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Adobe Blasts Nikon's Closed File Format

Joe Decker writes "Thomas Knoll, creator of Adobe Photoshop, blasts Nikon's use of encryption to limit access to white-balance information contained in D2X RAW images files. Fearing the DMCA, Adobe won't reverse-engineer the file, slightly reducing Photoshop's support for those files. Nikon responds. Is Adobe whining? Is Nikon shooting itself in the foot?" We've covered this previously.

57 of 347 comments (clear)

  1. Nikon by wirah · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nikon are screwing open source developers in the foot too :(

    1. Re:Nikon by DrXym · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mixed metaphors are fun! The hands on the other foot now!

    2. Re:Nikon by caluml · · Score: 5, Funny

      This article tries to turn the sow's ear of an overstretched metaphor into the silk purse of a pithy comment, but winds up counting it's chickens in a castle built on sand as the skeletons in the closet come home to roost.

      Stolen from somewhere I can't remember.

    3. Re:Nikon by mballe · · Score: 5, Informative

      What other digital camera manufacturers have documented their RAW file format?

      Adobe has previously been having a similar problem with the Fuji WB's as it can been seen here, taken from the following thread on usenet:

      http://groups-beta.google.com/group/adobe.photosho p.windows/browse_thread/thread/8636502afc4e20f9/60 6e144ad0af19c2?q=fuji+s2+white+balance+adobe&rnum= 7&hl=en#606e144ad0af19c2

      >Chris Cox Feb 20 2003, 10:08 pm show options
      >It's out of agreement because the plugin cannot read the FUJI
      >proprietary and undocumented data, and is making a guess at
      >the whitepoint based on the image contents.
      >
      >If you would like to see this improved, please contact Fuji and
      >ask them to work with Adobe to read their proprietary and
      >undocumented file format(s).

    4. Re:Nikon by Stregone · · Score: 5, Funny

      Keep an eye out for an old dude with a sports almanac from the future!

    5. Re:Nikon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      "I don't need a compass to tell which way the wind shines."

      -- Mr Furious, "Ticking Time-bomb of Rage"

    6. Re:Nikon by Kadmium · · Score: 5, Funny

      I bet you were burning the midnight oil at both ends to come up with that one.

    7. Re:Nikon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Just remember, a bird in the hand is greener than the grass underneath the other guy's bushes!

  2. Hmm by Agret · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Will this turn into something like Open Office's support for the .DOC format?

    --
    Have you metaroderated recently?
    1. Re:Hmm by RaffiRai · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ptobably not, as Nikon has already responded violently and Adobe is a rich, proprietary company, who doesn't want people writing unlicensed support for the PSD, and doesn't like what's happened with PDFs.

    2. Re:Hmm by Ucklak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The PDF standard IS open and published. Adobe commissioned the standard so it could get it's foothold in the fonts. It actually likes what is happening with PDF

      PDF - It Just Works.

      --
      if you steal from one source, that is plagiarism, if you steal from many, well, that's just research.
  3. No one is screwed.Unless they've been so all along by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    NEF file formats will continue to have support in Adobe Photoshop as a plugin. This is the current state of NEF processing, it will continue to be so in the future.

    The Nikon SDK that permits decoding of the format is still available to 3rd parties.

    In short, it's the same as it ever was.

    If the licensing is so heinous that an open source project can't accept it, then perhaps the problem isn't on the Nikon side, but in the perception and conception of how licensing should work on the part of the project team.

  4. An unforeseen consequence of the move to digital? by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I guess silly software patents should be thrown into the film vs digital debate. There's not a lot you can do to prevent someone else's brand of standard format film or paper being used in your camera, for example.

    Patents aside, there might also be an issue reading some of these manufacturers' RAW formats in years to come if you've lost the original CD or it doesn't work on Windows ZZZZ.

