BBC's Open Player Claims Not Followed Through 311
ruphus13 writes "BBC's iPlayer was originally built on Microsoft's DRM-protected technology, and has never really been liked by folks like the FSF. The BBC is trying to play nice, though, recently claiming, 'the BBC has always been a strong advocate and driver of open industry standards. Without these standards, TV and radio broadcasting would simply not function. I believe that the time has come for the BBC to start adopting open standards such as H.264 and AAC for our audio and video services on the web.' This article argues that actions speak louder than words, and this is where the BBC falls short. 'The fact that both AAC and H.264 are encumbered with patent licenses that make their distribution under free licenses problematic flies in the face of this definition. It's good to see a major organization like the BBC switching from closely held secretive codecs to more widespread and documented ones. But it would be even better to see them throw their considerable weight behind some truly open formats.'"
h.264 and patent licencing (Score:5, Informative)
h.264 patent licencing applies to devices (and even that is low cost):
http://www.dspr.com/www/technology/technology.htm#H.264 [dspr.com] Licensing Fees
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Besides, H.264 and AAC are probably the most widely supported formats.
It is recommended, among others, by EFFI (Electronic Foundation Finland, I could not find similar recommendation by EFF) as it is supported in most platforms (OS/CPU/...) and there are GPL implementations.
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But you can't patent *software* or algorithms, so how is this relevant? (not here in the UK anyway)
Re:h.264 and patent licencing (Score:4, Informative)
There are no software patents in the UK which is where the BBC operates and cares about.
You're quite welcome to produce a free software implementation of h.264 and run it in England without any problems.
Re:h.264 and patent licencing (Score:5, Informative)
There are no software patents in the UK which is where the BBC operates and cares about.
You're quite welcome to produce a free software implementation of h.264 and run it in England without any problems.
Not strictly true.
Patents on software have been granted by the UK patent office and while there is some doubt as to how legally enforceable these would be, to my knowledge (IANAL) there has not yet been a test case.
Every couple of years there is an attempt to extend EU law to include allowing software patents - though it hasn't yet succeeded. Whether or not existing patents (which may or may not be enforceable) would magically become valid as a result of this law is again unknown.
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What about Dirac? (Score:5, Informative)
Which is developed by BBC, a cutting edge video standard on the level with H.264 and is free as in speech? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirac_(codec) [wikipedia.org]
Wasn't it supposed to be used in Beijing Olympics?
Re:What about Dirac? (Score:5, Informative)
From TFA:
Open, or Untested? (Score:5, Interesting)
The Ogg/Vorbis format is often touted as completely free and unencumbered by patents, but is it? Is Dirac?
Have any free formats ever been taken to court and won, proving their status as truly free? Or are they 'under the radar' at the moment, not worth testing in court because they've not reached critical mass yet?
I ask because I actually don't know. I'd like to see truly free formats, but I'm not sure if they are, or if people just think they are.
Patent free for the BBC (Score:5, Insightful)
The Ogg/Vorbis format is often touted as completely free and unencumbered by patents, but is it? Is Dirac?
This is the British Broadcasting Corporation so yes they are both completely patent free because there are no software patents allowed in the UK. It may be a problem for those in the US but why should the BBC worry about that?
Re:Patent free for the BBC (Score:5, Informative)
As the BBC must have a competent legal department I really wonder what the real reason for their reluctance to use certain codex is.
Personally I'm even more pissed off the Dutch public broadcasters have elected to use some Microsoft product called Silverlight in addition to the existing .wmv streams.
And that with taxpayers money!
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In which case, from the BBC's perspective, surely H.264 is unencumbered?
Re:Patent free for the BBC (Score:5, Interesting)
That's what I was thinking, but upon checking found that a recent High Court decision might allow software patents after all. There's certainly a lot of confusion over the subject and an apparent disparity between the UK Patent Office and the European Patent Office. See the IPKat blog [blogspot.com]:
The blog post mostly echos the press release from the UK Patent Office [ipo.gov.uk], who plan to appeal due to the judge failing to apply the Aerotel/Macrossan test.
