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Can We Legislate Past the H.264 Debate?

Midnight Warrior writes "We could solve the H.264 debate if a country's legislature were to mandate that any patents that contribute to an industry-recognized standard were unenforceable in the application of that standard. Ideally, each standard would also be required to have a 'reference design' that could be used without further licensing. This could also solve problems with a ton of other deeply entrenched areas like hard drives, DRAM, etc. RAND tries to solve this strictly within industry, but both the presence of submarine patents and the low bar required to obtain a patent have made an obvious mess. Individual companies also use patent portfolios to set up mutually assured destruction. I'm not convinced that industry can solve this mess that government created. But I'm not stupid; this clearly has a broad ripple effect. Are there non-computer industries where this would be fatal? What if the patents were unenforceable only if the standard had a trademark and the implementer was compliant at the time of 'infringement'? Then, the patents could still be indirectly licensed, but it would force strict adherence to standards and would require the patent holders to fund the trademark group to defend it to the end. In the US model, of course."

310 comments

  1. What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by fph+il+quozientatore · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What's an "industry-recognized standard"? Who has the authority to make them? Defining this could raise more problems than the ones this whole thing is supposed to solve...

    --
    My first program:

    Hell Segmentation fault

    1. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Can We Legislate Past the H.264 Debate?

      No.

      What's an "industry-recognized standard"?

      "No" is recognized by almost every person, corporation and country. I'd say that's pretty standard.

      This is just a bad idea ... even worse than letting people like me post on Slashdot.

    2. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by sopssa · · Score: 1, Insightful

      This is just a bad idea ... even worse than letting people like me post on Slashdot.

      Exactly, and who will develop these technologies and put millions in to them if they can't get it back and/or profit from it? Isn't that exactly why US has had such innovative technology industry which promotes the basic idea of American capitalism? Now you want to take it away?

    3. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Exactly, and who will develop these technologies and put millions in to them if they can't get it back and/or profit from it? Isn't that exactly why US has had such innovative technology industry which promotes the basic idea of American capitalism? Now you want to take it away?

      But... but... capitalism?! Capitalism is evil!!

    4. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is just a bad idea ... even worse than letting people like me post on Slashdot.

      You should be modded +5 insightful, having refuted a troll post, even if that troll was really you... as Bertrand Russell would have been the first to point out. But wait, that means the troll post should be modded -1 flamebait... maybe proving that Slashdot has a mod 6 moderation system?

    5. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is GSM a "standard"? This country didn't take a stand in GSM vs CDMA. (Go Capitalism!) However Europe DID, and made GSM a standard.

      If it 'worked' or was better, that's up to debate.

    6. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by larry+bagina · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Congress could.

      Whereas H.264 ("The Standard") is a standard licensed under reasonable and non-discriminatory terms which promotes the science and useful arts.... bleh bleh bleh... any patent infringement claims against H.264 must be made known within 6 months of the passage of this law. Failure to make said patent infringement claims known within the specified time period shall prevent any future claims, actions, lawsuits, or other method of redress with respect to the implementation and/or use of the standard

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    7. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by mrsteveman1 · · Score: 3, Funny

      But... but... capitalism?! Capitalism is evil!!

      So is Boldism

    8. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by OeLeWaPpErKe · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      How about socialists prove socialism is better ... seems simple enough.

      H264 is far away from the theoretically best compression. So we just need one socialist to prove that they can do more, to make something that beats H264, and give it away for free.

      The only way this could be impossible is if we all accept that socialism is inferior, or that it at least can never be as efficient as capitalism. You know, theora actually got somewhat close, and failed (or so it seems). Any other course of action, like the proposed legislation seems like an open insult. "Let's just steal it, since we can't hope to ever approach anything of that quality".

    9. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by cynyr · · Score: 1

      i doubt that up for much debate, they have more coverage, more consumer freedom and a better selection of phones. so GSM wins.

      --
      All of the above was encrypted with a Quad ROT-13 method. Unauthorized decryption is in violation of the DMCA.
    10. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why would this discussion be some silly argument over who is better, capitalism or socialism?

      There's plenty of cases though, of a government regulating a standard, and deciding it will be available. No great problem with the television industry for example.

    11. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Funny

      So is Boldism

      No, you're thinking of Comic Sans. That's evil.

      Boldism is just annoying.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    12. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      H264 is far away from the theoretically best compression. So we just need one socialist to prove that they can do more, to make something that beats H264, and give it away for free.

      That's not how it works. 99% of progress is evolution, not revolution. A codec that beats H264 will inevitably share at least some characteristics with H264, and if those characteristics are patented -- even if the designer of the new codec has never even heard of H264 -- they're not allowed to distribute it in the US. (And you're conveniently ignoring the fact that patents are socialism.)

    13. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by BlackBloq · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are no king makers for standards! They arise from a need in the industry and then they fill a gap. MPEG group didn't say ok all you use this or be fired! Who would care? The MPEG came out as the only format that was there and worked. Go to a trade show, the only computer playing motion video AT ALL back in the day was a computer playing Terminator 2 with a hardware MPEG card showing FULL SCREEN VHS quality! Back then everyone was like woaaaa! Be there and work, fill the need. Then you become a standard. Everything else is lawyer stuff.

    14. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      I think that the big issue here is that there are patents provided for small details that often are obvious and can easily be re-invented almost as an afterthought by someone else.

      Effectively the patent system is containing too much noise.

      Then the patent holders of existing patents are often requesting settlements and license fees that aren't really reasonable, which causes some cases to end up in court before a settlement is made.

      And as a general rule - the world is developing at a breakneck speed which means that patent processing is often slowing down the development. This is one reason why countries in East Asia are offering new versions and items almost every week. They aren't limited to the same level by their patent system as the companies in the US are.

      Only catch is that a lot of products are sold in the US which means that now and then there are a call for a product ban due to some possible patent infringement. So even companies in East Asia needs to keep an eye on patents. However it also means that some products may appear earlier on other markets than on the US market - if at all - since they have to work out the patent maze first.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    15. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by angelwolf71885 · · Score: 0

      patents ARNT socialism they only last for 14 years then after that they are in the public domain socialism is complete control IE copyrights and with they way they work in the US they last about 100 years gaining complete control takes time it took 3 different bills under 3 different congresses to gain that much control Obama might break the record though he already controls education the auto industry and health care just need media and we are screwed well they are pushing for " supposed " net neutrality and Obama appointed 6 MPAA/RIAA lawyers to the FCC

    16. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      However, CDMA EVDO was a much smoother and faster rollout, lower handset power consumption than UMTS (IIRC,) and coverage in rural areas tends to be better with CDMA, in any country that provides both CDMA and GSM.

      And, the selection of phones and consumer freedom don't really exist on US GSM carriers, either.

    17. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by twidarkling · · Score: 1

      copyrights and with they way they work in the US they last about 100 years
      gaining complete control takes time it took 3 different bills under 3 different congresses to gain that much control

      I suggest you look up "Mickey Mouse Laws." Copyright is basically extended every time that Mickey Mouse is about to become Public Domain. It has nothing to do with "taking 3 bills under 3 congresses."

      --
      Canada: The US's more awesome sibling.
    18. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Yvanhoe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We could use the Washington criterion : an industry-recognized standard is anything that generates enough money to be lobbied as such. There are things that are much loosely define in the law

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    19. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH who cares ....

      Do what a friend of mine did. Invest in patents and submarine patent holders and make a fortune doing nothing.

      If you can't beat' em join them, I guess. He now lives out of the US... The irony is pathetic.

      The rest of us might as well become slaves of industry for 'ideas' than real 'products'.

      The US and all those who harbor these patent holders really are the losers...

    20. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by angelwolf71885 · · Score: 0

      i prefer this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_Term_Extension_Act the major ones were in 1976 1998 and the DMCA ( 2000? ) ( napster ? ) 3 different bills 3 different congresses

    21. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by tambo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      ...any patent infringement claims against H.264 must be made known within 6 months of the passage of this law.

      I don't think that's what the OP means. Here's what he wrote:

      any patents that contribute to an industry-recognized standard were unenforceable in the application of that standard.

      I think he means that any patents contributed to an industry standard consortium (like the WiFi Alliance) can't be enforceable. You're suggesting something about patents not contributed to the standards body being enforced against implementations of the technology that are authorized by the standards body. Or something.

      Honestly, I'm not entirely sure what either of you mean, or why. And IAAL - in fact, I practice in this area every day.

      Is this about making sure that technologies issuing from the standards body are freely available for use by anyone? That's the whole point of the patents owned by the body - to ensure that implementations follow the guidelines of the standards body (particularly about compatibility.) So you're lobbying to allow people to implement standardized technologies in non-compatible ways - i.e., in favor of "embrace, extend, extinguish?" I don't think anyone wants that.

      Or maybe you're arguing that if a company has technology and patents verging on the subject matter of an industry standard - e.g., a technology competing with WiFi - but chooses to keep it proprietary, then the company can't assert its patents against implementations issuing from the standards body. That's also a bad idea - should we really force the entire industry onto one standard? Doesn't that deter the advancement of technology through the development of alternative standards that might be better? Bluetooth was first conceived as a potential competitor for WiFi, but it has its own niche and is widely implemented for headsets and such. Under this type of rule change, Bluetooth would have been scrapped as soon as WiFi took hold.

      As an aside - the "submarine patents" cited by the author of this post haven't existed for decades, because (1) the patent term calculation was changed to be measured not from the date of issue, but from the date of filing, and (2) most patent applications are published at 18 months.

      This is a complex field. It's easy to get confused. But the field suffers from a wide range of folks who don't understand it, and yet still want to "fix" it. Hence, this post, and many like it on Slashdot and elsewhere.

      --
      Computer over. Virus = very yes.
    22. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      Exactly, and who will develop these technologies and put millions in to them if they can't get it back and/or profit from it?

      The won't necessarily get nothing back. Making the patent available for all does not have to mean that the creators are not compensated. You could use something like eminent domain. Once the standard is proposed, patent holders get a fixed period of time to notify people that their patents cover part of the standard. Afterwards, the standards body buys the patents outright for some independently determined fee. No other undisclosed patents may be enforced against implementations of the standard.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    23. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Draek · · Score: 1

      Exactly, and who will develop these technologies and put millions in to them if they can't get it back and/or profit from it?

      Corporations that don't push for their technologies to become part of international standards.

      To make an analogy, you're still free to write and sell Windows, you just can't push it to become part of POSIX unless you drop all your patents over it. Sounds fair to me.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    24. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by zippthorne · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ironically, CDMA is the technically better standard, since GSM under the hood (at the time) was actually TDMA, a modulation/channel sharing technique known to have significant sideband emission due to the frequent switching. (also CDMA tends to fail gracefully, by steadily increasing the error rate as the channel becomes fuller, rather than simply dropping calls.)

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    25. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      First, trying to enact a vague law that blanket invalidates a specific set of already-granted patents would pretty obviously be declared unconstitutional (not that it would ever pass anyway).

      And more importantly - it's taken decades to try to get patent law even somewhat aligned internationally. Legislation of a single country isn't going to do any good, it would have to be done through dozens of laws plus even more painful international treaties...

    26. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by TrancePhreak · · Score: 1

      And, the selection of phones and consumer freedom don't really exist on US GSM carriers, either.

      I think it exists with T-Mobile. They sell locked phones, but will unlock them after 90 days. You are also welcome to bring your own phones. They don't charge for tether, either.

      --

      -]Phreak Out[-
    27. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by skine · · Score: 1

      There are some things that ride the line between evil and annoying.

      SUCH AS CAPS LOCK.

      omg i jst tryed to pots n i wuz tld i wuz to mny cap its lke yeling soi mad it shrtr

    28. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by GlassHeart · · Score: 1

      CDMA is only the better standard if the same geographic area didn't have to be covered with GSM as well. As it is, we're trying to cover the US with two incompatible standards, a horrible waste of precious spectrum and money.

    29. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Wildclaw · · Score: 1

      And you're conveniently ignoring the fact that patents are socialism.

      This is quite an ignorant claim. The whole idea of socialism is that private ownership should be minimized in favor of public/shared ownership. Patents are a mechanism that puts something into the ownership of a private interest. It may be many things, but it is in no way socialism or socialist policy.

      That is unless you are using a Fox News style definition of Socialism, which seems to be "Anything that we think is bad is Socialism. And if we think it is really bad it is Communism".

      No, patents is just a basic capitalist idea (note: I didn't say free market). Creating a new type of capital that can be owned and traded.

    30. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      By having GSM as the only alternative the competition was a lot better since the customers weren't locked to the same carrier in the same way as they were in the US, and the GSM system uses the SIM cards which makes it easy for a user to switch terminal without problem. Even temporary terminal switch is no problem in the GSM system.

      Unfortunately the situation in the US was to lock the customers to one telecom operator and make roaming hard for visitors from elsewhere by using different frequencies for the GSM networks that are available. These days most terminals are quad band to resolve that inconvenience.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    31. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by AnotherUsername · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Learn how to use punctuation. If you want anyone to take notice of what you have to say in a meaningful way, you must learn to use punctuation. There are no commas, apostrophes, or periods anywhere in your paragraph, although there are quotation marks for your expressed sarcasm.

      The fact that you are complaining about Obama shows that you are likely American. The fact that you do not seem to understand basic grammar is embarrassing. Perhaps before you try to enact sweeping change via Internet message boards, you should learn how to communicate properly.