    --
    When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
  5. Hooray for the DMCA by gowen · · Score: 5, Informative

    Fortunately, outside the Land Of The Free(tm), anyone can access Nikon's encrypted data with a simple GNU/Linux application

    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    1. Re:Hooray for the DMCA by gowen · · Score: 3, Insightful
      it's unlikey that those inside the US have a problem either.
      But there's enough uncertainty for this to be Adobe's cited reason for not doing it. Remember, DVD Jon cracked CSS to make his Linux system interoperate with commercial DVDs, but he still got severely dragged over the coals before being exonerated.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  6. Re:Here is a solution. by NeuralAbyss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're a US company; the same way that soliciting somebody to commit a crime is (usually) criminal, I'm assuming they'd also be found to be guilty in a civil court when the DMCA is broken.

  7. Both by StormyWeather · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is Adobe whining? -- Yes.
    Is Nikon shooting itself in the foot? -- Yes.

    1. Adobe is whining because it doesn't really matter in the end (see #2).

    2. Nikon is shooting itself in the foot because even though I'm not a professional I know enough gurus in the graphics field to know that they are insane product researchers, and won't come within 10 feet of a product that will produce less than optimal results with photoshop.

    Ok, next topic. Refresh, refresh, refresh...

    1. Re:Both by bogado · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't think adobe is whining. I believe that a photographer that buys Photoshop will expect it to work with his camera out of the box. When he install it and discover that the raw do not work, he will be very frustaded, and possibly ver angry with (guess who?) Adobe.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    2. Re:Both by rebelcool · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I actually am a pro photographer.

      ACR (adobe's raw converter) has always produced suboptimal results with NEF, so many don't use it. It takes quite a bit of profiling and tweaking to get an image that doesnt look flat and dull out of it - something other raw converters dont seem to have a problem with. So typically you export to TIFF in another converter, then do your photoshopping.

      Most really high end camera systems use completely proprietary formats that only their own software can read. I've got a 22mp digital back here that costs 5 times what a D2X costs and it can only be handled with its own software. This has been pretty normal for years ...

      As a professional, this is an annoyance, but at the same time, I can't say it bugs me too much. Photographers arent quite as obsessed with things like this as typical slashdotters are. Got better things to do...

      It is however, a PR nightmare. Nikon's never been too good at PR. It'll be interesting to see how it plays out. I think theres much more going on behind the scenes between adobe and nikon than is let on.

      --

      -

    3. Re:Both by luna69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      > If Nikon starts to kick up dust, I'm just going to
      > take my business to Canon.

      Well YOU can, but the huge pool of pros and serious amateur photographers won't, because they're already too heavily invested in Nikon gear. The D2X and its brethren aren't point-and-shoot cameras that can simply be swapped for Canon gear: people often have thousands of dollars worth of lenses that would also have to be replaced. I'm not a pro, but even my Nikon optics+camera are worth more than my car.

      Nikon knows this.

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
  8. What will happen by seanyboy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is that Nikon camera users will blame Adobe for a lack of compatibility, and there's nothing Adobe will be able to do about it. If the other camera builders do the same, then Adobe could well be stuffed for Raw File editing. I'm guessing that Nikon have done a deal with a different graphics editing company.
    The best solution would be to pay camera companies to include a "Compatible with Photoshop" peelable sticker on the bottom of the camera / camera packaging. That'd probably get Nikon crawling back pretty quickly.

    --
    Training monkeys for world domination since 1439
    1. Re:What will happen by seanyboy · · Score: 4, Informative

      No. There's a difference between a lossless format and the camera's raw format. A camera raw image file contains the unprocessed data from the image sensor of a digital camera.

      --
      Training monkeys for world domination since 1439
  9. Double strandards? by geighaus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is ironic that Adobe mocks Nikon for their closed file format, while they are guilty of suing a person who reverse-engineered their precious format in the past. It would be fun if Adobe try to reverse-engineer their format and Nikon would respond by throwing one of their engineers into jail.

  10. heh, just read this story today by Adult+film+producer · · Score: 5, Informative

    Looks like Nikon's goofy encryption has been broken.

    Oh, here's a link to dcraw which will blast through Nikon's bullshit.

  11. Nikon shooting itself in the foot. by MMC+Monster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Word of mouth is an amazing thing. I bought a digital camera a couple years ago. After reading a lot of web sites, I choose a Canon G5. Since I'm the go-to guy in my circle when it comes to tech purchases, I've convinced at least 5 or 6 friends to purchase Canon digital cameras. Choose with your feet and tell others to do the same. As a group we've got a lot of power.