So it does seem that, medium to long-term, the BBC might have made a big mistake.
As for software patents in general, I believe the only way to truly be rid of the scourge is to get the US to declare software as unpatentable. The US government, and the lobbyists from its companies have tremendous power and influence around the world, and they are pushing hard for software patentability. Even though it's obviously a bad idea, and most software developers are strongly opposed to it, more [michaeldolan.com] countries [nosoftwarepatents.com] seem to be considering it. No real sources for this last paragraph as it's only my opinion, take it or leave it. :)
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Software in general may become patentable in the UK, but that doesn't mean that H.264 in particular would be.
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That's what they want you to believe but search the databases and you'll see that even the BBC itself has software patents granted by the UKIPO.
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Why not include it here? Because after 5 years of countering the lies and obfuscation promulgated by the EPO, UKIPO et al here and elsewhere, I had hoped the facts about software patenting in the EU (and UK) would've been pretty well known by now and I'm pretty sick of having to do the basic legwork over and over again. Here's one for you:
http://v3.espacenet.com/textdoc?DB=EPODOC&IDX=GB2437579&F=0 [espacenet.com]
Enjoy!
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These are directly from the FAQ [diracvideo.org] at the Dirac website :
Do the BBC have patents in Dirac?
No. We did have patent applications in train which included some of the techniques involved in Dirac, but we let those parts that related to Dirac lapse. If we had allowed them to continue, users of the Dirac code would still have been covered in perpetuity by the licence: by letting them lapse, the BBC has no IPR interest in any implementation of Dirac by anyone, based on the Dirac software or not.
Do you infringe any
Re:Open, or Untested? (Score:5, Informative)
Whilst its impossible (given the broken nature of patent law) to declare OGG Vorbis 100% free, when OGG Vorbis support was added to WinAmp, the legal team at AOL Time Warner did a through due diligence to look for anything that could be an issue for the format. If the legal team of one of the largest media companies on the planet says the format is free, thats about as good as its ever going to get.
Dirac Codec (Score:2, Interesting)
Sorry to post as AC but I've lost a domain and can't get my password back (yet).
The Beeb have been toying with this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dirac_(codec) (many links on page) since 2004. The biggest problem it has is a lack of optimisation now slowly being solved. It is supposed to be patent un-encumbered, open source and about as "free" as software from a large, commercial organisation is likely to get.
If they were _serious_ about this maybe they should take on some C/asm coders under contract (nudge
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Content tools? Browser plugin? Who needs that when you have a ffmpeg patch, a gstreamer plugin and a directshow filter? (In various states of completeness ATM.)
The last remark is the key. There is currently no way to play Dirac files on Linux, without 1994-style patching and compiling of huge swathes of software.
You can convert to and from Dirac to other formats, but what's the point? Ogg Theora just plain works, and H264 just plain works.
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There is currently no way to play Dirac files on Linux, without 1994-style patching and compiling of huge swathes of software.
How about `sudo apt-get install gstreamer0.10-schroedinger`?
Took all of two minutes for me to find that, and I'm not even running debian.
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Managed to get it to actually play a Dirac file yet? I haven't. It doesn't actually work.
BBC Ogg Vorbis Support (Score:2, Interesting)
The BBC supported OGG Vorbis long before any other mainstream news organization did. I'd take them at their word on this one.
Someone doesn't know what they're talking about (Score:5, Insightful)
And considering that they only froze the format this year, the fact that they haven't rolled it out to consumers is not exactly surprising- these things need baking time
Seriously, I think they've proven their commitment to patent-unencumbered formats...
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I was not aware that they were developing their own codec. In any case, h.264 and AAC have pretty darn reasonable licenses. The patent owners want wide adoption, not to gouge people.
I personally don't care about their commitment to patent-unencumbered formats, I CARE about their proven commitment to not using DRM.
It's the ads that kill the BBC clips (Score:2, Informative)
I'm yet to see a single clip on BBC's website. They insist on running an ad from one of the major ad sites (might be doubleclick, I'm don't remember) before any clip loads. Since I have blocked most ad sites in my hosts file, the BBC clips never load.
