy SOB's on the one hand while condoning napster and other content theives on the other? Where's the middle ground here where a solution might lie?
Re:Bullshit (Score:1)
I don't know how to get pirated books.
Umm... I don't suppose you'd tell me, would you?
Re:Me too? (Score:2)
I'd be willing to rip apart most of my paperbacks to scan them, there are few that are important enough as collectibles, or for sentimental reasons, for me to worry about.
I'd keep the covers, perhaps using them for a mural.
But yeah, anyways, the arbitrary laws are stupid. If it is legal for me to posess a certain bit stream, then it should be legal no matter how I obtained it.
Did you see the reply to my post that said "newsgroups"? I'm sure the poster simply meant that this ethical discourse continues in more detail on the newsgroups. Too bad he didn't specify which ones...
Here's what we need. (Score:1)
We've got to stop the MPAA/DMCA/RIAA from banding together. Maybe we should ask Mr. Heston to join us--that way these corporate thugs would be scared of us.
...I mean, No one's more powerful than Moses-- haha!
Market Evolution (Score:2, Interesting)
Without a force to counter the natural greed of big business they will milk anything, and everything, to the last drop. Control the actors and directors, control the content, control the distribution, control the branding. Maximise the return on investiment, minimise the risk. Piracy provides a countering force, and DivX;) is the latest tool to effect that force.
Once government might have fulfiled that limitation role, might have kept big business in check, but no longer. Do you think they pay attention to what the public say? Providing they won't talk with their feet (and they won't), then the movie companies know they can ignore the protests - just mouth reassurances.
Now when the movie studios want to increase prices, there is a counter. When they want to limit distribution to the timing they like, there is a counter. When they want to only distribute their choices, there is a counter.
Piracy is the only effective weapon to really be noticed by big business. Say thank you.
Shut down the community? (Score:2, Insightful)
Ironically, DivXNetworks' success could ultimately hinge on its ability to shut down the community that it helped foster.
Two words: good luck
Here's an open source alternative ... (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.vp3.com
DivX on non Intel Linux architectures work (Score:2)
OTOH, that there is a totally open-source codec is *VERY* good news. Hopefully it'll end up being like Ogg, an excellent alternative because of its better overall quality? We can always dream anyway.
Compression - Tool of the Devil (Score:2, Funny)
(obligitory sarcasm disclaimer here for the sarcasm impaired)
The same kinds of relationships between illegal activities and VERY USEFULL tools or commodities can be found all throughout every day life. It's pretty hard to smoke pot without oxygen or commit a drive-by without cars yet still oxygen and cars are freely available. Perhaps we shouldn't tell congress.
-Zane
Are ALL Compressions Tools of the Devil? (Score:2, Funny)
the MPAA /is/ a political organization... (Score:1)
Perception is reality (Score:2)
Quite the trick! (Score:2)
Alas, it seems to be a trick that certain [www.rte.ie] Canadian [celebritoons.com] politicians [umanitoba.ca] have yet to master.
(Sorry, Jean.)
A 'free video codec' thread... (Score:2)
...and nobody's mentioned (admittedly still in 'planning' stage) Ogg Tarkin [xiph.org] yet? Shocking...
'Course, there doesn't seem to be any actual code yet, while the developers seem to have been busy with Vorbis instead, but it looks like there are interested people working on it, anyway.
I noticed their mailing list archives show some discussion of whether the vp3 codec mentioned in one or two other posts might make an interim codec to use for an Ogg video file format while Tarkin is under development...
How does 3ivX compare? (Score:2)
But as for the technical side, how does it actually compare? I haven't done tests.
Re:How does 3ivX compare? (Score:2)
Not sure, but my guess is:
Don't know if any of my speculation here is TRUE, but it's my best guesses...
The Problem and The Solution (Score:2)
While the various IP merchants are pushing for a "pay-per-view/rental" scenario, this doesn't match current standards of IP control at all.
It's outrageous to expect the population to accept an outright ban on "non digital rights certified devices"(posted on slashdot recently) -- as outrageous as a population expecting to be able to use BearShare to aquire copyrighted materials for free.
The industry is pushing for a world where all transferred objects are guaranteed legit, and unreplicatable. The hardcore few claim there has been a technology shift, and all information must be free.
Both sides are wrong, and any company that thinks MS is going to be their savior is a fool. Microsoft will toss out the IP middlemen as sure as they have destroyed netscape and countless other quality companies -- the IP merchants are just next in line.
It's been said by reasonable people on slashdot over and over again : Just make it hard enough, and the penalties distasteful enough, and people won't steal. Our whole society works on this premise...and it is effective. Sure, I could steal at the market, but the potential downside far outweighs the benefits. Sure, the NSA could mount a camera (a small one) on my dick to make sure I'm not a child molester, but that's going a little overboard with regards to a presumption of innocence and my personal privacy.
What can I do with a CD? I can loan it out, I can make copies for myself, I can play it (potentially) an infinite number of times, I can sell it, I can give it away to a friend, family or library. Similar situations exist with other IP -- dvds, books, etc.
What can't I do? Replicate and distribute the IP for free or profit. I can only transfer the copy I own, a single copy.
So there needs to be an infrastructure that makes it impossible for the current object holder to use an IP object unless they hold the rights -- via direct or indirect sale, loan, gift, etc. Perhaps some type of key system gets examined and allows decryption of the IP, with severe penalties for "crackers" who post IP protection bypass software.
This is not rocket science; banks allow activities over the web and we are comfortable with that, The IRS and Social Security keep regularly updated records on individuals and their status.
The IP situation can be dealt with without either side freaking out -- this should not be treated as a big "Win-Lose" situation where the public, Microsoft or the IP merchants and up in a "winner take all" scenario. Extreme outcomes are unneccesary.
Hey it IS CLOSED SOURCE! (Score:3, Interesting)
When I first saw the article, I thought the discussion would include the (lack of) "openness" of the codec.
I think it did not make many noise, but they have closed the codec, and halted the open version. Proof?
their post on their forum! [projectmayo.com]
Well, let's realize this. The used idealist open source hackers to make their closed source codec and also money. Their license was less acceptable even than the darwin license!
What did they do? They make a "reference" implementation open. It contained all the features needed for MPEG4 except any optimizations. But then they did learn how to make a codec, they made another indoor version (which we do not know to contain code from open version). And they made it "faster" and "more reliable".
Doublespeak. (Score:2)
People silent-speaking:
DivX is bad freedom.
Re:DivX sucks (Score:1)
Intellectual property is property? (Score:4, Insightful)
Let me get the ECT rig out and we'll fix that little bit of "piracy" right away- won't hurt...much...and you'll not forget too much of the other stuff.
Strictly speaking, if I give you a copy of "intellectual" property, the potential for profit might have been taken from the owner, but unlike physical property, I've really taken nothing from the owner. The owner can sell the "property" to the next person. Try that with something like fresh fruit. NO, "intellectual" property is nothing more than a legal fiction, like several others, that appear to have at least partially outlived their usefulness as they're not being used in the manners that they were intended.
Re:Quit whining about the DMCA. (Score:2)
This reminds me of a sig I have frequently seen on /.:
Intellectual property is to property what fools gold is to gold
Uh, it IS MPEG-4... (Score:2)
There is no "official" format for MPEG-4 yet... (Score:2)
Oh, by the way, DivX is no longer a hacked up implementation of Microsoft's codec- it's its OWN codec derived from the reference implementation from the MPEG comitee.
Re:Wait a minute (Score:1)
pay attention!