    --
    Help! I'm a slashdot refugee.
    1. Re:Nikon shooting itself in the foot. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Easier said than done at the D2X end of the line (or Canon 1D / 1Ds, same idea). People have thousands (or, if they're buying D2X's, probably tens or hundreds of thousands) of dollars invested in glass (lenses to everyone else). Switching camera manufactureres is a VERY expensive proposition. Not only do you have to buy a whole new set of glass, but you have to learn (from scratch) which of the new manufacturers lenses work best for what you do, and how to use them to get that result.

      Sure, at the G5/Powershot/etc level, changing brands is a matter of picking a new camera up. When you get into DSLRs, changing brands is orders of magnitude more expensive than simply buy a new camera body.

  12. Squeel? by t_allardyce · · Score: 5, Funny

    Adobe should just put a little message in so when you try to access a Nikon camera in Photoshop it starts bitching about the DMCA and how Nikon doesn't love their customers as much as other manufacturers.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  13. Let me be the first to say: by LittleBigLui · · Score: 5, Funny

    Freely readable white-balance information is to the American film producer and the American public as the Boston strangler is to the woman home alone.

    --
    Free as in mason.
  14. bona fide software developers by mrons · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nikon says they will provide a SDK for "bona fide software developers". I wonder what they are?

  15. Re:because by CrackedButter · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You dick, how the fuck do you pirate your own material? Guess what, when you click the button on the camera, the image you take is yours, not Nikons. Its nothing to do with ethics, they'd do it if it weren't for the DMCA.

  16. Re:No one is screwed.Unless they've been so all al by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    If the licensing is so heinous that an open source project can't accept it

    It isn't a problem for open source projects. They can already access the data. Well, those outside the US anyway, and people inside just need to download from outside...

    It's Adobe, a proprietary US company, that's having problems.

  17. Re:No one is screwed.Unless they've been so all al by Ben+Hutchings · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You need to sign an NDA to get hold of it, so it won't be redistributable and most users are going to have to just disable its use when building the program. It probably only includes binaries for Windows/x86, anyway.

  18. The Good News, As i see it: by kabbor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There would be no question that Adobe is a "bona fide software developer", and would be able to get their hands on the SDK. The good news is that they are refusing to sign up for it - They are determined to get the information out in the public domain, legaly.
    For this, they should be praised. IMHO.

  19. Re:Recent Nikon experience by ukleafer · · Score: 5, Informative

    The NEF file format is Nikon's RAW data, ie: not compressed to JPEG or other format, it's pure image data from the camera's sensor.

    By default, Nikon cameras (that are able to shoot RAW) convert to JPEG on the camera, and you have to select RAW manually. Sadly though as you discovered, they don't supply fully licensed software that can read RAW data with their cameras, beyond a trial version of Nikon Capture (this might have worked for you?).

    Granted - their software is a total pain in the ass to install. I've just recovered from a situation in which I installed updated 4.1 to 4.2, but the installer crashed, and 4.1 refused to reinstall because it detected the remnants of 4.2 and aborted - leaving me with no usable version of the software. In the end I had to borrow a copy of version 3 which didn't have the newer-version-check in the installer, and then patch up from there.

    I'm not bothered about NEF being encrypted or whatever, but I do think it's lame that they don't supply a fully licensed copy of Nikon Capture with their cameras that can shoot RAW. I own a D70 and had to fork out for a copy of it to make the most of the camera. Other than that, Photoshop natively supports NEF files, although IMO the remote control and live previewing features of Capture make it worth the cost.

  20. Re:Sue Nikon under the DMCA! by Dachannien · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That is true. Nikon has provided software which functions as a means of bypassing an encryption scheme which protects copyrighted works to which they don't hold the copyright (the copyright belongs to the photographer). Seems like anybody who has taken a picture with one of these cameras would have standing to bring a DMCA complaint against Nikon.

    Guess that knife cuts both ways, eh?

  21. They're free, we're free by Deep+Fried+Geekboy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Nikon are free to do this.

    We are free not to buy their products.

    I run a heavy traffic photo mailing list (http://www.topica.com/lists/streetphoto) and the overwhelming response has been "Stuff Nikon".