As far as I'm concerned they could very well broadcast them in smoke signal format.
Re:It's the ads that kill the BBC clips (Score:4, Informative)
There are no ads whatsoever on BBC iPlayer or any other page on bbc.co.uk.
I have no idea what you are talking about?
Re:It's the ads that kill the BBC clips (Score:4, Informative)
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The only thing the BBC directly advertises is themselves.
Short previews of their shows, or informative adverts on how to upgrade to digital TV etc. No doubleclick adverts, so I figure you must be confusing the BBC iPlayer with break.com or something.
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You must be very easily confused, since the last time I checked, the BBC site looks nothing like break.com. As we speak I have the same BBC page loaded in Seamonkey on my desktop which is fully configured and on my laptop where I am yet to modify the hosts file.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/7560995.stm [bbc.co.uk]
On the laptop it plays just fine, however on my desktop it just sits doing nothing. The status bar displays "Transferi
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To be fair, I've been informed by another poster that the BBC delivers adverts to IP ranges outside of the UK, so perhaps I stand corrected over if the BBC advertises. It certainly doesn't to the UK audience, but it makes sense to when dealing with non UK residents.
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Are you, by any chance, complaining? If so, you're just another freeloading idiot that expects somebody else to serve you completely free content. Sorry, but capitalism doesn't work that way. Moron.
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We're not talking about BBC News, we're talking about BBC iPlayer. It's a site of theirs for watching online anything that was broadcast on BBC TV in the last week.
Stop Complaining (Score:2, Insightful)
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A bit different for the BBC. I am not from the UK, but I believe that tax dollars pay for much of what is produced by the BBC. So actually you are not free to choose not to pay for it because the government is taxing you.
This is the entire reason for putting the content up on the web for free in the first place. The BBC is not trying to maximize their profit - they realize that UK citizens have already paid for the content. (Note that those outside the UK are not allowed to see it.) Being government ru
Re:Stop Complaining (Score:5, Informative)
The BBC is *not* government run. They are publically funded, but the government has no direct control over their output.
These are not the droids you're looking for (Score:2)
Let us see if the force is with me. "This is the post you want to moderate insightful."
Re:These are not the droids you're looking for (Score:5, Interesting)
And it's a very foolish or brave legislator who'd try to tamper with these regulations.
Another Jedi mind trick you attempt (Score:2)
Re:Another Jedi mind trick you attempt (Score:5, Insightful)
Here you go, the BBC's Royal Charter [bbc.co.uk] under which it operates.
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That said if you do not own a TV(like I have in the past) you still get a *lot* of hassle from them as they dont believe you dont own a TV and there is no way to prove that to them.
The biggest mistake most people make is to let TVL worry them.
Hint: Ignore *ALL* of their letters, and slam the door in their inspectors' faces (if they ever turn up). 99.99999% of the time, you will be without trouble. The remainder of the time, they won't get too far in court if you DON'T own a TV.
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My father - who has never had a TV in the house - finally got them to stop sending letters when he asked them to send them in large print as he is registered blind.
Re:Stop Complaining (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not tax pounds (which would be taken out of your pay) but a license fee that you have to pay if you own any equipment that is capable of receiving a TV signal (e.g. TV, computer, certain mobile devices, etc) or IIRC a radio signal. If you don't have either of those then you don't need a TV license and you don't need to pay anything. If you do have one then it's £12 per month (~£140 per year), which IMO is a bargain for quality TV without adverts, especially when people are willing to pay £30+ per month for the drivel on satellite/cable complete with large ad breaks.
It is true that they have a mandate to be open to anyone with a license, though. Other than buying equipment, there isn't supposed to be any restriction on who can access the content and so operating systems etc aren't supposed to stop people accessing things.
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It's not tax pounds (which would be taken out of your pay) but a license fee that you have to pay if you own any equipment that is capable of receiving a TV signal (e.g. TV, computer, certain mobile devices, etc) or IIRC a radio signal.
