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Steve Jobs Hints At Theora Lawsuit

netcrawler writes "Steve Jobs' open letter on Flash has prompted someone at the Free Software Foundation Europe to ask him about his support of proprietary format H.264 over Theora. Jobs' pithy answer (email with headers) suggests Theora might infringe on existing patents and that 'a patent pool is being assembled to go after Theora and other "open source" codecs now.' Does he know something we don't?" Update: 05/01 00:38 GMT by T : Monty Montgomery of Xiph (the group behind Theora, as well as Ogg Vorbis, and more) provides a pointed, skeptical response to the implicit legal threat, below. Monty writes: "Thomson Multimedia made their first veiled patent threats against Vorbis almost ten years ago. MPEG-LA has been rumbling for the past few years. Maybe this time it will actually come to something, but it hasn't yet. I'll get worried when the lawyers advise me to; i.e., not yet.

The MPEG-LA has insinuated for some time that it is impossible to build any video codec without infringing on at least some of their patents. That is, they assert they have a monopoly on all digital video compression technology, period, and it is illegal to even attempt to compete with them. Of course, they've been careful not to say quite exactly that.

If Jobs's email is genuine, this is a powerful public gaffe ('All video codecs are covered by patents.') He'd be confirming MPEG's assertion in plain language anyone can understand. It would only strengthen the pushback against software patents and add to Apple's increasing PR mess. Macbooks and iPads may be pretty sweet, but creative individuals don't really like to give their business to jackbooted thugs."

2 of 686 comments (clear)

  1. Re:It's called FUD. Look it up! ^^ by Kristoph · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Apple has not basis and no reason to spread FUD against Theora. It does not license any of the H264 patents (it has only 1 in the pool and it's minor). It gains no monetary benefit from H264 (that it would not gain from any other codec). H264 holds no strategic value.

    This is Steve saying 'we can't support it because we'd get sued'. It's an a conspiracy. Time to take off the tin foil hat.

  2. Re:Apple and Microsoft by Kristoph · · Score: 0, Redundant

    What do they expect to gain exactly? Apple has just one minor patent in the patent pool. You would think, actually, that Apple would benefit from a patent free codec.