    Photogs tend to have well established workflows with a few choice tools (eg Capture One + PSCS) and do not enjoy having to use Nikon's frequently b0rked software.

    There is no reason whatever to encrypt this data except to screw more $$ out of the customer.

    If Nikon had a conspicuously superior product then this might conceivably make some kind of bean-counting sense but these days they don't. Canon's DP stuff is arguably superior and the only real effect of this on anyone will be to drive up Canon sales and drive down Nikon, amplifying an already-existing trend.

    Thomas Knoll, who blew the whistle on this, is regarded with great affection within the DP community. Nikon is not.

    If you listen carefully, you can hear the sound of Nikon flushing itself down the toilet.

    --

    I'm not wrong. You haven't thought about it hard enough.

  22. How ironic by jyoull · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, this is certainly an ironic twist. Adobe should have lost its right to complain about the DMCA when it created the Dmitry Sklyarov incident, creating the first and still most ominous DMCA-related precedent for the use of criminal charges for what are fundamentally business problems and civil matters...

    Adobe CREATED this and now wants protection from it. That's kinda funny. I don't care so much about white balance. The other issue in this matter is much more interesting.

  23. This won't effect me and most other Nikonians by -unta · · Score: 3, Interesting


    I bought a D70 recently. I choose cameras by using them (and of course reading the odd review). This way i've always bought cameras that I, myself, can take great pictures with (previously, Canon A70, Olympus C-5060).

    I also tried out the Canon 300D and 350D, E-300 etc. The Nikon felt best in my hand. That's the secret to a good camera/photographer relationship.

    I would put up with having to install a plug-in if it meant getting better results. Perhaps Nikon's plug-in produces better results?? They did create the camera, after-all.

    I think Nikon's biggest problem is they have no decent mid-range D-SLR. But then I can't imagine what you would need that the D70 can't deliver.

  24. Re:Recent Nikon experience by Total_Wimp · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Thing is, the CD's she had with her that she'd got with the camera, were full of crippled software - "lite" versions you have to purchase the full version, etc

    This is the crap I hate. You buy some nice piece of hardware that seems like it _should_ work just spiffy on its own, but the truth is you have to use someone's proprietary software or go searching for a hack to make it work. It's maddening.

    Other things in this category: My daughters' iPod. Yeah, I know y'all love iTunes and I know that it doesn't suck, but maybe you can cut me some slack in the fact that I happened to choose a different package for my MP3 library before getting her the iPod. Now I have this incompatible mess. I could just switch to iTunes throughout the house, but why should I have to make that choice just to put a stupid MP3 file on her player?

    My cell phone has this nice memory card that I need synch software in order to access. Yeah, I can store and use a gig of data, including MP3s, software, books, etc, but I can't access it on any computer that doesn't have ActiveSync. Why?

    I'm sick of it. Maybe these folks think they're helping me out by including their crappys software or maybe they're just doing it to lock me in. Either way, it makes me, the consumer, wary of buying their products. That can't be something they actually like.

    TW

  25. Re:No one is screwed.Unless they've been so all al by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Or one might make the case that a picture taken using Nikon equipment - or any other brand - is really the property of the person who shot it. That person should be able to do whatever he or she wants with the photo without having to pay Nikon any more $, either directly or indirectly through the cost of software whose developers had to pay for a license to Nikon's SDK. Call me crazy.

    And yes, of course the solution is "if you don't like it, don't buy it". So I won't. However, I'm feeling some pity and righteous anger on behalf of the inevitable bulk of Nikon buyers who (a) never heard of this outrage and (b) wouldn't understand until it's too late and they find out they have to buy more software for some incomprehensible computer nerd /lawyer doubletalk reason that they never ever will understand.

  26. Re:No one is screwed.Unless they've been so all al by gaspyy · · Score: 5, Informative

    What most /.-ers miss is that Adobe Camera RAW as well as most other converters such as Capture One or RawShooter don't rely on manufacturers' SDK to convert RAW files. This way they can achive better results.

    I don't know about Nikon, but for my Canon I know that ACR produces far better results than Canon RAW Converter.

  27. This is a tempest in a teapot, and here's why... by LaminatorX · · Score: 4, Interesting
    To put things in context, I'm one of the specialists in this sort of thing at one of the oldest and most respected photographic suppliers in the midwest.