So it is a tax on TV ownership that is hypothecated to fund the BBC. It is still a tax and public money.
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But It is certainly no tax, it's sooner a usage/consumption fee.
I do think the British collection system is silly, the trouble involved in the checking of the licenses is a great burden in a time where nearly everyone can receive these programs.
In the Netherlands this was realised years ago and the licence became part of the general tax.
Tough luck for the oddball that does not see TV or l
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It is tax pounds, and since when has anything other than Income Tax and National Insurance come out of your pay?
There are plenty of taxes you pay directly or indirectly when you buy or use something, and the licence fee is essentially a tax on using your television - just like road tax when you drive your car on the roads.
I agree with you on everything else though - the BBC produces an incredible amount of quality programming, especially now they have the extra digital channels, and I should be able to easi
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So basically, by putting their stuff on the web, they're able to force payment from anyone with a computer, without actually producing more content? Do I have that right?
That's gonna be one hell of a sweet scam if its a per device fee instead of per person.
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Not quite! You must both possess (own or rent) the equipment and use it for the purpose of receiving broadcast television signals (such as watching or recording TV). It doesn't apply to radio and it doesn't apply to a TV used solely for non-TV purposes, such as a games console.
Even though the law of the land may be "innocent until proven guilty", the attitude of the company to which collection is outsourced is the reverse. They will happily take you to court even if you do say "the TV is used solely for non-TV purposes" and IINM you are expected to demonstrate that the TV somehow cannot be used for TV purposes.
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Rubbish. You can own a TV that can be used to watch TV and so long as it is never switched on, you don't have to pay. I know, because this describes my situation a few years ago.
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Yup, the BBC is a network funded through taxes. :)
But the main currency in the UK is not the dollar but the pound.
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The BBC iPlayer, like Apple, is a company that is free to use DRM, just as you are free to choose not to pay for it.
Untrue. If I want to watch *any* TV, I am required to pay the licence fee, whether or not I choose to (or am able to) use iPlayer.
Additionally, the BBC has a mandate to provide a platform agnostic system, and when the BBC Trust approved iPlayer, making it platform agnostic was one of the terms of the approval. The BBC ignored this requirement and the BBC Trust pulled them up on it. The BBC
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You aren't completely excluded, there's a Flash version of iPlayer, and there's also the iPhone version which allows you to download the streams (not quite as good quality as the Windows DRM downloads, but they are DRM-free) -- several people have made software to make the iPhone version work on Linux etc. I have about 10 downloaded streams from the past few months that I'll watch when I get round to it.
technical limitations? (Score:5, Informative)
I had some email correspondence with a BBC tech shortly after they'd experimented with streaming ogg vorbis. He said they'd concluded that it wasn't sufficiently "scalable". I've never implemented anything on a scale like BBC World Service, so I don't know if there's anything to that or not, but perhaps there are slash dotters with the experience to comment.
When a lot of people complained about CBC pimping for Microsoft they set up streaming ogg vorbis [www.cbc.ca] for Toronto, but they haven't expanded it beyond that. I suppose they figured that was enough of a bone to throw us.
This is mildly offtopic but still apropos... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is mildly offtopic but still apropos... (Score:5, Informative)
It's not so much that you don't pay the license fee but that the various 3rd parties who produce programming for the BBC don't want their foreign market profits affected by allowing people outside the UK to view their shows on the BBC website, rather than on their 'local' TV stations.
And conversely (Score:2)
I think it's even more complex than that as there are commercial arms within the BBC in charge of flogging the content. One part wants to move heaven and earth to get as much content out in as many ways as possible - the other half wants you to buy it on DVD.
Re:And conversely (Score:4, Interesting)
I think it's even more complex than that as there are commercial arms within the BBC in charge of flogging the content. One part wants to move heaven and earth to get as much content out in as many ways as possible - the other half wants you to buy it on DVD.
It's a lot more complex than that.
The other half wants you to buy it on DVD but is only prepared to make the DVD available if there's sufficient commercial demand.