      --
      I don't like Linux. This doesn't make me a troll.
    32. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by ewanm89 · · Score: 1

      not to mention, I can use the same phone anywhere in europe (and majority of the world). Same can't be said about the US.

    33. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1
      I agree wholeheartedly with WrongSizeGlass. This is just plain a BAD idea.

      any patents that contribute to an industry-recognized standard were unenforceable in the application of that standard

      What's to stop an "industry" from forming a "standard" around any patent they want? That is not a solution. It is a recipe for mayhem and disaster.

      Further, if some "industry" wants to form a "standard" based on somebody's patent, then they can damned well pay royalties on the patent where appropriate. THAT'S WHAT PATENTS ARE FOR. To promote innovation by protecting inventions for a limited time. Since when did "industry" gain the right -- or ability -- to bypass the patent office whenever it wants?

      The problem here is that regardless of which party was at fault, or (more likely) both, H.264 should never have become a "standard" in the first place. And it should never have been adopted by so many other companies even AFTER it was well-known that it was proprietary. That's just a bunch of companies screwing themselves (and their customers). It has nothing to do with patents. And it doesn't give them the right to pass a law in order to attempt to bypass their profound screwup.

      If you don't want standards that are proprietary and cost money, then don't make them in the first place. This is a pretty straightforward concept.

      As far as the patent office is concerned, it's problem is that it need to go back to the old, stable way of doing things that was workable and did work. And a big part of that is enforcing their own existing rules and standards. And: with few if any exceptions, all software patents should be thrown out the window, stomped on, and burned.

    34. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by cheezegeezer · · Score: 0



      <quote><p>H264 is far away from the theoretically best compression. So we just need one socialist to prove that they can do more, to make something that beats H264, and give it away for free.</p></quote>

      <p>That's not how it works. 99% of progress is evolution, not revolution. A codec that beats H264 will inevitably share at least some characteristics with H264, and if those characteristics are patented -- even if the designer of the new codec has never even heard of H264 -- they're not allowed to distribute it in the US. (And you're conveniently ignoring the fact that patents are socialism.)</p></quote>

      That only holds true if you continue to offer recognition of the existance of these patents if you no longer recognise them then no problem ,,,, H264 is no longer covered by any patents there sorted now get writing the superiour free and OPEN replacement

      --
      What the F*** is Kharma i do got teeth i don't got no kharma
    35. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by erice · · Score: 1

      In most areas, we have multiple CDMA and GSM carriers, each with their own towers and spectrum. Even though roaming is often possible, the fees are usually prohibitive if the capability isn't blocked outright. Universal GSM would just mean more options technically available but not actually used.

    36. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go go gadget LTE! Why do you think *EVERYONE* went for LTE? The carriers want 1 standard. They want global roaming. Even the biggest CDMA guy on the planet verizon wireless is going LTE.

      The only reason GSM was a 'standard' was because Nokia and Siemens made sure of it by grabbing their local legislatures and putting it into law. Vodaphone then put it everywhere except the US (but that was because of other agreements).

      As the saying goes when you cant innovate legislate when you cant legislate litigate. Hence the big Q suing Erickson back in the day and basically giving it away to TI (as they failed to get it put into law). They made sure they got their slice of the pie. Or as everyone in the industry calls it the qualcomm tax.

      Also spectrum allocation has little to do with it, as the standards can coexist quite well as they are on different bands. Designed that way up front. You may be under the mistaken impression that AT&T doesnt have the spectrum to handle the iPhone. Actually they have TONS of spectrum (probably more than they actually use). Their problems are at the towers themselves. They built too little bandwidth to the towers to handle it. A T1 doesnt cut it when you have 4-5 iPhone users snorking it all up (doesnt take much). Then things get dropped and flakey. It is why in europe the iPhone is doing 'ok'. The carriers there had a freeking clue as to how much BW it was going to take and planned ahead for it (plus they were swimming in cash from overcharging everyone for years). AT&T has been nickle and diming their network for 10+ years and it is starting to show big time.

      Spectral efficiency doesnt matter a damn if you build a crap network to back it up.

      Plus everyone gave up GSM years ago. It is *ALL* some sort of CDMA these days or variations of it. Even LTE and HSPDA/EDGE is a variation of it. It just is that much better. Its why you didnt see the big Q squawk too much when its 'standard' 'died'.

    37. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by joocemann · · Score: 1

      I agree.

      I'm no champion of the free market, etc, but one thing I do know is that if you work hard at something and become popular -- it might really bother you for someone to then simply take it all away.

      As a people, if we want a high quality 'standard' and we have expectations of open-use -- we should be paying for it with our tax dollars.

      It is underhanded to have such a society where we would live/thrive by capital gains, urge people to be innovative so as to do so, and then legislatively acquire ALL of what they have worked for simply because most people want to use it.

      That's wrong.

      If we're gonna change everything about how we interact, I could see this being something plausible... But only in a society where such things would be expected/normal and accepted. But we aren't that way... We are all competing and 'innovating' to succeed...

    38. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by dudpixel · · Score: 1

      But... but... capitalism?! Capitalism is evil!!

      So is Boldism

      And Italicism isn't? sheesh...double standards right there.

      --
      This seemed like a reasonable sig at the time.
    39. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Midnight+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the detailed reply, tambo. You are quite right that I am not a lawyer and thus make simple, repeated mistakes in this area. You pointed out a confusing point I had and the more I stew on it, the more I'm convincing myself that this is a complete dead end. It's starting to feel like a Game Theory model is going to have to be built in order to make any significant improvements to the system.

      I really like your observation that the first standard established becomes the de facto standard as it would be the only one with any real patent protection according to my plan. The process of even trying to develop the next generation technology would have to stand on the shoulders of the previous work, but since it wouldn't be part of a standard yet, the developers could be easily sued.

      As for submarine patents, thanks for calling me out on that. It might have helped if I had run a Google on it before I posted that phrase.

      Can you conceive of a plan, then, by which RAND can force non-members to at least identify their patents within a short, finite time span or forfeit most forms of redress? Ideally, a patent search would find relevant conflicts, but I'm starting to get the idea that more and more generic, broad patents are being issued with too much being left to interpretation.

      I guess what I kind of want is patent owners to be required to be more involved in nearby issues like the involvement required for trademarks. I'm looking to change the balance of things since the issuing rules don't appear to be up for change any time soon in the U.S. And that's what everybody on Slashdot complains about the most.

      Thanks again!

    40. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who is "congress"? We are talking about a world wide standard, not just one country.

    41. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      >First, trying to enact a vague law that blanket invalidates a specific set of already-granted patents would pretty obviously be declared unconstitutional (not that it would ever pass anyway).

      It's not unconstitutional. The same constitution that provides for patents also provides for eminent domain, and government use of patents without a license has been held to be a taking under eminent domain. This may entail compensation, but it's not unconstitutional.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    42. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, what happens when the USPTO take 8 years to prosecute my standards essential patent? It's not a patent until It's issued, and it may not issue before your 6 month window closes.

    43. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by WNight · · Score: 1

      I don't think patents fit on the socialism to capitalism axis, they're really dictatorial. The government declares absolute ownership of something and parcels it out to cronies.

      Capitalism is how we trade those rights, but patents would still exist even if they were just given out to nobility for arbitrary reasons.

      If there's one word for patents, it's censorship.

    44. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Eminent domain is not unconstitutional, of course. But (quoting *your* link) it applies only "when an invention is used by or manufactured for the United States." And in any case, it just says the government can't "infringe", not that it doesn't have to pay for the license. And even so, it has no bearing on companies selling goods to individuals.

      Before you comment, read the OP next time - you're not even talking about the relevant point. His proposal was that a law be passed invalidating the patent for EVERYONE (which I assume also means the govt doesn't have to compensate). Without that compensation, it's unconstitutional, since it violates the 5th Amendment.

      (And after all this, I'm not saying his proposal wouldn't actually be a good thing, as long as companies were given a chance to state their patent claims upfront. I'm just saying that it's not remotely possible and would probably be laughed out of Congress and the Supreme Court...

    45. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by nyet · · Score: 1

      That's the whole point of the patents owned by the body - to ensure that implementations follow the guidelines of the standards body (particularly about compatibility.)

      Bull. That was NEVER the point to patenting any parts of a standard. I don't know of any standards that are NOT being broken because of the threat of a patent lawsuit. I can't think of a single one. The point to adhering to a standard is so you have a checkbox on your datasheet. If it doesn't adhere, your customers complain, and they go to a different vendor.

      You claim this is your field, but your assertion truly baffles (and enrages) me, unless you are trying to spin patents as "good" to people who watch patent games ruin standards efforts daily.

    46. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Can We Legislate Past the H.264 Debate?

      No.

      In fact, the US can legislate past the H.264 debate. You only need to dismiss software patents (all of them). But the proposed situation can't work.

    47. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can We Legislate Past the H.264 Debate?

      No.

      I would say yes. Eliminate all software patents.

    48. Re:What's an "industry-recognized standard"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THIS.

      Seriously, I stopped reading after the first line, when it became pretty obvious that this person has no idea how to write a proper sentence.

  2. Uh huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That deprives the patent holders of at least some of the right to profit from their patent, which means that you get into the legal minefield of expropriation and just compensation.

    1. Re:Uh huh by hedwards · · Score: 2, Insightful

      No it doesn't. They could choose to withhold permission for it being included in the standard. Which is really the point, a lot of these formats would never have become standard if they had been forced to pay royalties on it from the get go. GIF and JPEG for instance ended up having issues, not to mention somethings with submarine patents where the corporation holding the patents lies about it.

      The problem is the abuse of questionable patents that aren't disclosed or utilized by the entity holding them then holding the world hostage after the standard takes off. All standards should be unencumbered and free to use. You want to be paid? Fine, just do it with something that isn't a standard.

    2. Re:Uh huh by Goaway · · Score: 2, Insightful

      a lot of these formats would never have become standard if they had been forced to pay royalties on it from the get go.

      Pretty much all the places where h.264 is used, it had to be paid for from the start, and it was still chose, because it is very good.

    3. Re:Uh huh by Svartalf · · Score: 4, Informative

      Ahh... But you don't know all the places that it requires LICENSING.

      Use it to produce a home movie, you're okay.
      Use it to produce a indie movie, even with "pro" grade equipment and you're not.
      Use it to produce a demo reel for your work, and you're not.

      Only parts of the generation or playback licensing have been paid for- you're on the hook for everything else and they'll enforce if you hit a certain threshold (about $100k of revenue of any kind generated from it...). They'll come mug you for money at that point and it's NOT cheap.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    4. Re:Uh huh by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      That deprives the patent holders of at least some of the right to profit from their patent, which means that you get into the legal minefield of expropriation and just compensation.

      While the popular term for copyrights and patents ("intellectual property") really muddies the waters, they are not property rights. In fact, the Constitution specifies that they must be expropriated, not just that they may be. The Constitution states that copyright and patent terms must be for a "limited time", and that they are solely to "promote the progress of Science and the Useful Arts". They are not a property right intended for the individual, they are intended to serve a societal good and to be limited in duration. If the greatest benefit to science and art would be to remove all patents and copyrights, the Constitution's clear statement of their only legitimate purpose would not only allow but demand that we do so.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    5. Re:Uh huh by Bengie · · Score: 1

      it should be more along the line of "if you offer a free version of something and it becomes industry standard, you lose your rights to it".

      It gets rid of this bait-and-switch bullshit where they make a codec free/easy and it becomes standard then they decide to charge for it once it everyone NEEDS it.

    6. Re:Uh huh by Arker · · Score: 4, Informative

      No, actually it doesnt.

      Patents are not real property. They are monopoly privileges *created* by the state, and in fact they represent "expropriation" to begin with. Understanding this fact is critical.

      The proposal in this article is backwards for exactly that reason. We have a problem created by state interference in the economy, and rather than propose that the state simply *quit creating the problem* we propose even more interference.

      Entirely backwards. The solution here is the opposite of the proposal. Simply abolish patents instead.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    7. Re:Uh huh by joebagodonuts · · Score: 1

      Thank you. The idea they are entitled for money for a creative product I make using their codec - effectively without other options in the market. Just try to buy a camera without it - is the opposite of freedom. Market freedom or personal freedom.

      This market is NOT open, and there is a concerted effort to make it that way and keep it that way. Lots of patent-saber rattling and veiled threats. The folks who are behind this are the same people who will lie to you and tell you " you have options" and "the market is free". They have a powerful pulpit to spread their message.

      Can we legislate? I dunno. I think that requires a certain amount of political will, and I don't know that we're there yet. I'd like to think it's in our interest to do so. Possibly be a benefit to the business as well. We're more competitive when we are forced to compete, rather than having a few players tightly control things. But, then you are one of the few controllers, your perspective changes.

      --
      "Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
    8. Re:Uh huh by erroneus · · Score: 1

      That speaks much truth. Get rid of software patents and you have "legislated past the problem." Or more accurately, you have "delegislated past the problem."

    9. Re:Uh huh by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 4, Informative

      Use it to produce a home movie, you're okay.

      Correct.

      Use it to produce a indie movie, even with "pro" grade equipment and you're not.

      Producing the movie does not require a license. Distributing the movie for pay would require a license.

      Use it to produce a demo reel for your work, and you're not.

      Producing with H.264 does not require paying a license fee. Demo reels generally are not distributed for pay or in quantities large enough to meet the thresholds for which licensing fees kick in.

      Engadget had a good article that dealt with much of the H.24 licensing FUD that is going around.