    Shooters who are serious about RAW files don't use Photoshop as their RAW converter. Photoshop may be the number-one image editor, but when you've got 300 RAW files to process it's totally unacceptable for that task. Not only is the output merely good rather than great, Photoshop just isn't engineered for smooth high-volume workflow. If you shoot weddings, catalogs, fashion, or the like; you've got too many files to use Photoshop time-efficiently.

    The kind of shooter who needs a D2x will be using something like Capture One. I once used it to convert 300 RAWs under difficult stage lights in two hours. I grouped photos under similar light, fine tuned the converter for one group, set it batch converting the group in the background while I moved on to the next group. This would have taken a loooong time in PS. Once your RAWs (NEFs ORFs CRWs, whatever) have been converted to TIFFs, THEN you move to Photoshop, if necessary.

    PhaseOne has already announced that C1Pro 3.7.release.candidate supports the D2x, so I guess the SDK is available to 3rd parties. The overlap of [D2x owners} and {Adobe Camera RAW users} will be a relatively small group.

  28. Re:Here is a solution. by egburr · · Score: 3, Informative
    he would never of been arrested.

    That doesn't make any sense. Try "never have been". Or, if you are basing this on what you hear said, try "never 'ave been" or maybe even "never've been".

    --

    Edward Burr
    Having a smoking section in a restaurant is like having a peeing section in a swimming pool.
  29. And Let ME be the first to say: by commodoresloat · · Score: 5, Funny

    Freely readable white-balance information is the bedrock of our liberties. Those who would give up essential white balance information to obtain temporary control over copyright infringement deserve neither.

  30. Don't confuse encryption with undocumented RAW! by Morgaine · · Score: 5, Informative

    What other digital camera manufacturers have documented their RAW file format?

    That entirely misses the point.

    Undocumented RAW formats are one thing, and can in most cases be reverse-engineering quite trivially just by using commonsense.

    But what Nikon did was to *ENCRYPT* the values contained in one particular set of fields, those holding the white balance information.

    This is totally unrelated to the structure of their RAW files being undocumented. It requires a decryption key to release that data (which is the photographer's data anyway, not theirs), and commonsense cannot possibly reveal it.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
    1. Re:Don't confuse encryption with undocumented RAW! by mballe · · Score: 3, Informative

      I totally agree that what Nikon is doing is stupid, but it is not much different from what other manufacturers have been doing.

      As far as I know, Canon is also doing some kind of encryption of the WB in some of its cameras, which can be seen in the dcraw source code.

    2. Re:Don't confuse encryption with undocumented RAW! by plover · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Umm, no.

      I just looked at dcraw.c and the parts pertaining to parsing Canon's white balance info simply use the camera model name to determine where in the RAW file Canon put the WB. Hardly "encryption", it's just an offset that varies by format.

      Canon appears to develop a unique RAW file format by camera model. That makes a "tiny" bit of sense in that each file can accurately describe precisely the data the camera is capable of producing. It makes it harder in the long run to support dozens of file formats, but that's a trade-off Canon appears to be willing to live with. Keep in mind that Canon has to eat their own dogfood, too -- every format they produce means a new software release to parse the RAW files. And Canon doesn't charge for these downloads -- once you've bought their camera, it comes with software and upgrades (so far) have been free. So there's no real economic incentive for them to continue this, but they do.

      What I think is most important regarding this issue is that it's simply a tempest in a teapot, being stirred by Adobe for their own political reasons. First, it's only on a single high-end pro camera -- affecting only a select set of professional photographers, most of whom have never heard of Open Source. Second, it's only white balance information. It's what the photographer told the camera about "white" or "gray" at the time of the shot, but it doesn't change the underlying image data. It's nothing that can't be recovered in the digital darkroom during processing. Finally, the encryption is trivial to break -- Adobe is raising a ruckus claiming the DMCA is preventing reverse engineering. In reality, most Open Source developers would simply ignore the DMCA and perform the decoding anyway.

      In the camera world Nikon stands alone in this stupidity, but it's really too small of a matter to concern any of us, (unless you're looking for a DMCA poster child to nail to the wall.)