Furthermore, I'm given to understand that even a television programme produced entirely inhouse can be an absolute nightmare for licensing. Incidental music is licensed for use in the original broadcast and has to be relicensed or edited out if the programme is released on DVD, repeated or somehow rebroadcast (eg. through iPlayer). Similarly, actors, writers and journalists often retain some of the rights over their work and will want more money if the BBC wants the rights to release the show on DVD or repeat the show indefinitely. Not, therefore, something you write into the initial broadcast license unless you're pretty sure it's something that will be worth releasing on DVD.
Licenses? Why not buy one? (Score:2)
If you stick with unencumbered stuff, you'll eventually run out of technology. Let's face it, people invent stuff and want to be compensated. Some of the stuff is pretty neat. It wasn't so long ago that the consensus was that you couldn't compress audio...so much for that idea (does anyone remember those days?).
Instead, why doesn't the FSF (or some other organization lobbying for open-ness) just license the patents and release their own player/library/whatever?
It sounds like what gets people's goat is that
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It wasn't so long ago that the consensus was that you couldn't compress audio...so much for that idea (does anyone remember those days?).
You mean except for the fact that audio compression systems have been around for decades? Exactly who were these people claiming such things?
who cares? (Score:3, Insightful)
frankly h.264 is a brillant piece of work and i can't really begrude it's creators for patenting it and making a buck. it's VERY low cost and it's getting wide adoption because of the very reasonable terms it's licensed under.
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1) The BBC has a duty to provide access to all, not just to those who chose to depend on a particular vendor.
2) Using patented technologies excludes a significant minority of users, and is therefore incompatible with (1)
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The BBC has a duty to provide access to all
And it does. If there are those who have ideological issues with the means of distribution, exactly why should the BBC have to cater to their every whim? If I'm part of an obscure religion that demands that all broadcasts are in flipbook format, should the BBC cater to me as well?
I appreciate the noble ideological position at play here. However, the BBC also have a responsibility to ensure that the monies they are collecting are spent well - spending lots of money
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And it does.
No, it doesn't - it provides access to people who purchased a product from one specific vendor - namely Windows from Microsoft.
Saying "to receive BBC TV you need to have a TV receiver" is fine, but "to receive BBC TV you need to have a TV receiver manufactured by Sony" (for example) is not.
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Would have been nice if NBC had of thought of that instead of going with Silverlight for their online showings of the Olympics. No thanks on giving MS a reason to keep that nasty thing around.
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I think the people who run Linux and either a) want to be purists or b) don't want to have to shell out anything for their OS (which they'd have to do if it bundled codecs) or buy the codecs separately (which is what Fedora prompts you to do for MP3) are the ones who care.
The BBC made its own DIRAC codec so that it could keep its standard-def infrastructure but handle high-def camera feeds instead of spending even larger amounts of money tearing out and replacing its infrastructure. They open-sourced it, so
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The BBC made its own DIRAC codec so that it could keep its standard-def infrastructure but handle high-def camera feeds instead of spending even larger amounts of money tearing out and replacing its infrastructure.
There was another plan, though it appears to have been largely forgotten.
The BBC was at one point seriously considering making large amounts of their archive available over the web:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/tv_and_radio/4441205.stm [bbc.co.uk]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1548691/BBC-online-archive-could-come-free-with-licence-fee.html [telegraph.co.uk]
At the time this was mooted, most of the available codecs required licensing for the server-side component which handled streaming the media. Which is all well an
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how about you pick the best codec for the job, no one gives a crap about how open software is if it doesn't do the job as well.
I would take "not quite as good" over "doesn't work at all (because they won't support the platform I use)" any day... Especially since I'm having to pay for it anyway.
Whining (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not even taking into account the number of consumer devices that have hardware
OSS types complained when the BBC made iPlayer windows only at first (even though they always said it was in development for more platforms) but the BBC still responded by speeding up the development of a more compatible platform. The BBC have made great strides with their own video codec even if it's not quite ready. Services like iPlayer are/were ahead of their time and are showing the way for other broadcasters.