    10. Re:Uh huh by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1

      They could choose to withhold permission for it being included in the standard.

      That wouldn't work. For instance, company A develops a new drug for boneitis. They patent it. They aren't even interested in licensing it. However, the other drug companies all start manufacturing it anyway, without licenses. Company A sues them.

      They point out that since the whole industry is making this drug, it is an industry standard, and the patents cannot be enforced according to the proposed stupid law.

      Or is the law only meant to apply to standards that are formally develped by an industry group, as opposed to de facto industry standards? If so, company A is still out of luck. The other companies get together and form the Boneitis Treatment Standardization Committee, and approve a variant of A's drug as the standard treatment. Now it's a de jure, not just de facto industry standard, and the stupid law applies.

      Or does it only apply when the standardization involves the whole industry? In that case, it would not apply to H.264 because not everyone in the industry participated in the standardizaion.

      The net effect of the proposed law is to get rid of patents, except in the case where only the patent holder is interested in using the invention (e.g., there is some other factor besides the patent that stops others from using the invention), or there are sufficient alternative ways to accomplish what the patent covers that no one needs to license it. In both of these cases, there is no point in getting th patent in the first place.

      If we want to get rid of patents, the legislature has the power to do so. The Constitution allows a patent system. It does not mandate a patent system. The proposed law is simply brain dead.

    11. Re:Uh huh by jx100 · · Score: 1

      Considering the forces that make H.264 the dominant codec for just about any video media created digitally, I'd call this more than a trivial issue. The level of control they desire gives them power over much of our new media. The sheer potential size of the issue is why it should become the concern of the government. ..and yes, governments generally do have the freedom to control what other people offer to sell to you. They're generally called consumer protection laws.

    12. Re:Uh huh by wjsteele · · Score: 1

      The Constitution allows a patent system. It does not mandate a patent system.

      But, it does grant the right for an invention to be exclusively owned by the inventor for a period of time. You might not call that a patent, but it still has the same effect. I can guarantee that any law that takes that right away, like the proposed one, will not pass Constitutional muster.

      Bill

      --
      It's my Sig and you can't have it. Mine! All Mine!
    13. Re:Uh huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      One thing I'd like to see (besides the abolition of software patents altogether) is being able to demand of a patent holder that they tell you whether your product infringes on their patents.
      That way, for instance the Linux foundation could demand of Microsoft, or the Xiph.org foundation could demand of the MPEG licencing consortium, that they give a list of patents they infringe on, and they'd get a reasonable time (say, a year) to respond.
      That would go some way towards both alleviating the submarine patent problem, and stopping FUD tactics with vague threats about possibly suing in the future if a competitor gains traction.

    14. Re:Uh huh by mini+me · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Distributing the movie for pay would require a license.

      As I understand the license, distributing the movie for free, but having the video hosting provider (such as Youtube) inject ads into your movie, requires that both you and the provider have a license.

    15. Re:Uh huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No such right is granted in the constitution; instead, rather, congress is empowered with the capability.

      Article I, section 8:'The Congress shall have power ... To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries;' ... just like they are empowered to declare war, grant letters of marque and reprisal, etc.

      These things do not represent rights-- these are congressional powers and congress is free to not exercise them.

    16. Re:Uh huh by BitZtream · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Use it to produce a indie movie, even with "pro" grade equipment and you're not.

      By the time they care about your indie movie, you've made enough money that their fee is irrelevant.

      Use it to produce a demo reel for your work, and you're not.

      You are utterly and completely WRONG, unless you think uploading a video to youtube for the world to see is 'producing a demo reel for your work'. Of course Google already pays the fee and since they are actually the distributer, they are the responsible party.

      Only parts of the generation or playback licensing have been paid for- you're on the hook for everything else and they'll enforce if you hit a certain threshold (about $100k of revenue of any kind generated from it...). They'll come mug you for money at that point and it's NOT cheap.

      So basically, if you use it to dick around with your own personal stuff, they don't care ... but if you start marking a substantial amount of money they expect to get compensated for their work.

      As for the price ...

      Under the terms of the agreement, you have two options: a one-time payment of $2,500 “per AVC transmission encoder” or an annual fee starting at “$2,500 per calendar year per Broadcast Markets of at least 100,000 but no more than 499,999 television households, $5,000 per calendar year per Broadcast Market which includes at least 500,000 but no more than 999,999 television households, and $10,000 per calendar year per Broadcast Market which includes at 1,000,000 or more television households.”

      So basically they want 2.5 centsfor each copy of a work you distribute using h264 AFTER 100k copies (Not $100k dollars by the way, so again, you don't know what you're talking about) ... Just how fucking cheap do you want it to be? 2.5 fucking cents dude ... get the fuck over it. At 1 million copies they want 1 cent.

      Funny how people here will get all fucking uppity if someone doesn't like GPL or doesn't abide by GPL because they aren't contributing back ... and those same people will rant and rave that they have to give back to someone else in the form of money.

      Next time do a brief google search before you start talking about shit you don't know about.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    17. Re:Uh huh by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Since the Constitutional article also not only allows but requires that these rights be for "limited times", it is not creating a property right. It is allowing certain laws, only insofar as they advance a societal good ("to promote the progress of science and the useful arts"). Since the Constitution requires expropriation and is framing the issue as a societal, not individual, right, there is no property right here. If science and the arts would be best served by eliminating or shortening copyright and patent terms or narrowing their scope, the Constitution does not just allow this to be done-it requires it.

      Look at the very different way in which the Constitution treats property rights, and you will quickly realize that copyrights and patents were never intended to be viewed as property.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    18. Re:Uh huh by Rocketship+Underpant · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear! Patents are a problem created by government legislation, and the best solution is going to be to repeal that legislation. Stop giving corporations monopolies on the use of mathematical algorithms.

      --
      He who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.
    19. Re:Uh huh by nabsltd · · Score: 1

      Use it to produce a indie movie, even with "pro" grade equipment and you're not.

      By the time they care about your indie movie, you've made enough money that their fee is irrelevant.

      Just because you can afford to pay doesn't mean it's correct.

      What if laser printers started coming with the same kind of "license", and after you use a MoneyGrab® printer to print the script for Avatar, the printer company comes after you for a few million dollars in royalties? That would be easily solved by using a different printer, but the problem with H.264 is that it is almost completely impossible not to use a device/software somewhere in the production chain that allows the license to kick in.

      If this sort of license term was part of the EULA for Windows (i.e., if you produce anything where the Windows OS is involved in the production chain, you owe royalties), it would be shot down in courts in about 30 seconds, since the end user really doesn't have a choice. The MPEG-LA is just as much a monopoly as Microsoft, yet governments aren't up in arms about it.

    20. Re:Uh huh by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      Actually it sounds to me like that is exactly what this proposal is proposing, albiet to only a limited extent. It's saying "government created this problem" by allowing these kinds of patents - where "allowing these kinds of patents" translates into actual physical action on the part of the government as "deciding in favor of the patent-holders in lawsuits and using the force of law (e.g. men with guns, when it comes down to it) to uphold those decisions". Then it's saying that it's doubtful that the industry itself can solve this problem that government created, and suggesting that the solution be to pronounce patents in such standards invalid, which translates into actual physical action on the part of the government as "no longer deciding in favor of the patent-holders in lawsuits", with the subsequent implication of no longer having the threat of men with guns coming down on you if you use the techniques thus patented in an implication of such standards.

      Basically, he's saying that, within the limited domain of "industry standards" (however that's defined), patents should be effectively abolished, by not being enforced.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    21. Re:Uh huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The level of control they desire gives them power over much of our new media.

      In which ways exactly? "I'm too cheap to pay for something they're selling," isn't limiting your freedom. Nowhere does it say you're entitled to other people's stuff to make your voice heard. If you don't like it, use some other form of media. It's not like there's a shortage of media types.

      They're generally called consumer protection laws.

      Right. And they're a form of "Big Brother". Why does everybody forget Big Brother is there to protect them?

    22. Re:Uh huh by lonecrow · · Score: 1

      Sorry but all property is created by the state (by rule of law actualy). Without rule of law there is no property only possessions.

    23. Re:Uh huh by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, real property rights are also privileges created by the state, or, in the absence of a state, by force.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    24. Re:Uh huh by badkarmadayaccount · · Score: 1

      Better idea - make an exception for copyleft FLOSS licensed software. Copyleft, to make sure everybody pays their fair share - in code. If FLOSS, then it is automatically for the good of all society, so it is something reasonable that a government can mandate.

      --
      I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.
  3. While we're at it by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Can we say that any property rights - intellectual or otherwise - for the ingredients of Cheetos, ramen and anime are unenforceable. Then I we can all watch free anime DVDs and eat Cheetos and ramen. Also the telco should give me unlimited download bandwidth and stores that deliver ramen and Cheetos should be prevented from charging.

    --
    echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    1. Re:While we're at it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's not really a lot of protected "intellectual property" behind ramen and cheese-puffs to begin with, honestly.

    2. Re:While we're at it by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Well, until you come up with a replicator, traditional property rights will have to remain. You simply cannot get any ramen without taking it away from someone else (unless you produce it yourself, but then the same applies to the stuff out of which you make ramen).

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    3. Re:While we're at it by Draek · · Score: 1

      And even that would be more reasonable than allowing people to "own" Mathematics.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    4. Re:While we're at it by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      If I get my IP from someone else without paying, why should they continue to release it?

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  4. Have you really thought this all the way through? by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 0

    Are there non-computer industries where this would be fatal?

    Would the computer industry be ruined by such a sweeping move to remove IP protection from companies?

    You think that there's a problem with standards now? What the hell do you expect to happen when companies are forced to give up their IP if they ever join a consortium?

  5. No. Just pay up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The world has moved on. People are already playing their x264 videos and sharing their mkvs. This IS the standard for video. My linux-based sammy TV plays the files just fine.

    If you want Linux to play catch-up and odd-man-out yet again and wining about stuff that end-users will never care about like licensing, go on. The world doesn't care about your weirdo software religion and never will. This proposal requires the entire world to change to work. I wouldn't hold my breath for it.

    1. Re:No. Just pay up by LingNoi · · Score: 2, Informative

      Indeed, Linux and Ubuntu linked in the summary have had H.264 support for years. It's a no brainer for them to pay a license for their OEM distributors to be able to sleep at night. I don't really see that as a "debate" though.

      With regards to codecs like Theora I've tried a couple of times to get encode HD video in it but it always comes out blurry. I've seen videos like the HD Theora video on the big buck bunny website so I know it's possible however there doesn't seem to be much information out there on the correct settings. For example how would one convert a clear h.264 HD video to Theora and have it come out with the same quality.

    2. Re:No. Just pay up by peragrin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but you then can't redistribute said videos.

      You buy an HD camera. it records in h.264 The moment you upload it tot he web you are supposed to buy another license for that video. The moment you share that video at your friends house on their TV. You need another license. what's that, you want to transfer that video onto a DVD, that's two more license violations.

      I wish people would stop and read more about the licensing issues of H.264 They are currently generous, but MPEG-LA can literally revoke all licenses and make everyone pay fora separate license to create,view, edits, or distributes H.264 video.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    3. Re:No. Just pay up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obeying the law isn't a "weirdo religion".

    4. Re:No. Just pay up by LingNoi · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Your HD camera that records in h.264 has a license, the TV you have that plays h264 has a separate license, the video you upload to the web isn't your problem unless you own the site and over 150,000 people view it in which case you're correct and need to pay for a license however I doubt that case is valid for anyone apart from video sharing websites.

      I find it humorous that you respond with license FUD to my open invitation to educate me on how I can make Theora work as good as H.264. Should I interpret your response to mean it simply can not perform as well as h264?

    5. Re:No. Just pay up by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      End users do not care about licensing costs because it has always been hidden from them. They buy a computer, thinking that the price is for the hardware itself, never being informed that they are also paying for various copyright and patent licenses. If consumers were able to see what they are really paying for, and were presented with real choices (as opposed to the current, "Well, you can have this one low end system with Ubuntu preloaded, or any of these 20 high end systems with Windows"), I think we would see a much different picture.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    6. Re:No. Just pay up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't *transcode* and expext to get the same results as if you *encode*. It's not a limitation of any particular codec. It's just information theory.

    7. Re:No. Just pay up by Svartalf · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, you're not licensed to do it even BEFORE the 150k people viewing it- that's just the threshold at which they have chosen to ENFORCE their IP rights. You technically still need a license for it (Check the licensing details on your gear, even the pro-grade stuff will tell you that you need a separate license for professional uses of the gear. They're not kidding.).

      And stating that it's relevant to video sharing sites- they're an enabler, but YOU are the one on the hook, not they (because there's yet another license THEY have to have to do what they're doing...) and you're still needing that license in addition to the one they're paying.

      As for Theora being better than h.264... No, you'd be right about that. It's on a rough par with MPEG4- VP8's closer to what you're looking for and if rumor's right Theora 2 will be in that space. Having said that, I'd prefer a web (and others...) standard to be something that's utterly unencumbered. All it'd take is for one player to play grab-em like Unisys did with LZW and you owe money all over the place. It could just as easily as not happen with h.264.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    8. Re:No. Just pay up by LetterRip · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You buy an HD camera. it records in h.264 The moment you upload it tot he web you are supposed to buy another license for that video. The moment you share that video at your friends house on their TV. You need another license. what's that, you want to transfer that video onto a DVD, that's two more license violations.