      --
      John
    3. Re:Don't confuse encryption with undocumented RAW! by Yer+Mom · · Score: 3, Insightful
      In reality, most Open Source developers would simply ignore the DMCA and perform the decoding anyway.
      Yes, but most Open Source developers don't have as much money as Adobe.

      Somebody who can, say, afford to buy Macromedia is much more likely to get slapped with a giant lawsuit.

      --
      Never mind Spamassassin. When's Spammerassassin coming out?
    4. Re:Don't confuse encryption with undocumented RAW! by MrResistor · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Adobe is raising a ruckus claiming the DMCA is preventing reverse engineering.

      I thought it was Nikon that raised the ruckus by threatening Adobe with it.

      Either way, it being trivial to break isn't going to be a winning arguement in court. Indeed, trivial encryption is exactly what the DMCA was made for. Strong encryption doesn't need to be protected by law.

      Honestly, I hope Adobe is successful in stirring things up around this. If it actually goes to court there stands a very good chance of a bit of the DMCA being chipped away, since it's actually the end user who owns copyright on the data being encrypted.

      Trivial or not, Nikon needs to be kicked in the head.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  31. The issue is - Encrypting files for no reason by acomj · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If I took the photograph isn't the data mine? Not Mine and NIKONS... Shouldn't I be able to control what parts are encrypted and what parts aren't, so I can get the best posible image/color/detail out of the photograph.

    There should be no fear of decrypting this data. Didn't I create that file? Isn't the data even though encrypted mine?

    I can't even think of an analogy. Even MS with its word file format, won't document how it works but isn't so evil as to encrypt it.

    This is bad form and is another strike against Nikon.

  32. Subject by Legion303 · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Fearing the DMCA, Adobe won't reverse-engineer the file"

    The poetic justice is lovely this evening.

  33. Not just undocumented, actively encrypted by RDW · · Score: 5, Informative

    One key difference is that Nikon has not only left their file format undocumented, they've actively encrypted a key image parameter, allegedly as a spoiler tactic to prevent 3rd party developers fully parsing the files without signing up as 'approved' developers. If Nikon decides you are a 'bona fide' software company worthy of the honour, you can get hold of an SDK (apparently Windows/Mac C++ only with binary runtime libraries) but won't be given a full description of the file format. This has serious implications for the use of Nikon NEF files as an archival format (will Nikon's SDK components work on whatever OS you are running in 20 years time?), for developers who want to use their own algorithms (like Adobe), and for FOSS projects. Luckily, Dave Coffin has already reverse engineered the decryption algorithm in the current version of his open source dcraw RAW converter, so we're not yet locked out of the NEF format. What isn't yet clear is whether Nikon will continue with this sort of tactic in future NEF versions, and if Adobe will overcome their DMCA concerns to fully support NEF in their ACR raw converter (assuming they're not just grandstanding). Incidentally, there's a brief description by Tom Christiansen of the white balance encryption algorithm here, and a pointer by Thomas Knoll (of Photoshop fame) to the relevant section of the dcraw code here.

  34. Illegal? by Ixalon · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm no lawyer, but I've a feeling here in Scotland the encryption of other people's data without providing them with a means of decrypting it COULD be taken as illegal.

    Here in Scotland, preventing someone access to something they own (and you would expect that the photographer owns the data of the photograph) is viewed as theft by the law. It's why car clamping is illegal in Scotland. I'm not sure if there are any cases which provide precedence for this with regards to data, but would be interesting to see Nikon bought to court over this!

  35. Nikon to Users: All Your Data Are Mine by ausoleil · · Score: 5, Informative
    Speaking as a Nikon D2X owner (the new $5,000 12 Megapixel Nikon DSLR):

    Nikon released a statement late last week regarding the "encryption" (not technically encryption, but instead, obfustication) of the RAW format (NEF) photo data taken with a D2X camera:

    Nikon's Statement of NEF Formats

    As a proprietary format, Nikon secures NEF's structure and processing through various technologies. Securing this structure is intended for the photographer's benefit, and dedicated to ensuring faithful reproduction of the photographer's creative intentions through consistent performance and rendition of the images. [emphasis was added by me] Discussions propagated on the internet suggesting otherwise are misinformed about the unique structure of NEF.