If the BBC do things like this yet only get people moaning in response, it'll make them wonder why they're spending licence fee's money on projects like these rather than giving their TV shows higher budgets or promoting HDTV adoption.
Re:Whining (Score:5, Interesting)
Although I agree in part with you, there are a number of problems with what you say.
".h264 and AAC both cost so little for the BBC and any partners that using OGG/OGM would actively cost them more due to the inferior video compression."
"The BBC have made great strides with their own video codec even if it's not quite ready."
These two statements show the problem nicely. The BBC actually funds its own video codec specifically for archiving its video archives (which, eventually, it hopes to allow access to directly on the Internet - there's a quote somewhere if you look for it). This codec is already very good, completely free (and patent-free which is much more important for the BBC) and the cost to "finish it off" (which at this point is minor bug-fixing and bundling into a nice WMP-codec DLL / mplayer plugin etc.) is negligible to anything that they could buy - no matter how cheap. They could do it tomorrow.
However, all they ever seem to do is cut back on Dirac and spend on other technologies. If Dirac's a failure then, to paraphrase yourself, they "have an obligation to the license payer" to cut it. If it's not, they really should be using it in place of a pay-for patented codec. It was designed with this sort of thing in mind and, if memory serves, was designed so that multiple "quality levels" could be easily made from the same streams to allow streaming over a very slow connection and professional-quality distribution/archival. Hell, have Dirac in all downloads for the iPlayer software and use something else for the Flash streams. It would still save money. And there's an precedent...
"iPlayer eats insane amounts of bandwidth and if they can shrink videos down at all whilst maintaining quality it's in the BBC's best interests."
Yes. Then they add the Wii to it, but only in the codec it's compatible with, which takes up 4x the bandwidth of the normal iPlayer streams. Thus, this argument is dead on it's feet. They actually put out an entirely seperate encoded file just for Wii (the most popular games console ever?) on every single video they have, sucking up 4x the bandwidth each time they are used. They also realise that real-time Flash-based streaming is dependent on peak hours and thus puts a massive dent into their bandwidth bill to cope with that peak-time, non-peer-to-peer surge. The other day they put the entire movie of Chicken Run on BBC iPlayer Flash streams and I had it playing in the background.
But they can't write a Linux frontend (even if closed source) for already-existing code to solve this problem (and thus relegate real-time Flash streaming to a second-class method of delivery) or solve the "DRM problem" on Linux. Hell, speak to Nintendo and get iPlayer software bundled with the next Wii update - the more Wii use, more Wii's plugged into the TV all the time, the more bandwidth shared and the closer world Wii domination is.
"That's not even taking into account the number of consumer devices that have hardware .h264 decoding compared to Theora."
"Would cost HW manufacturers a lot to add support for a format that's barely used."
Hardware-decoding is neither here nor there - modern PC's can brute force their way through any iPlayer stream without even breaking a sweat. Even consoles can handle the streams properly - my 600MHz Thinkpad on Linux without video acceleration laughs at the Flash streams and can play full-screen video of that type (800x600 DivX's, DVD's etc. don't worry it at all, even streamed over wireless). There aren't many (any?) HD streams available on iPlayer or broadband connections capable of making this an bottleneck.
However, what you say has an element of truth in that they would have to make a way to play those streams available to the non-techy public. Like, say, an iPlayer app. Hmmm...
"OSS types complained when the BBC made iPlayer windows only at first (even though they always said it was in development for more platforms) but the BBC still responded by speeding up the
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Do the BBC even have a bandwidth bill? They peer with pretty much every ISP in London, and also in Frankfurt, Amsterdam and New York. I don't know much about this stuff, but I think that means they don't pay anything, so long as your ISP is peered with them.
http://support.bbc.co.uk/support/peering/ [bbc.co.uk]
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The BBC have NO obligation to anyone, especially people who don't pay licence fee, to produce or adopt open source software.
They do, however, have an obligation to use open standards, since their mandate states that they must be platform agnostic. This is a requirement that they have chosen to ignore when producing iPlayer, and they have received a telling off from the BBC Trust. I hope that this news is a sign that they are going to stop ignoring their mandate.