      I wish people would stop and read more about the licensing issues of H.264 They are currently generous, but MPEG-LA can literally revoke all licenses and make everyone pay fora separate license to create,view, edits, or distributes H.264 video.

      I've always been curious about this. The patent is obviously required for the creation of the encoding and decoding software. But how can distribution of an already encoded video be in violation of the patent? It doesn't implement the patent, only the results of using the patent. This really needs to be something that the legal basis of needs to be challenged.

    9. Re:No. Just pay up by Sancho · · Score: 4, Informative

      Exactly. It's like creating furniture with a SawStop table saw and the patent holders expecting to get a cut of everything you make with it.

      You should buy the right to use the patented technology, and that should be the end of it.

    10. Re:No. Just pay up by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      I've always been curious about this. The patent is obviously required for the creation of the encoding and decoding software. But how can distribution of an already encoded video be in violation of the patent? It doesn't implement the patent, only the results of using the patent. This really needs to be something that the legal basis of needs to be challenged.

      Well that's the way patent law works. You have a license to do "A", but not "B". If you want to use our property to do "B", you need new permission to do that.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    11. Re:No. Just pay up by joebagodonuts · · Score: 1

      But why should they be entitled to more money if "..over 150,000 people view it in ..."? Other than the license says so? That's the piece of this that really baffles me. Oh, I understand why they would license that way. More money for them. But why should I think that's OK?

      --
      "Give a woman two glasses of wine and some pad thai, and they'll agree to just about anything." the Sports Guy
    12. Re:No. Just pay up by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Why the fuck not? He isn't asking to make the video better, he is simply asking to take the information in video A, place it into video B, and not have it look like it was shat upon. I've done it with WMV to H.264, with DivX 5 to MP4, with QT to MP4, so WTF? I have to agree with the other poster the docs for Theora really suck, as there really isn't anything to tell you "I got bitrate A in format A so you need settings A+1 and bitrate A=2" for Theora.

      But I don't get how information that is digital is supposed to "rot" or somehow degrade simply because you are taking it from format A to B unless the settings in B are less than A. Care to explain and back it up with citation?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    13. Re:No. Just pay up by VertigoAce · · Score: 2, Informative

      Unless format B is lossless, you will degrade the quality when transcoding from format A to format B. By definition, a lossy encoding will result in the loss of some information from the source video. I haven't experimented with this, but I would guess that codecs that are similar to each other (i.e., both lose similar information) would result in less degradation with an output at roughly the same bitrate. If the codec is completely different (loses information unrelated to the information that the first codec discarded), I would imagine you would need to increase the bitrate closer to the point of being lossless in order to maintain the quality.

    14. Re:No. Just pay up by d34dluk3 · · Score: 1

      As a representative of SawStop, I would like to make you aware that by your above post, you have incurred $56.30 in trademark fees. Please forward at your earliest convenience.

    15. Re:No. Just pay up by BitZtream · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Wrong. Nice FUD there buddy.

      The license for h264 distribution is free until you hit 100k copies, at which point they want 2.5 cents or less per copy you distribute. You need to pay per distributed copy, so yes a DVD and a TV broadcast would count as two (or really the broadcast depends on number of views so in your case, I doubt you'd have to worry about that aspect)

      Please to be getting a clue about the subject.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    16. Re:No. Just pay up by peragrin · · Score: 1

      No the current license says that.

      In Jan MPEG-LA announced they weren't going to change the license until 2016. However they aren't legally bound to wait that long. They can start claiming licenses and change existing licenses whenever they want.

      The only reason they haven't yet is because options exist. It is also why the recent batch of FUD against Theora. They are trying to sway those who might go OGG to enable higher fees later for themselves.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    17. Re:No. Just pay up by Pentium100 · · Score: 2, Informative

      But I don't get how information that is digital is supposed to "rot" or somehow degrade simply because you are taking it from format A to B unless the settings in B are less than A. Care to explain and back it up with citation?

      I can explain it. While digital information can be copied as many times as you want and still be identical to the original, the same is not true about some transcoding.

      There are two compression types - lossy and lossless.

      Lossless compression (zip, rar, flac, lagarith) compresses the original data so as to remove redundancies, but still have all of the information, for example, you can compress "AAAAAAAAAA" into "10A" and save 7 bytes, but still be able to expand back into the original form. However, this type of compression does not achieve high ratios.

      Lossy compression throws some of the original data out. This is done to increase the compression ratio, but it is now impossible to expend back int othe original, some data will be missing. MP3 file sounds different than the original WAV, while a FLAC file sounds the same. This is because mp3 is lossy compression. However, mp3 file uses less space than flac file.

      Video uses a lot of data, RGB 1920x1080 video takes 5.9MB per frame and there are at least 24 frames per second, so uncompressed HD video takes ~142MB per second (SD 720x576 would be ~28MB/s). Lossless compression does not help here much, you need to use lossy compression. And all widely used video codecs are lossy, they throw out a lot of information to make the 1080p HD movie fit in a Bluray disc or ~11GB file. Or to make a SD movie fit in a DVD or even in a CD.

      Lossy codec creates artifacts, that is, details that are not in the original video and are just the product of the codec throwing out information. When you watch a low bitrate video that has a lot of motion you get blocks. Blocks are one type of artifact.

      Now, when you try to transcode, the first thing you do is decode from the original codec to uncompressed video (which can be passed straight to the other codec without storing it first). The encoder looks at the decoded video and again tries to throw out information to make the result fit in the specified space. This encoder has no way of telling which details in the video are real and which are just artifacts, therefore, it tries to encode all of them just as good. In the encoding process it produces its own artifacts and now you have a video that is of lower quality. A third generation video will be even lower quality.

      This is the same as with analog, where each generation has not only the noise and distortions of the medium that it is recorded on but also noise and distortions of all of the previous generations.

    18. Re:No. Just pay up by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Right, I know this,That wasn't the question, sorry if I made it unclear. Here is what I'm asking. Say you have a video encoded at 1500k H.264 and you want to go to Theora like the original GP was asking. Now why the fuck can't you encode at a higher bitrate like say 2000k, and not lose shit? As I posted earlier I've done this with other codec like H.26x and MP4, and while I'm sure that if you ran it through a microscope it wouldn't be a 100% perfect match, but looking at it with my eyes it sure as hell looks like I got 99.9996 or pretty damned close to that.

      So nobody is talking about smaller file sizes, or even perfect bitrate matches, because we all know that a 1500k H.264 will be a better quality than a 1500k Theora (although to my eyes 1500k DivX is pretty damned neck and neck) but if he goes higher, thus allowing for more information per second not less, shouldn't he be able to keep quality the same? Or at least get 99.996% or so like I have with MP4? Because the way I'm thinking it would allow for the full video PLUS any overhead of the transcoding process.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    19. Re:No. Just pay up by westlake · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Exactly. It's like creating furniture with a SawStop table saw and the patent holders expecting to get a cut of everything you make with it.
      You should buy the right to use the patented technology, and that should be the end of it.

      MPEG LA is only interested in the big green.

      2 cents a disk is chicken feed unless you are talking $1 million in sales.

      Your state of the art H.264 encoder is - for all practical purposes - free as in beer until you reach that level of success. Can you say the same for the SawStop?

    20. Re:No. Just pay up by evilviper · · Score: 2, Insightful

      how would one convert a clear h.264 HD video to Theora and have it come out with the same quality.

      It's 100% impossible to convert a video into a lossy format and not lose quality. When the video was converted to H.264, quality was lost. When you convert it, AGAIN, to Theora, you will get all the quality loss and artifacts from H.264, and also all the quality loss and artifacts from Theora.

      For "big buck bunny" in particular, you can download the lossless video yourself, and try converting that into Theora and H.264 and see how each turns out. Converting from H.264 to Theora is unfair, and the quality would likely be just as bad if you converted from Theora to H.264.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    21. Re:No. Just pay up by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      I really don't understand why this is. I'm not asking for better quality, I'm just asking for the same as the h264 quality.

      If my media player can play frame for frame high quality non-blury scenes why does the encoder turn out blury movies when I encode them in Theora? What's so impossible about taking the h264 frame for frame and turning out the same quality video in Theora?

    22. Re:No. Just pay up by evilviper · · Score: 1

      What's so impossible about taking the h264 frame for frame and turning out the same quality video in Theora?

      Lossy codecs selectively discard information, and H.264 and Theora are vastly different, so no chance of a special code to allow skipping some of the steps, and offering fast and/or lossless conversion from one format into the other. If you want exactly the same quality, you can use a LOSSLESS video codec like Huffyuv, but you'll find the file sizes are far larger than the input.

      Ever tried making a copy of a copy, of a copy, with an audio tape? Each generation adds on to the artifacts before it, and adds it's own. Advanced lossy codecs have the same issue, but much, much worse.

      If that doesn't explain it sufficiently for you, you'll just have to take my word on it, and take some time to learn the details of lossy video compression. I would recomend starting with http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/MPEG-1

      The version on WP also hasn't been too badly damaged yet.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    23. Re:No. Just pay up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only reason they haven't yet is because options exist. It is also why the recent batch of FUD against Theora. They are trying to sway those who might go OGG to enable higher fees later for themselves.

      You're not the first to claim this. Everyone who does so is an idiot, IMO.

      The MPEG-LA didn't jack up license fees on earlier MPEG standards which got widespread adoption like MPEG1, MPEG2, etc. The reasons why it did not have not changed.

      What you freetards probably never bother to understand is that MPEG-LA is in the business of administering patent pools consisting exclusively of patents owned by OTHER entities. Far as I know, MPEG-LA doesn't actually own a single patent covering H.264. There are hundreds of them, owned by dozens of different companies. MPEG-LA is merely the middleman they've all agreed to have administer the pool.

      Why pool? Because so many different companies hold patents essential to creating a modern high performance video codec. No single one of them can even come close to owning the whole thing. The companies in question also make their money selling hardware and/or content, not licensing patents. Codecs which are in wide use reduce or eliminate barriers to selling hardware and content to as many consumers as possible. By creating the pool and instructing the middleman (MPEG-LA) to make it easy and cheap to license, codec market fragmentation is avoided and everyone in the pool wins.

      And that's why MPEG-LA is very unlikely to go rogue and jack up the prices at a later date. The owners of the patents in the H.264 pool would be quite displeased, and ultimately, they hold the strings, not MPEG-LA.

    24. Re:No. Just pay up by vegiVamp · · Score: 1

      > MPEG-LA can literally revoke all licenses and make everyone pay fora separate license to create,view, edits, or distributes H.264 video.

      Cue the Next Big Thing.

      --
      What a depressingly stupid machine.
    25. Re:No. Just pay up by Dunega · · Score: 1

      ...and an extra $3.50 for the bad "get a cut" pun.

  6. Flame on, baby, flame on by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Is completely clueless trolling in the summary the new standard on /. now? What does the fact of a "standard" being "trademarked" have to do with patent issues? How do you compensate patent holders if you invalidate their patent ex post facto? What "mess the government created"? Holy cow, this summary is a new low. Besides, if the author of the summary explicitly states that "he is not stupid", well, we can pretty sure about his intellectual capacity.

    --
    Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    1. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really? This level of rubbish used to be the standard for Slashdot on a Sunday

    2. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Vellmont · · Score: 2, Insightful


      Is completely clueless trolling in the summary the new standard on /. now?

      It's not a summary, and it's not "trolling". The paragraph IS the article, and the links are merely poor background information. Though I do agree that there's no apparent connection between trademarks and patents.

      You might not agree with the article, and it's largely poorly written and poorly supported. But "trolling" isn't the same thing as a bad article. Honestly, when did "trolling" become just a poorly written article? If anything, I'd say directly attacking someones intellect is trolling.

      Given all that, I think the idea of legislating patents applied to industry standards is an interesting idea. It's likely problematic in many ways though. How do you stop people from trying to invalidate any patent by merely making it part of an "industry standard"? Can federal legislation even DO that kind of thing? (There are limits to what the federal government can do). Would it even matter, since standards such as HTML5 are international ones, not US only? Would such legislation have impacts on already existing trade agreements?

      The waters seem muddy enough that even if such an approach got traction, I have doubts it would be workable.

      --
      AccountKiller
    3. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is completely clueless trolling in the summary the new standard on /. now?

      Yes. Time to move on, I think...

    4. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The difference between "trolling" and "bad article" is: is it purposefully stupid in order to get outraged replies? Or merely ignorantly stupid.

      Since the author here insists he's not stupid, personally, my first inclination would be to call this trolling as well.

    5. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I called it a troll because it is very hard to lead a rational discussion on patent matters at the best of times. The article at issue here uses very loaded language from the beginning - e.g. the "government-created mess". This is designed to incite a flamefest, in my opinion.

      Regardless of the trolling-or-not-issue, the whole topic is half-arsed, not remotely thought through. The questions you are asking are good ones that aim at the heart of the problem. There is a deeper issue, though: What exactly *is* an industry standard for the purpose of this? Who defines it?

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    6. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      The article at issue here uses very loaded language from the beginning - e.g. the "government-created mess". This is designed to incite a flamefest, in my opinion.

      I think you're being a bit overly sensitive. It's an opinion piece designed to show a point of view. It's not really any different from your average letter to the editor in a local newspaper. Actually probably a bit better than the average one, since the average one tends to be even more poorly worded and thought out. If you really think this article is a troll, then a large percentage of the world is essentially trolls.


      There is a deeper issue, though: What exactly *is* an industry standard for the purpose of this? Who defines it?