    Nikon: You Are Wrong. Period. And do not insult me by lying.

    Update: Nikon has removed this statement from their web site.

    The thing that galls me about Nikon's statement is that Nikon is essentially telling me that I need to use their processing solution, or one that they approve, or not use the NEF format at all.

    They can wax poetic in PR legalese all they want, but at the end of the day, all I am reading is that Nikon is saying that my data is for me to use as they see fit. No, Nikon, it is not.

    A camera is an instrument to take a photograph, and that's all. Now, however, the coming of age of digital has married irrevocably cameras and software. Without software, a digital camera is absolutely useless. It produces nothing tangible, and to make that photograph anything more than a small image on the LCD screen on the back of the camera, you simply must have software.

    That said, if the images are now aetherial bits, do they not still belong to us, the photographers, or our assignees?

    I think the answer to that is yes. They certainly would if they were film images. And has any camera manufacturer ever mandated what film processing methods must be used with photographs taken with their camera? No. It would have been insane for one to even try.

    And this is insane now.

    As such, I think that the SDK should be freely available to anyone who asks for it, and at the very least, to any owner of a Nikon digital camera. Why should I not be allowed to write my own software? Because Nikon says that I can't, as I am not a 'bona fide' developer? Do I need to be one, to write applications to fiddle with my own images?

    No. The data are mine.

    Let me use a real world example: I photograph a lot of panoramics. I use Panorama Tools a great deal of the time to stitch those programs together. Now then, PTools does not have an embedded interface for NEF files, especially D2X NEF files. Let's say that I wanted to open my NEF files and input them programmatically into Panorama Tools. With this press release, Nikon is telling me that I cannot have the information to do the task I want to do. In other words, sod off, pay us to play.

    This whole issue reminds me much of Gillette, the razor company, when their mantra was "sell the razor cheap and the blades at a high price." Instead this time, it is "sell the camera high and continue to reach into their pockets to allow the photographer to use his/her pictures. Use our software, or someone we like, or do not use your data as you see fit."

    Worst of all, this has been enabled by the US government, what with the asinine provision of the Digital Milleneum Copyright Act. The DCMA makes it illegal to reverse engineer encrypted files. Bottom line is that one can argue that NEF files are not encrypted, but in reality, they are, because the data are obfusticated...and without Nikon's blessing, one risks enormous civil fines and prison to bypass Nikon's methods.

    I hope at the end of the day Nikon is punished severely by the marketplace for this. I truly hope that Canon makes a point to point out in their marketing that not only do they not charge for their RAW conversion tools but that developers can get the information they need to extend the capabilities of Canon cameras.

    That sounds severe, but the only thing Nikon will understand is a beat-down from their potential customers. And this time, Nikon deserves a black eye.

  36. Yes, Adobe DNG Format by alteridem · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Hopefully this will turn into something open. Many photographers are very concerned about the archiving of their photos taken in RAW format. Will we still be able to read the many different formats 5, 10 or 100 years from now? Imagine if all of Ansel Adams negatives and prints (or any other great photographer) were now in unreadable formats!

    To combat this, Adobe has introduced a new open RAW format called DNG for digital negative. They provide a free converter to convert all of the closed proprietary formats to it and are willing to work with the camera comanies to make sure that the format contains the information they need.

    The RAW converter that came with $2500 Minolta SLR I bought does a terrible job. They want me to pay an extra several hundred dollars for the Pro version that does the job decently. All that just to read the damn pictures I take!

    Can you imagine if you bought a film camera and got consistently crappy prints from it unless you bought a pro-upgrade lab? At least Adobe takes the time to reverse engineer these proprietary formats and even provides a free tool to convert to an open format.

  37. OpenRaw.org by Nowhere.Men · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.openraw.org/ OpenRAW is a group of photographers and other interested people advocating the open documentation of digital camera RAW files.

  38. Purpose of white balance by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A lot of people don't seem to understand why the white balance has value to a professional photographer. When you shoot RAW, you can completely correct for ambient lighting after the fact by adjusting the white balance, and without any loss of quality.

    Even just for "pro-sumer" cameras, this feature is great when working with ambient light.