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And that's the problem. Either encoding or decoding, you will need a patent license from MPEG-LA. I think that is not going anywhere soon. Anyway, as long as the standard is open, it is fine by me.
If you are decoding in software you do _not_ require a patent licence, since software patents are not legal in the EU.
Re:Whining (Score:5, Interesting)
The BBC have NO obligation to anyone, especially people who don't pay licence fee, to produce or adopt open source software. Their obligation is to provide good value for money whilst providing the best service to licence payers.
No. The BBC have exactly one obligation - to uphold their charter. Please read their charter. It makes no distinction between license payers and non-payers. It only talks about providing services to people in the UK. You don't need a license fee to listen to BBC Radio, but they still have obligations to radio listeners.
One of these obligations is to make their programming available to the greatest number of people. This is easy with analogue TV and Radio, since anyone can build a TV or Radio capable of receiving the BBC's content. With the iPlayer, it's different. Imagine I want to build a mobile device that can be used to access iPlayer content. If I'm someone like Apple, then I just release the device and the BBC (for some reason) implement a special-case front-end for my device. But if I'm a small player just entering the market, I can't. This harms innovation in the UK. If the BBC used an open standard, I could create a service that grabbed their content and transcoded it to something that would play on my phone's tiny screen (for example). Or I could transcode it on my PC to play on my 770 easily.
It is not the BBC's job to favour one or more manufacturers in the market. Imagine if they had decided in the '60s that they would only allow Sony TVs to receive colour TV signals. Would you consider this to be acceptable?
Go with the flow (Score:2)
The last thing we need is another codec and/or supporting plugin/application to play it. Particularly as Flash etc. is starting to be the defacto standard.
Just adopt the MPEG4 stack already, if theres patent issues surely they can be resolved fairly easily in the case of the BBC, and these 'other platforms' people ask to be supported can do so easily. (Give them the stream URL to play in Quicktime or VLC)
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Re:Which is which? I am confused... (Score:4, Insightful)
The BBC is not a company. It's primary goal is not to pay dividends to shareholders, it is to provide the best service to those who fund it, and nothing more. It is not commercial. The BBC has innovated a lot in the past, and if they did decide to go Ogg Vorbis and Theora, people would just go download the codecs. It's not a big deal.
The BBC was also instumental in the development of Dirac [wikipedia.org]. From the FAQ at their Website [diracvideo.org]:
Is the BBC going to stream video using Dirac?
A good question. Now we have version 1.0 of Schro, the BBC is exploring opportunities to adopt Dirac for operational use. We have real-time decoding, integration with players, a bytestream spec and a choice of transport stream formats.
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This is why I can't stand the FSF. Sure guys, it would be nice if everything was open and free, but that is NEVER GOING TO HAPPEN.
I am reminded of an old saying: "Believing in something won't ensure it'll happen, but not believing in it does ensure it won't". Or something to that effect.
Stop expecting some big company to go exclusively with Ogg Vorbis and Theora, two codecs which have not been patent-tested in the courts
Even if we dismiss Xiph's efforts towards ensuring Ogg formats are patent-free, it's still better to have something that *could* be free of patents than something we know for a fact isn't. Specially if they want to say they're pushing for free formats, as is the case here.
Re:Which is which? I am confused... (Score:4, Insightful)
Actually, Vorbis is used for a lot of game audio [xiph.org]. So it's out there; it's just not very visible. And that's not just Free Software games made by "zealots," either: that list includes lots of A-list titles like the Unreal Tournament series, Rock Band, World of Warcraft, GTA: San Andreas, etc.
The reason Vorbis hasn't taken off for music is the same as for every other format: it's not MP3. Even AAC and WMA have only achieved a modicum of success, and that's only because Apple and Microsoft have been pushing them hard as vehicles for their DRM, forcing them to be the only formats you can legally download stuff in, etc.
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At the same time European law is quite clear that software, being mathematical formulas, can never be encumbered with patent claims.