      I thought of that, but both of those are just problems of scope and definition. They're problems to be sure, but they don't strike me as ones that might be fundamentally unsolvable.

      --
      AccountKiller
    7. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      The difference between "trolling" and "bad article" is: is it purposefully stupid in order to get outraged replies? Or merely ignorantly stupid.

      Interesting. I might define "trolling" as using language such as "purposefully stupid" or "ignorantly stupid" to describe something.

      Actually I really detest the whole "trolling" meme. It's so incredibly subjective as to have little meaning. It becomes a bludgeon to apply to any idea that might personally enrage you. In other words "I don't have to think about that idea, because the whole thing is a troll!".

      --
      AccountKiller
    8. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      It seems pretty naive to expect legislation against moneyed interests. They have the campaign donations and lobbyists to push against any bill that would hurt their interests, and they have plenty of money for lawyers to fight any law that gets passed tooth and nail. I really don't see a solution for this.

    9. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      I think I may be able to clear this up. Now I may be wrong, it may be just be, but I've always understood trolling to be speech meant to in inflame and get a bunch of nasty comments going without any real merit. For example everyone be discussing some topic and someone drops in with "You must be a God Damned Nigger to think like that, because only a nigger would be so fucking stupid". That doesn't stay on topic, doesn't bring anything to the conversation, and is meant to sidetrack the discussion and get a nice flamewar going. This video has further examples.

      Now for me TFA doesn't really fit what I would call a troll. In this case author see problem, tries to think of solution to problem. Now solution may not be good, hell it may be moronic and cause more problems than it solves, but as we have seen with congress just because a solution is stupid doesn't mean that someone won't try it. Now the writing of TFA sucks, but then again so does 90% of the writing on the Internet so I can't really fault him for being a shitty writer.

      But it IS a stupid answer to a real problem, as we have seen getting congress involved with anything even slightly murky usually ends in a giant clusterfuck. But I honestly don't think he is trolling, just one of those that believes "when in doubt the government can fix it" which sadly is the belief of waaaay too many nowadays, but it doesn't make it trolling, just naive.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    10. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can federal legislation even DO that kind of thing? (There are limits to what the federal government can do).

      Given that patents are a creation of the federal government in the first place, I would say that clearly yes, federal legislation can do that kind of thing.

      The one caveat being if it would be in violation of a treaty... which at this point, it might very well be. But stripping people of their patents because they were being jerks about licencing was threatened back in WWII, when we couldn't build a modern airplane due to a refusal to cross-license patents.

    11. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "I am not stupid" is only ever falsely uttered, i.e. if you have to claim you're not stupid rather than proving it, you should probably just stop.

    12. Re:Flame on, baby, flame on by MidnightBrewer · · Score: 1

      I agree. The system being exploited by scrupulous bastards is par for the course, and it's the industry that created the mess. They *like* things the way they are, because it allows them to abuse the system in a way that benefits them.

      --
      "Give a man fire, and he'll be warm for a day; set a man on fire, and he'll be warm for the rest of his life
  7. You got the government industry bought by 0xdeadbeef · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'm not convinced that industry can solve this mess that government created.

    You people are like children. Mommy, let us do this! Mommy, let us do that! Then things don't work out quite the way you wanted them to. Mommy, it's all your fault!

    1. Re:You got the government industry bought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, and how does your comment contribute to finding a solution?

    2. Re:You got the government industry bought by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually I think its rather a case of the industry members who are getting left behind want a legislative solution to their problem, at the expensive of the industry members who have gained the advantage of a headstart.

    3. Re:You got the government industry bought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, and how does your comment contribute to finding a solution?

      Solution? Slashdot? ROTFLMAO!

      Thank you fellow AC. I needed that.

    4. Re:You got the government industry bought by vyrus128 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So you oppose patents, then? Or do you like mommy-granted monopolies, and just start crying when the other children try to get your monopoly taken away? :-P

  8. Fifth Amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Any such legislation would reduce the property rights of existing patent-holders and therefore violate the Fifth Amendment. All patent-holders would need to be "justly compensated" for this taking of property.

    This is the same reason why copyright terms cannot be shortened, even if you got a bill to do so past the Disney lobby.

    1. Re:Fifth Amendment by hedwards · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, it wouldn't. Despite pleas from conservatives to the contrary, nobody forces these people to allow the use of their patents in standards. They allow it because it gives them the chance to file massive law suits later on for infringement. Meaning that people have to pay for the license, suit or be left unable to use the standard.

    2. Re:Fifth Amendment by Jenming · · Score: 2, Insightful

      shortening the term would not require compensation any more then prohibition required the compensation of alcohol manufacturer's.

      --
      Morpheus, God of Dreams.
    3. Re:Fifth Amendment by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is the same reason why copyright terms cannot be shortened, even if you got a bill to do so past the Disney lobby.

      Nonsense. For one thing, you can shorten the term of new copyrights without affecting existing copyrights. For another thing, if congress can extend the term of existing copyrights as they did for Disney's latest copyright grab, I think it's only fair that they be allowed to shorten them as well.

      --
      "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
    4. Re:Fifth Amendment by DRJlaw · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. For one thing, you can shorten the term of new copyrights without affecting existing copyrights.

      True. Politically difficult, but true.

      For another thing, if congress can extend the term of existing copyrights as they did for Disney's latest copyright grab, I think it's only fair that they be allowed to shorten them as well.

      The Supreme Court will not -- and those are the nine individuals whos thoughts count. That would be a classic taking of a vested property interest. If you live in the Western U.S., then it is Congress that granted the original title to the land that you're residing on. If Congress can grant that title, then it's only fair that they be allowed shorten the term of that title by law, correct? Despite the rhetoric on Slashdot, intellectual property is "property" in the eyes of the law. "Nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation" will apply in exactly the same way.

    5. Re:Fifth Amendment by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

      That argument worked really well with slavery.

      (not that I am against patent trolls creating their own country where they can sue each other and leaving everyone else alone, mind you)

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    6. Re:Fifth Amendment by Adrian+Lopez · · Score: 1

      If you live in the Western U.S., then it is Congress that granted the original title to the land that you're residing on. If Congress can grant that title, then it's only fair that they be allowed shorten the term of that title by law, correct?

      That's not exactly what I'm saying. Instead, what I'm saying is that Congress and the Supreme Court seem to have no problem with extending copyright terms despite the fact that the US Constitution says copyrights are "for limited times". If Congress can extend copyright terms retroactively, I say it's only fair that they be able to restrict them retroactively as well. Not necessarily legal, but "only fair" (meaning it's equally unfair).

      Reducing the length of existing copyrights is just as much like stealing from the copyright holder as extending the term of existing copyrights is like stealing from the public domain. Copyright is a government-granted monopoly. If the government thinks changes to copyright terms should be applied retroactively, they should better do so in both directions than just in the direction that benefits the rich at the expense of the general public.

      --
      "In prison you just have to shut your eyes and take it. Here you have to shut your eyes and give it."
    7. Re:Fifth Amendment by evilviper · · Score: 1

      shortening the term would not require compensation any more then prohibition required the compensation of alcohol manufacturer's.

      A patent is your property.
      The legality of the product your company manufactures, is NOT your property.

      Eminent domain applies to one, and not the other.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  9. Sure by russlar · · Score: 1

    Yes, we certainly could declare patents on industry-standards were un-enforcable. But that would deprive a lot of people of a lot of profit, so it will never happen.

    --
    Anybody want my mod points?
  10. Or, we can do the RightThing® by Quixotic+Raindrop · · Score: 3, Insightful

    and eliminate Software Patents entirely.

    --
    Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. (Einstein)
    1. Re:Or, we can do the RightThing® by BitZtream · · Score: 1

      Yes, going from one extreme to the other and not bothering to even LOOK at the middle ground is always a good idea.

      --
      Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
    2. Re:Or, we can do the RightThing® by Quixotic+Raindrop · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The middle ground is to return patents to what they are supposed to cover: inventions of physical machines. Copyright and trademarks cover things like Process and Software, and they are the appropriate places to protect them.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. (Einstein)
    3. Re:Or, we can do the RightThing® by the_greywolf · · Score: 1

      and eliminate Software Patents entirely.

      Or, better, eliminate patents entirely.

      They serve no useful purpose, expect to stunt economic growth and hinder innovation. Why keep them around?

      --
      grey wolf
      LET FORTRAN DIE!
  11. Back in 1988... by Kupfernigk · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I was in a meeting of our (electrical) industry body discussing how we would work on harmonisation of standards across the EU, with a QC (senior legal counsel) present as adviser. I asked more or less the same question - whether it would be possible to mandate that European law should require that any technology essential to meet a harmonised standard be free of licensing requirements. This would mean that a company making a single product relying on patented technology would only be able to sell it across the EU if the patent was unencumbered by licensing requirements. The reply of learned counsel?

    You're a smartass. Everybody hates a smartass.

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:Back in 1988... by Vellmont · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Heh.

      Sounds like the lawyer felt threatened by the idea. He probably thought that if such a law were to take effect, there'd be less need for legal council. Thus his dickish reply.

      --
      AccountKiller
    2. Re:Back in 1988... by Midnight+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Awesome! I'm glad to know that I'm not alone in looking for effective ways to introduce a better balance into the ecosystem. Thanks for the excellent story.

    3. Re:Back in 1988... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Maybe it is the simple fact that saying:
      "You're wasting everyone's time with a pipe dream. Please return to reality, this is not your hazy dorm room, we have jobs and want to get back home." ... would be impolite.

      Reality is not a schoolhouse rock song, you are not going to petition the government during that meeting. No one in that room is going/can't to call a high level EU meeting to deliberate merits of patent law. Reality is a little more complicated and using up time in a meeting talking about make-believe would have zero results on the end of the day.

  12. Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Dragoniz3r · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "I'm sorry sir, your idea has become too successful, we're going to have to take it away from you now."

    Is this some sort of joke? This is similar to claiming that is too important to fail, thus the government should take it over and run it "for the people." The real solution is to make sure you can't get patents on trivial algorithms that anyone would come up with, when presented with a particular problem. Not to take away genuinely innovative approaches that just so happen to become popular.
    Yes, it's true that most software patents are trivial. But not all are, and the ones that aren't should be protected just like any other innovation or invention.

    1. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by loufoque · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Is this some sort of joke? This is similar to claiming that is too important to fail, thus the government should take it over and run it "for the people."

      I don't see it as a joke, on the contrary I find it very sensible.
      I guess it's a matter of political opinion. The government should ensure the best for the people rather than allowing a single company (or consortium) to get royalties for things that have become ubiquitous in today's world, as that is hindering both innovation and regular activity.

    2. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The ones that aren't trivial were published by Knuth more than 20 years ago, and their patents would have expired by now if they'd been filed.

    3. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this some sort of joke? This is similar to claiming that is too important to fail, thus the government should take it over and run it "for the people." The real solution is ... Not to take away genuinely innovative approaches that just so happen to become popular.

      It's not a viewpoint without precedence. Look how many here support action against Apple's "monopoly." Or, going further back in time, Netscape v. Microsoft.

      I won't try to debate this, because people have already formed their immutable positions. It's based entirely on what you feel the role of government should be. If you're like me, you find the concept of a non-government granted monopoly absurd.

    4. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unfortunately, in the US, the needs of the very very few outweigh the needs of the many......

    5. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The real solution is to make sure you can't get patents on trivial algorithms that anyone would come up with, when presented with a particular problem. Not to take away genuinely innovative approaches that just so happen to become popular.

      But if we only allow patents for more complex software, won't that encourage developers do do away with the KISS principle and make their code needlessly complicated?

    6. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Sancho · · Score: 1

      The Devil's Advocate would say that H.264 would likely not have become ubiquitous if the creators knew that they wouldn't be able to patent it. It almost certainly wouldn't be as open as it is now. Do you think that Linux would have native H.264 playback if the MPEG-LA had to resort to close-sourcing it rather than relying on patents to protect their codec?

      We don't need to get rid of the patents in H.264--what we need is sane licensing. There should be at most two licenses--one covering encoding and one covering decoding. Better would be one license covering both uses, but then they couldn't make it cheap enough to include a decoder in every computer while still making good money from the relative few who produce content with it.

    7. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by rawler · · Score: 1

      Agreed, with one addition;

      Submarine patents must be addressed. With regards to the question of h.264, the Theora submarine patent-scare is ridiculous, not because it is unrealistic, but because it is a very unsound patent-system that enables that kind of behaviour in the first place. The respectable purpose of patents is to protect inventors, not being used as legal weapons to stifle competition, or economical vampirism, and submarine patents is an obvious example of that.

      Perhaps there should be some news-bulletin by the patent-office, where proposed standards and inventions can be submitted, and any patent-holders are given a certain amount of time to speak up, or surrender their patent. Puts a lot of effort on patent-holders though, other ideas, anyone?

      Then regarding "trivial", that's always a moving target. What was inconceivable 10 years ago may be mainstream today, and the notion of "trivial" is often changed with it. My guess is the wheel wasn't trivial when it was invented, but revolutionary. Perhaps patents in general should have shorter lifespans.

    8. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by loufoque · · Score: 1

      The Devil's Advocate would say that H.264 would likely not have become ubiquitous if the creators knew that they wouldn't be able to patent it.

      You could still patent it and earn royalties, until the point when it becomes ubiquitous.

      From what I can gather myself, as working for the videoconference company that is proposing a likely candidate for H.265, is that they care more about standardizing good codecs and use them in their products.
      Royalties are certainly a nice extra, but it's not the business model driving the codec design, at least that is what I feel.

      It almost certainly wouldn't be as open as it is now. Do you think that Linux would have native H.264 playback if the MPEG-LA had to resort to close-sourcing it rather than relying on patents to protect their codec?

      It's a standard.
      Various people make implementations, some open-source, some closed source.
      I have to say I honestly don't understand your point here. Are you trying to say that without patents, more implementations would be closed source? That's silly. Open source implementations of H.264 (libavcodec, x264) are not made by MPEG-LA licensors as far as I know.

    9. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Orestesx · · Score: 1

      The problem with your solution (protect non-trivial software inventions, reject trivial patents) vis-a-vis the h.264 debate is that the patent in question may actually be non-trivial. Patents were created to encourage people to share their designs, creating greater utility out of the invention in the long run. You say that the non-trivial inventions should be protected, but the trouble is the definition of non-trivial. Do you really think that software patents benefit the industry as a whole and encourage people to share their ideas? I say no, because the real innovation is the source code, which can be kept secret and copyrighted. The whole thing is convoluted and broken. The systems benefits no one except the patent trolls and the lawyers, who add nothing of value to the industry. The system is not fulfilling its expressed purpose, er go the system should be dismantled.

    10. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      It my not be trivial, but it's still math. My favourite example of a terrible software patent is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arithmetic_coding. Say you want to store a string consisting of 'A's, 'B's and 'C's in binary. The fast solution is to map each symbol to a block of bits. eg A -> 00, B -> 01, C -> 10. Obviously, the combination 11 is wasted.
      Another solution is to convert to a radix 3 number, (A -> 0, B -> 1, C -> 2) and then change base to binary.
      Arithmetic coding is a compression scheme in which if the probabilities of the symbols (A, B and C) are not equal, the radix is increased, and some symbols convert to multiple numbers. for example, if A occurs in the string once, B occurs twice, and C occurs three times, the radix is increased to 6, A is mapped to 0, B is mapped to 1 and 2, and C is mapped to 3, 4 and 5. then, when encoding a symbol with multiple numbers in your message, you can pick the number that takes the least additional number of bits. This is the gist of the technique. There's no code, there's no difficult math, but it's still covered by at least nine patents.

      --
      404: sig not found.
    11. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it always strikes me that this attitude couldn't exist
      unless deep down the holder of said attitude thought
      that he had ideas so good the whole world should pay
      him.

    12. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by KharmaWidow · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. Billions of dollars go into R&D in the USA. Would corporations keep spending that money if their product was so successful it became a standard and they lost control of the supply?

      Business is about controlling supply while demand is high. Additionally, this would probably hurt efforts of standardization because business would calculate just how much success their products would need to maximize return BEFORE standardization - as well as develop competing technologies to their own product.

      Its a puerile concept that everything of value should be socialized by society.

    13. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think that Linux would have native H.264 playback if the MPEG-LA had to resort to close-sourcing it rather than relying on patents to protect their codec?

      Yes, certainly. That's the point. There are plenty of H.264 encoding and decoding projects. And they are illegal in the US, because of these patents.

    14. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Orestesx · · Score: 1

      I agree that it's silly to issue a patent for that. Let's presuppose that it is non-trivial in the eyes of the patent office. It is in fact a rather clever solution to the problem. But should it be patentable? Hell no. The price (measured in lawsuits, lawyers fees, licensing fees) is too high to pay for what "we" get in return (full disclosure of a non-trivial solution to a relatively common problem).

    15. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      The Devil's Advocate would say that H.264 would likely not have become ubiquitous if the creators knew that they wouldn't be able to patent it. It almost certainly wouldn't be as open as it is now. Do you think that Linux would have native H.264 playback if the MPEG-LA had to resort to close-sourcing it rather than relying on patents to protect their codec?

      The devil's advocate would be wrong. Sure, h.264 makes a bit of money by licensing, but the real money maker is all these devices that are built and sold. And all the related services, and the ability to create high quality video. The industry wanted a good and standardised video codec and somehow they managed to get one.

    16. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Sancho · · Score: 1

      It's a standard.
      Various people make implementations, some open-source, some closed source.
      I have to say I honestly don't understand your point here. Are you trying to say that without patents, more implementations would be closed source?

      I think if there weren't patents, all of the implementations would be closed-source, and the specification only given to people who license it.

    17. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm sorry sir, your idea has become too successful, we're going to have to take it away from you now."

      The government will not, and cannot, take an idea away from someone. But they can stop keeping it away from other people.

      The point of the patent system is to promote innovation. When it's not accomplishing that goal, it should not be applied.

    18. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Define trivial.

    19. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Erm, was the world falling apart before the advent of H.264?

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    20. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Software patents are a fucking stupid idea in the first place. Software should not be patantable. Copyright only.

    21. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by TwinkieStix · · Score: 1

      The result of a government policy of taking property (even patented inventions) from the ultra successful for the benefit of the common always provides an incentive for the ultra-successful to take it's business elsewhere. This is why countries that frequently practice such a policy of radical socialism or communism tend to grow at a slower pace in the long run than more capitalist oriented countries in terms of GDP, or any useful quality of life measurement.

      Any economist I know would tell you that the greatest benefit to the people is to allow the successful to enjoy the fruits of their labour so long as they don't stifle competition more than to allow them to make a modest profit from their hard work. And, the political discussion then can surround what exactly is a "modest profit", and how do we keep from stifling competition "too much". You've stepped outside that argument with complete disregard for the rightful owner of property under the auspices of "the good of the people" which has been shown in the real world, at least until now, to be a failed philosophy due to the fact that determining "the good of the people" never actually happens better by some governing body when a free and open market is available (which isn't always the case: sanctioned monopolies, military, health care, fire/police, etc).

    22. Re:Yeah that's a fucking great idea by Harinezumi · · Score: 1

      The real solution is getting the government out of the business of granting monopoly privileges over math.

  13. a modest alternative by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about establishing an industry standard registry web site under the supervision of the Fed. government, where standards could be posted - for a significant fee - and rights holders would have a certain period of time (let's say 18 months) to assert possible claims, including 1) list of patents, copyrights, trademarks, etc. and 2) specific reasons why these might apply. Posting rights assertions would also require a significant fee (per document) to discourage flooding and frivolous claims.

    This wouldn't prevent patent trolling, but at least could help avoid some of the scenarios where IP portfolios are bought and sold several times, and years down the road, one of the buyers decides to assert claims against a well established standard like JPEG.

  14. No-Go From the Start by The+Mighty+Buzzard · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's an excellent idea that makes huge whopping loads of sense; therefore, it will never even be authored as a bill, much less considered on the floor of any legislative body.

    --
    Violence is like duct tape. If it doesn't solve the problem, you didn't use enough.
  15. What is an "industry standard?" by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    More appropriately, when does something transition from a "good idea that is sparsely implemented" to an industry standard? If you set the criteria as "defined by an industry organization" (such as ANSI, ASNE) then why would a company allow patented tech into the standard? Would MILSPEC constitute an industry standard? I think the battle point would just change, with companies wanting larger license fees early because they'd lose them later; which would limit the adoption of a standard. In addition, they would have little incentive to allow free licensing to encourage adoption since there's no money at the other end.

    I'm not sure what the answer is - perhaps a compulsory license fee that is the same for all users of the technology? Of course, then I could charge a high upfront one time fee, rather than a per unit fee, effectively locking out newcomers.

    Of course, eliminating submarine patents would go a long way. If a person has applied for a patent, they should be required to notify a potential infringer when they first notice the infringement, not after the patent being granted. After a certain time limit, the infringer should be grandfathered into non-infringement. If they have been notified, and the patent subsequently is upheld, then the are liable if they failed to modify their infringing item. A separate arbitration board would hear arguments, and if they decide the patent appears to be valid then either they settle or the infringer posts a bond set by the panel. The winner of the eventual suit gets the bond. I would even say that granting the patent, and winning a challenge, would be enough to get the patent holder the bond; since a panel of experts decided the infringement issue earlier but did not rule on the patentability. Alternatively, they could settle both issues at once

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    1. Re:What is an "industry standard?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MILSPEC is gone. It's been contracted out ot ANSI, and now you have to pay through the nose to access mil specs, even though you're paying through the government to create them.

    2. Re:What is an "industry standard?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the answer is to legislate that fees cannot be changed once a standard is published. You eliminate patent trolls that way, and you allow honest companies to earn a return on their investment. For example, if you invent a new picture compression technology that becomes an industry standard (GIF) and you license the technology for free when the standard is adopted, you can't change the fees later.

    3. Re:What is an "industry standard?" by TwinkieStix · · Score: 1

      You're right. Or, as a large corporation, I would have a HUGE incentive to grease whatever wheels I can to make sure that:

      1. My technology doesn't become an official open standard but remains an unofficial one.
      2. My competitors technology DOES become an open standard to drive him out of business.
      3. My technology DOES become an open standard, but some essential tooling to use my technology remains outside the standard and very costly.
      4. Some really poor technology becomes the open standard so that I can achieve #1.

  16. How about the KISS principle? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think the sheer complexity of this approach alone would have everything everywhere tied up in litigation for years. That alone is a mark against it.

    Instead, let's use a simpler method, and take away patents from software, methods, or any other intangibles. That will take away the current minefield where almost any nontrivial software is technically in violation of a patent. And it would make sense.

    A brilliant new design for a computer (or a piece of it) can be patented. (Note this means a quantum leap, not an incremental improvement). In the same vein, if you came up with a brilliant new design for a guitar, causing it to weigh 40% less and have a tone quality far better than anything on the market, you could patent that guitar design.

    However, if you came up with some brilliant new chords that this guitar can play, you can't and shouldn't be able to patent those. Even if they're brilliant, even if you're the first to ever play them. You can copyright any songs you write with them, of course. But you can't keep someone else from using the same concept in their own songs.

    Software is the same as the music. It is the unpatentable intangible played on the patentable tangible. You can copyright it, but you should not be able to stop someone from independently create something interoperable.

    --
    To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    1. Re:How about the KISS principle? by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      (Note this means a quantum leap...

      a leap of the shortest distance possible that has any meaning in physics?

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    2. Re:How about the KISS principle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask most people what they consider a large collection of characters in an organized manner and they will call it a book. Print out a program's source on paper and that will resemble a book too. Total programs should be copyrightable, but not patentable.

      The patent was created to allow an inventor to create something and profit from its manufacturing. Such inventions were often easy to recreate and therefore easily stolen. The patent protected the huge expense of manufacturing your product and protecting your investment for a minimum time.

    3. Re:How about the KISS principle? by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      A quantum leap is also a movement between two distinct states with no possible in-between states. In that sense the analogy makes sense.

    4. Re:How about the KISS principle? by optikos · · Score: 1

      H.264 is typically implemented by EEs in ASICs, not by programmers in software. So H.264 is in fact new circuitry that is a "brilliant new design for a" new portion of a "computer (or piece of it)" that you say "can be patented". In patent law in the USA, if the innovative functionality of an ASIC is patentable, then someone making a slower, hotter, more electricity-consuming (and thus inferior) implementation in *software* still infringes on the ASIC's patent. What is (supposed to be) patented is the innovative portion of a new state machine, not the various superior or inferior modes of implementation of that machine, whether those modes be ASIC lithography, soft-programmed FPGA netmask, or imperative sequential thread of execution.

    5. Re:How about the KISS principle? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you came up with a brilliant new design for a guitar, causing it to weigh 40% less and have a tone quality far better than anything on the market

      That just gave me an excellent idea! An air-guitar made out of Helium! Weighs significantly less. And has the same tone quality. Now where's those patent forms...

    6. Re:How about the KISS principle? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Hardware acceleration is hardly a novel concept that should be subject to any patents. Regardless, only the hardware portion should be patentable even if it were. If it can be reimplemented in software, it's software with a hardware acceleration component. That's not an earth shattering new technology, it's an existing technology being used for a new format. Like all gradual improvements making existing technology a bit better, that should not be patentable.

      Even if it were, however, software reimplementations should not be prevented. Since software, if the system worked properly, should not be patentable, it also should by definition be unable to violate a patent. Only copying a patentable machine with another machine could do so.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    7. Re:How about the KISS principle? by optikos · · Score: 1

      Should innovative finite state machines (FSMs) be patentable? If not, then digital circuits become unpatentable. If so, then why should the mode of implementation of how the machine is represented make any difference? Stroger (stepper) telephone switches (the technology permitted pre-WWII direct dialing instead of human patch-cord operators) are essentially century-old mechanical implementations of a 3-digit-area-code/3-digit-exchange FSM, differentiated by the presence/absence of 0 or 1 in the 2nd digit of the trio. If particular FSMs cannot be patented, then the Stroger switch a century ago could not be patented. (In this case only the underlying electrical compontent in isolation individually could be patented (as long as physics itself does not read on the electronic component's claimed property boundary lines), but Stroger did not invent those components; he invented an innovative assemblage of components to accomplish an FSM.)

      One argument against software patents is that all software is essentially function composition in math. A vast quantity of patents since the nineteenth century has been for innovative FSMs, regardless of the underlying implementation of that FSM (e.g., witness the numerous patents for typewriter keyboard layouts-only for over the past century). If software patents fall in the USA, then won't we see merely an adjustment of claim wording to FSM patents that do not refer to any particular implementation? Is an FSM not a machine that satisfies the In Re Bilski machine-or-transformation test? If not, how is a finite-state machine not itself a machine?