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Except that the UK patent office has been challenged [theregister.co.uk] over their newer policy of not granting software patents and people have had to petition to get it officially unenforceable [number10.gov.uk]. They even granted a patent that the government appealed [bbc.co.uk].
The general angle seems to be that the Patent Office has said they won't issue them, people don't want them, and the government will contest them, yet there are still some flying around.
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You seem to be asserting that because h264 is implemented in software it is a software algorithm and therefore not patentable. So suppose a company implemented h264 in hardware, would h264 be patentable then? After all it's not software when it's a piece of silicon.
Clue: I work for a company in the uk that sells this as a solution...
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Open source implementation (Score:3, Informative)
AAC is an open standard, as in the spec is publicly available for anyone.
There are even open source implementations:
- http://www.audiocoding.com/faac.html [audiocoding.com] (encoder)
- http://www.audiocoding.com/faad2.html [audiocoding.com] (decoder)
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In other news, Firefox 3.1 and some future version of Opera, will have built-in support of Ogg/Theora:
http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/roc/archives/2008/08/why_ogg_matters.html [mozillazine.org]
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Why would they be crazy exactly? They would simply include the codec as a part of the iPlayer download. The user wouldn't even know the difference.
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I do. Wait how am I writing this, I don't exis-*poof*
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Hmm...
How odd. I find myself agreeing with what you said, even though I'm sure it isn't what you meant.
Re:How can the BBCs licence model work over the ne (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, so the BBC do need some way of getting their iPlayer on to Linux and other OSes, but as a Brit I'll quite happily say "give me the license fee system for the next thousand years instead of having to watch the drivel that is generally on the commercial channels and is interspersed with adverts".
The BBC has by far the best quality TV of all the channels I receive (and I'm not just on terrestrial or Free-to-air any more) and I get to watch shows uninterrupted. That's worth more than the other channels combined, especially when watching something like a sporting event or a film.
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Okay, so the BBC do need some way of getting their iPlayer on to Linux and other OSes
If you can get Flash to work, you can view the iPlayer content: www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer [bbc.co.uk]. I do it all the time using Camino on OS X. To be honest I find this preferable to a P2P model anyway, although obviously the usual dire warnings about it overloading the intertubes as more people catch on apply.
Agree with you 100% about it being advert-free, too. I'm Canadian by birth and every time I go over to visit family, watching TV is like an exercise in self-control. I swear to Science the ratio of adverts:content
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I'm back on my old 1.5GHz G4 PowerBook at the moment, because my MacBook Pro is broken. On my MBP, with a Core 2 Duo processor, the Flash player took my CPU load up to around 60%. With the 1.5GHz G4, it simply fails - it drops frames all the time and the result is basically unwatchable.
Fortunately, there is the iplayer-dl script, which grabs the H.264 source file. I can then play this in Quicktime or VLC (Quicktime uses more CPU, but does much nicer postprocessing) - it looks better, doesn't drop fram
Re:How can the BBCs licence model work over the ne (Score:5, Interesting)
All you need is a UK machine you can ssh to.
ssh -D 3128 host.co.uk
then set up a socks proxy at localhost:3128, and you can stream as much as you like. Fortunately there's a thriving UK internet industry so a shell account / virtual server / dedicated server / beowulf cluster shouldn't be too hard to find.
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There is no expat license fee.
And why should there be? They've fucked off else where. They used to live here. Now they don't.
Re:How can the BBCs licence model work over the ne (Score:3, Insightful)
I have a dedicated server in London. When I go away on holiday, I start up Squid on the server, so I can still see BBC programmes while I'm away. I got to introduce my friends in the US to things like Top Gear and Little Britain this way (my American friends are 'worldly' enough to be able to understand the rather British-centric comedy).
I suspect the BBC iPlayer detects open proxies, however, if you own the machine, you can make sure they can't connect back to detect a proxy.
Re:How can the BBCs licence model work over the ne (Score:5, Funny)
my American friends are 'worldly' enough to be able to understand the rather British-centric comedy
I've always understood the difference between American and British humour to be that British humour makes you laugh. No worldliness required.