    8. Re:How about the KISS principle? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      I would also generally disagree with patenting a keyboard layout. Such an improvement would still be an incremental improvement to existing technology, not something groundbreaking. For patentability, we should be looking at things like the first electric typewriter, not just rearranging the keys.

      I think the same applies here. Hardware acceleration is not a novel or groundbreaking concept, so that in itself is no cause for a patent.

      But, let's presume for a moment you have come up with a chip design that does better hardware acceleration, rising to the level of patentability. Even then, if someone can, without using your machine, create the same effect in software, they are not violating your patent. Sure, your machine (be it a circuit board, car, or industrial system) is patentable, if it is groundbreaking and has no prior art, but that gives you the right to prevent people from doing things in that way using your machine. It does not prevent people doing the same thing by any means whatsoever.

      Take, for example, a machine that produces widgets, which before were considered impossible or extremely unlikely to be machine reproducible. Can the inventor patent that machine? Sure. But he cannot, using that patent, stop the production by hand of those same widgets. Of course, that's different if the widget itself is patentable, but software is not a machine or tangible thing, and should not be.

      So, sure, here, if the machine really is groundbreaking beyond being just another hardware accelerator, patent it. But that patent should still only apply to implementations using the machine, not to any implementation whatsoever of the machine's end products done using unpatented commodity hardware. If your machine's that integral of a component, and makes the process that much more efficient, people will pay the premium for it. If not-then not so groundbreaking after all, was it?

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    9. Re:How about the KISS principle? by optikos · · Score: 1

      Your reply contains nothing about whether a finite state machine is a machine in the In Re Bilski sense of a machine-or-transformation test. If someone can patent an FSM, then the patent applies to any implementation: mechanical, electronic analog circuit, electronic digital circuit, or sequential imperative thread of execution. If an FSM is not patentable, then: Why is an FSM not a In-Re-Bilski machine? and How can any digital circuit be patentable? and hence: How can any processor or ASIC or subsystem thereof be patentable if not via their FSM?

    10. Re:How about the KISS principle? by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Yes, it does. But let me try to simplify it:

      The tangible representations of an FSM, such as a circuit board, can be patented, provided that they meet all other patent requirements (groundbreaking/not incremental, no prior art). The logic and mathematics behind it cannot be, since mathematical equations are not patentable no matter how brilliant they are. Software is just discrete math (and really, at its core, a compiled program can be represented by a single, though very large, number). A circuit board is a physical thing. You're trying to say they cannot be differentiated, since they can both be representations of an FSM. But they are different, because one is tangible and one is purely mathematical. Your question "Is an FSM an In re Bilski machine?" requires the question "That depends. Is its representation tangible or intangible?"

      Just because you don't like the answer doesn't mean it isn't an answer. My answer is, if something is physical and tangible, it is possibly patentable. If it can be implemented purely in mathematics or without tangibles, it is not patentable. If it's possible to do both ways, only the physical component or representation is possibly patentable, but the mathematical components are not. Representing an FSM is not the final question one needs to ask to determine if something is patentable or is a "machine". One needs to also evaluate if something is purely mathematical or requires specific tangible components.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
  17. Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Patent legislation in the USA is very unclear on questions about whether it should apply to software. That's why it's always ignored in the debate, with everyone focussing on the rulings from the CAFC and the Supreme Court. There is good grounds for saying the legislation excludes software ideas, since the Constitution only allows patents where they promote the progress of useful arts - and all the studies say software patents impede such progress.

    A flat exclusion of software from patentability is one solution, and its the best one. Other possibilities include an exclusion of liability when using ideas for the purpose of compatibility. That wouldn't fix all problems, but it would fix the h.264 and other file format problems.

    Related info on en.swpat.org:

    1. Re:Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by tyrione · · Score: 1

      Patent legislation in the USA is very unclear on questions about whether it should apply to software. That's why it's always ignored in the debate, with everyone focussing on the rulings from the CAFC and the Supreme Court. There is good grounds for saying the legislation excludes software ideas, since the Constitution only allows patents where they romote the progress of useful arts - and all the studies say software patents impede such progress.

      A flat exclusion of software from patentability is one solution, and its the best one. Other possibilities include an exclusion of liability when using ideas for the purpose of compatibility. That wouldn't fix all problems, but it would fix the h.264 and other file format problems.

      Related info on en.swpat.org:

      Twenty years ago Harvard released dozens of studies showing the dangers of Caffeine and now Science is back with a new spin. Spare me the ``all the studies'' crap.

    2. Re:Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 1

      Great point.

      So... ah, what evidence should I use?

    3. Re:Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by evilviper · · Score: 1

      A flat exclusion of software from patentability is one solution, and its the best one.

      Devices that are sold in countries which do not enfore software patents, still require paying the patent license fees for H.264, MP3, and the like. So how does eliminating software patents magically solve all our problems, again?

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    4. Re:Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the moment you don't have a "carrot" for the companies that bought software patents that (voluntarily or not) ended up in international standards, and who would complain when software patents are finally abolished.

      Could a possible carrot be:
      "The government, realizing the substantial investment of company A in applying for and obtaining the now voided patent, reimburses company A to the sum of 10x its patent application costs as a reward for enriching the world with a new, innovative, international standard"

      or something like that?

    5. Re:Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 1

      Yes, that's a fine idea. And if the government had to bear the cost of the innovation-encouraging-system, instead of converting it to bureaucracy and dumping it on developers, you can bet the level of patent office scrutiny to shoot up.

    6. Re:Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 1

      I don't follow your example. If a country doesn't recognise software patents, why would a company feel obliged to pay licence fees for software ideas such as h.264?

      Eliminating software patents magically solves all our problems because then anyone could implement h.264, mp3 etc. without having to think about, or pay for, patent issues.

    7. Re:Yes, clarify the invalidity of software patents by evilviper · · Score: 1

      If a country doesn't recognise software patents, why would a company feel obliged to pay licence fees for software ideas such as h.264?

      Once your H.264/MP3 decoder gets flashed into the firmware of a device, it's no longer just a software patent. You'll have to pay license fees on it in practically every country in the world...

      So the problem is really the reverse of what you think it is... Why should H.264 be patentable when a purpose built chip is constructed for it, but NOT when you use those same techniques in a program?

      Eliminating software patents magically solves all our problems because then anyone could implement h.264, mp3 etc. without having to think about, or pay for, patent issues.

      Yes, I suspected your solution works only based on ignorance. You've merely confirmed it.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  18. Obvious back door to breaking the system... by sribe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So, basically, your idea is that if a patented "invention" turns out to be really important and useful, the patent should be rendered unenforceable. Yeah, good luck sneaking that proposal through ;-)

    1. Re:Obvious back door to breaking the system... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're talking about software patents. There are only so many ways experienced developers would attack a given problem, giving a pretty limited set of solutions. First past the post is locking one of those away and preventing others from implementing the same thing. Why? MOONNNEEEYYYYY!

  19. Wow, that makes so much sense! by dptalia · · Score: 1, Troll

    Oh sure, lets get the government involved in this! Because they're:
    Efficient
    Looking out for the people
    Focused
    Not interested in pork
    Uninfluenced by patent holders

    --
    Genius is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration, which is why engineers sometimes smell really bad.
    1. Re:Wow, that makes so much sense! by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      Oh sure, lets get the government involved in this! Because they're:
      Efficient
      Looking out for the people
      Focused
      Not interested in pork
      Uninfluenced by patent holders

      And who should be involved in this that meets those criteria, business? If you think business is "efficient", then you haven't looked terribly deeply into business. The other ones I don't even think anyone has any serious beliefs business is any good at. People only accuse government of all the things you describe because we have a big public window into it's operations.

      --
      AccountKiller
    2. Re:Wow, that makes so much sense! by dptalia · · Score: 1
      The honest truth is NOTHING is efficient. And NOTHING is really interested in anything other than collecting as much power as possible/maintaining the status quo.

      I'm merely saying that expecting a solution from the government is silly. So is expecting one from industry.

      However, if over time this truly becomes enough of a problem, the market will end up coming up with a solution. Right now - we're so below critical mass that expecting anything to crystallize out of the chaos is unreasonable.

      --
      Genius is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration, which is why engineers sometimes smell really bad.
    3. Re:Wow, that makes so much sense! by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      The honest truth is NOTHING is efficient. And NOTHING is really interested in anything other than collecting as much power as possible/maintaining the status quo.

      Hmm.. I guess I just don't agree. Government is really one of the few things that can create solutions in everyones interest. Do you honestly think child labor, anti-discrimination policies, the interstate highway system, free public education (as opposed to private only), etc aren't all successes of government? None of those examples are either "maintaining the status quo". I guess you could argue some of them are "collecting power", but that's not always a bad thing either. Dismissing government as a solution to problems because you only look at its failures is dishonest.

      This particular case I don't know about, but you sound like you're merely dismissing it out of hand, based on ideological grounds. I think that's wrong, and you don't have to look to far to see why.

      --
      AccountKiller
    4. Re:Wow, that makes so much sense! by Zironic · · Score: 1

      What's up with people thinking the market is run by magic pixies?

    5. Re:Wow, that makes so much sense! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually, I think you're wrong. Child labor is awful, but the big solution the government came up with is cumbersome, expensive and can actually hurt people. And it doesn't work - plenty of child labor still, but now it's underground with no controls - not even public shaming.

      Public education? Do you know HOW MUCH is spent per kid in the U.S? and HOW LITTLE the kids are taught? Are you telling me that keeping bad teachers due to tenure is good? Catholic schools take everyone for a third of the cost and turn out much better results. Maybe parents ought to be RESPONSIBLE for their own children? Why should all of society have to fund someone's choice to have a child?

      Interstate highways - okay, there are cool. But I would argue that they weren't the best solution - too much politics involved. And have you every looked at a modern transportation bill? Honey, the interstate is utterly screwed.

    6. Re:Wow, that makes so much sense! by dptalia · · Score: 1

      it isn't. It's actually a sort of group intelligence. It tends to come up with equilibrium solutions to problems when the problems get big enough. of course, we rarely see that happen because people/government muddle with the market screwing up it's reactions.

      --
      Genius is one percent inspiration and 99 percent perspiration, which is why engineers sometimes smell really bad.
  20. Violation of TRIPS by hweimer · · Score: 4, Informative

    We could solve the H.264 debate if a country's legislature were to mandate that any patents that contribute to an industry-recognized standard were unenforceable in the application of that standard.

    I have read until here. What you propose is unfortunately not allowed under the TRIPS agreement, which requires that once that a patent has been granted, the holder must be able to enforce it. While there can be exceptions to this rule, I highly doubt that a country trying to get rid of the H.264 patents that way will get away with it.

    If a legislative body wants to fight these patents, the best thing it can do is to require the use of unencumbered technologies in the government.

    --
    OS Reviews: Free and Open Source Software
    1. Re:Violation of TRIPS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Incorrect - a patent can also be removed by a unilateral government fiat, after all a patent is a government granted right - not an inalienable one.

      The ex-patent holder than gets to scream and yell - but unless the government agrees with the ex-patent holder suing them .... the ex-patent holder is out of luck.

    2. Re:Violation of TRIPS by Midnight+Warrior · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the thoughtful reply. I've read through the TRIPS link you graciously provided. There is some good reading in there. What I failed to find though was anything that supported your argument of mandatory enforcement. I'm sure it's in there, I just wasn't having very much luck.

      What if the patent holder was required to take a more active role in their patents and the applicability to proposed standards, as governed by industry and government bodies (e.g. ANSI, MILSPEC)? If a call went out looking for patents related to a specific standard, they would be required to participate in the standards body within, say, 3 months of being notified. Failure to respond or to provide reasonable licensing terms (to the standards body) is a forfeit of the holder's right to prosecute those who implement the standard.

      I've got this idea because it means that:

      • Lawyers will be retained to provide continuous monitoring of the standards landscape
      • It encourages patents to be licensed rather than sat on and thus impeding progress
      • The sheer volume of patents would either be a boon for the legal industry or a discouragement from filing yet more patents
      • Patents are encouraged to get organized into standards bodies
    3. Re:Violation of TRIPS by hweimer · · Score: 1

      What I failed to find though was anything that supported your argument of mandatory enforcement.

      It's in section 5 of the actual text of the treaty.

      What if the patent holder was required to take a more active role in their patents and the applicability to proposed standards, as governed by industry and government bodies (e.g. ANSI, MILSPEC)?

      Of course any standardization body may adopt the patent rules it likes. One could try to push ISO towards royalty-free licensing, but I doubt that this will get a majority among the member states. On the other hand, there are organizations like Ecma that will happily publish any standard a member wants to push through.

      If a call went out looking for patents related to a specific standard, they would be required to participate in the standards body within, say, 3 months of being notified.

      I am not a patent attorney (but I play one on the internet), but this might be allowed under TRIPS. After all, there is no such thing as a "right to patent ambush".

      --
      OS Reviews: Free and Open Source Software
  21. No by Kjella · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I don't think it'll in any way be practical to expropriate that IP, which is essentially what you are talking about. However, that is not the biggest problem with patents. The biggest problem with patents is that a standard is never proven patent free, only that no claim of infringement has been made against it yet. This is why I would like standards bodies to have the ability to call for patents, and any patent claim not made within a reasonable time frame is forfeit as related to that standard. A relevant current example is Theora - they claim it's patent free but is it really? What if someone like ISO or ITU-T could publish the standard, demand that any patent claims must be done within three months and if none were made you knew with 100% certainty that any later claims are null and void? It would be wonderful. I don't see this as a way of freeing IP, but it would go a long way of reducing patent FUD and submarine patents. Even if it should turn out to be patented you know which bits and could work to remove those and try again.

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:No by __aagbwg300 · · Score: 1

      This is why I would like standards bodies to have the ability to call for patents, and any patent claim not made within a reasonable time frame is forfeit as related to that standard.

      Even if the patent is not included in the standard, the standard might still infringe upon it. I think the scenario you are thinking of is similar to what happened with Rambus a few years ago - they massaged the standard to cover patents that they owned and then sued after it was adopted. A more realistic scenario is that my tiny telecommunications company owns a patent on compressing audio that gets included in a larger standard. The company may not have any representatives involved in the standard - in fact, they might not even know that there is an infringing proposal.

      I think the latter scenario is a lot more common and of course, the standards organization is still (rightfully) on the hook for liability.

    2. Re:No by St.Creed · · Score: 1

      So what would happen if the standards committee had a standard publication, containing all these proposals with a request for patentholders to come forward within 12 months?

      I think you can make a good case that if you're working in an industry, you should be required to know of new standards affecting that industry. This is already required in several areas, like law. In most countries a law becomes official once it is published in a certain place. This could also be done for proposed standards, perhaps in a publication by the patent bureau?

      Patent holders all get a free copy of that publication. If they don't care to read it because it might hurt their profit, too bad for them. If they do and they see a standard including a patent or possibly including a patent, they are required to notify the standards committee.

      And about the rambus scenario: that was bad, because it was so obvjous. But it's much worse. A friend of mine worked for one of the largest patent holders in the world and at some point was their number 3 patent writer (in amount of patents, not in money). Ofcourse, this was when he was working on an industry standard (curently implemented in nearly every router, PC and printer). As he explained it, the trick was to say that you didn't have any patents, then quickly write them the day after you declared that.

      The whole patent scam needs to be revisited, and while the original article misses the mark, it sure aims in the right direction.

      --
      Therefore, by the (faulty) logic you're using, you're just a cow with a keyboard - osu-neko (2604)
    3. Re:No by Kjella · · Score: 1

      A more realistic scenario is that my tiny telecommunications company owns a patent on compressing audio that gets included in a larger standard. The company may not have any representatives involved in the standard - in fact, they might not even know that there is an infringing proposal. I think the latter scenario is a lot more common and of course, the standards organization is still (rightfully) on the hook for liability.

      Two words: Tough shit. If you want to have a patent, you have to review the standards proposed and see if any patents you have apply. Anything else will just lead to willful blindness where they don't want to be part of the standards organization and instead patent troll the process. There are not that many standards being passed that might be relevant to each patents, it's more than reasonable to demand that. Just like how you can lose your trademark if you don't defend it or there are tons of public notices in the paper who nobody will check if you read or not. If you don't, your problem and your loss. Though personally I think software patents should be abolished world wide altogether.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    4. Re:No by evilviper · · Score: 1

      What if someone like ISO or ITU-T could publish the standard, demand that any patent claims must be done within three months and if none were made you knew with 100% certainty that any later claims are null and void?

      Wow, talk about a dystopian future...

      So the onus is on the individual patent holders to follow the published information from all major standards bodies, and scour them on the astronomical chance that somebody has introduced SOMETHING into the standard, SOMEWHERE, that uses any bit of your patented technologies?

      That's an incredible onerous rule you're slamming down on the head of any and all patent holders.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    5. Re:No by Draek · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Given that the alternative is forcing everybody looking to implement the standard to follow the published information from all patent issuing bodies, and scour them on the astronomical chance that somebody has patented SOMETHING belonging to the standard, SOMEWHERE, for which you could be potentially liable, I'd say the GP's option is far better.

      --
      No problem is insoluble in all conceivable circumstances.
    6. Re:No by evilviper · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I'd say the GP's option is far better.

      It is indeed much better for one group... And vastly, horrendously worse for another group...

      The question is, is it ethically okay to steal so much from group B, and give it to group A.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    7. Re:No by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if, like the OP mentioned, a group could publicly submit an application asking for patent claims within a certain statutory period and, if none were presented, it would not prevent enforcement of the patents but would prevent claims for damages from violating patents and would ensure that anyone found to be violating the patent would be given a reasonable period of time (again likely statutory) to replace the patented technology with an alternate version or work out a licensing agreement?

      This would not place such an absolute burden on patent holders but would still offer the the OP's vision for allowing people to move forward with implementing a specification without fear of dangerous patent litigation down the road. Claims could still be made down the road, but the process of resolving those claims would be more friendly to the violator since they had explicitly given the patent holder the ability to make claims at an earlier date.

    8. Re:No by jrincayc · · Score: 1

      I agree in principle, but three months might be too little time.

  22. H.265 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  23. Patents system is based on 18th Century technology by copponex · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Some of the founders were worried that the patent system wouldn't allow enough time for inventions to spread, as America had a much greater land mass than England. That's how out of date this idea is.

    Software patents are totally worthless. All they do is impede progress. Consider a software patent on controlling a lawn mower. You could patent this idea. Could you patent lawnmowers? Of course not - patenting the idea of cutting grass can be laughed off by everyone, except for a few lawyers and jurors in East Texas. Adding the abstraction of software control does not make the idea new or worth protecting.

    What people don't realize is that you could never patent the end result of an invention, only the particular way in which you solved the problem. With software, they are patenting end results, saying adding accelerometers with a touch screen that has a cellular radio is revolutionary, or that providing a video stream with a certain open codec on a computer needs to be protected. Well, no it doesn't. Protecting the certain way in which you use software, hardware, and branding to release your product is protected under copyright and trademark.

    Intel should not be allowed to patent passing data through the light spectrum. Similarly, anyone who releases their codec as an open standard cannot patent playing back the codec, if someone figured out a way to do it with their own different software.

  24. Nokia/Apple by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah - but then Nokia would loose it's patent fight with Apple..

  25. ... and the same for DAB? by andyh-rayleigh · · Score: 1

    If that approach were to be applied to the "analogue switchoff" in UK radio then it would have to be delayed until Philips relinquished, or at least freed, their bundle of patents that puts about £10 on every DAB radio.

    Hmmm, that's a good idea.

  26. No IP if it is worth it? by barfy · · Score: 1

    No to patents, if it gets in the way or makes things tough? Really? Then the value of patents is zero?

    This is not the right argument.

  27. Not going to happen by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    If such a bill became law tomorrow the h.264 and html 5 were made before teh law and therefore under the grandfather clause would not be valid.

  28. There is already an article that would allow this by kanweg · · Score: 1

    I can't give a percentage of patent laws that have it, but it is not unheard of that a patent law contains an article that deals with appropriation of a patent. This is used in very restricted cases. For example, in case of a severe disease, a pharmaceutical company can't hold a country at ransom. The loophole exists that the patent is appropriated, and if properly done the company will be compensated (but not as much as the ransom). I believe that Brazil did this a couple of years ago (with respect to an AIDS drug). Economical reasons may also be case.

    It is extraordinary rare that the article is used (don't know whether US patent law has it), but it just takes some action on the part of the government and a stack of money to boost the economy by giving anyone free access to a particular piece of technology, if that piece of technology is crucial and we can't afford to sit out the 20 year term before the patent lapses.

    Bert

  29. Is this a joke article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is pretty awful, even by Slashdot standards.

  30. Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Communist.

  31. What about a one year notification period? by Glass+Goldfish · · Score: 1

    I would rather front load the lawsuits. If a group of "industry leaders" with a "significant presence" in a field want a license-less standard, it shouldn't have hidden liability. A one year notification starts and anyone who states that the standard violates their patents can complain at the start. If someone makes a reasonable (as in a judge agrees) complaint of violation, the clock stops on the notification. The standard would have to be revised or the patent would have to be found to be invalid. Once the year long notification is over, you can't make a patent claim against the standard. Companies operating in a particular field with applicable patents will know what standards are coming out (I guarantee there would be at least a dozen websites related). And it's easier for them to nip a patent violating standard in the notification phase rather than sue a large number of unwary companies, unless patent trolling is in their business model.

    There would be complications related to determining what constitutes "industry leaders" or a "significant presence", but there will be lawyers involved anyway. It's just better to bring them in at the start.

  32. Re:Have you really thought this all the way throug by Nadaka · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Here is the thing.

    Software is the only industry that that is encumbered by both copyright and patents.

    Reasonable IP protection is a good thing.

    I like that there are patents and copyright.

    But they should not cover the same material in this way.

    Copyright is the more appropriate protection for software (though its duration is far to long).

  33. Yes, but by Kupfernigk · · Score: 1

    He was the lawyer, I was just a consultant. Guess who was taken notice of?

    --
    From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
    1. Re:Yes, but by Vellmont · · Score: 1


      He was the lawyer, I was just a consultant. Guess who was taken notice of?

      Officially of course the lawyer. That's more about posturing and group dynamics than anything else though. Privately I bet a lot of people thought the lawyers reply was unprofessional, and that of an ass. He was after all "only the lawyer", and not a leader setting the tone.

      --
      AccountKiller
  34. How about the other way around? by Vellmont · · Score: 1

    Instead of invalidating patents, why not just simply say all standards must not be patent encumbered?

    That turns "we're taking your great idea" into "we'll take any great ideas that you don't try to own, lock, stock, and barrel". Everyone knows the real money is always in delivering the solution and maintaining it, not trying to control the idea and own it. Large companies hate this of course, because they know that if they had to compete in a fair marketplace the small shops would eat their lunch since they can out-innovate most of the time (especially with software).

    --
    AccountKiller
    1. Re:How about the other way around? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I absolutely love your idea in principle. I personally believe, for instance, in using ODF, FOSS, etc. It is the best course of action in the long term, and ensures that I'm never stuck between a rock and a hard place when proprietary solutions fail me at their single point of failure -- the rights holder.

      However, it is wishful thinking that others will be rational about this. Companies only care about the bottom line a few months from now, not a few years. This makes sense for the CEO, who just wants to pocket as much as possible as quickly as possible. Individuals do the same thing without any justification at all.

      Official standards are completely irrelevant in the face of de facto standards.

      Frankly, we've already seen what happens when unencumbered tech is made a standard. Think about what happened with PNG/GIF. Now think about what happened with ODF/.doc/OOXML. Think about governments using MS products.

      Of course there are success stories (X.org), but they are unfortunately rare.

    2. Re:How about the other way around? by Moochman · · Score: 1

      Instead of invalidating patents, why not just simply say all standards must not be patent encumbered?

      Mod parent up. This would be a really nice, sensible state of things that I could imagine being realistically being applied to many (but probably not all) standards bodies.

      But even more pertinent is the question, why is the W3C allowed to put H.264 in the HTML5 spec? The whole premise of the web is that its specifications are open (i.e. royalty free), and that is one of the reasons it has become so popular. Have we learned nothing from GIF? Media formats that are specified as being embedded within HTML should be treated as if they are part of the HTML specification--a specification which is supposed to be royalty-free! Allowing H.264 in there is the epitome of saying one thing while doing another--pure hipocrasy!

    3. Re:How about the other way around? by optikos · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      But even more pertinent is the question, why is the W3C allowed to put H.264 in the HTML5 spec?

      H.264 is so popular with all mainstream-consumer standards bodies because its decode path's entire traffic-plane (with a rich set of hardware registers to the software control-plane in the device driver) is widely implemented in hardware, and the encode path is likewise implemented in hardware nearly as often. Competing standards' video traffic-planes are usually implemented entirely in software without any custom-hardware assist, which causes at least a decimal order of magnitude more power consumption and likewise at least a decimal orders of magnitude more performance burden on software. These excess orders of magnitude of additional effort in software erode battery life. Right now extending battery life is viewed as more important than extending the WWW's socio-political agenda. The standards are rewarding H.264's extreme efficiency in multiple dimensions. The electronics industry is rewarding H.264's extremely wide standards-adoption to more certainly recover their multi-millions of dollars/euros of non-recoverable engineering (NRE) costs of developing these ASICs. Is it a grand conspiracy against your socio-political agenda or is it merely a textbook example of a win-win engineering/business-model sweet-spot?

      The whole premise of the web is that its specifications are open (i.e. royalty free), and that is one of the reasons it has become so popular.

      The whole premise of being in business is to maximize profit, not pursue some sociopolitical agenda of transferring all ownership of the means of production to "the people". If you don't think that the most-widely-deployed most-highly-efficient greatest-quality-of-experience products are the goal (for greatest recovery of NRE by the most-affordable business model to satisfy the most paying-customers), then by definition you are something other than an engineer (even if someone in management & HR strokes your ego by putting the word "engineer" in your job title).

      Glossary: In the teledatacom industry [which includes the telephone network and the Internet (as pure inter-LAN data network) and the converged data-audio-video-signaling/routing-management network], the traffic-plane (a.k.a. data-plane a.k.a. user-plane) is where the end-user's bits are for, say, TCP or UDP payload, audio telephone call, or video feed, all of which are customarily in hardware for speed, electrical-power-consumption, and thermal-dissipation reasons. The control-plane is typically the software (device-driver) that controls (i.e., indirectly governs via look-up tables, where the hardware is doing the looking up) how the hardware itself switches the ingressing information flows to the egressing information flows, including inter-network-element signaling & routing that establish or tear-down information flows. The management plane is how the ISP or telco or carrier conveys command that configure the network-elements throughout their network. Nowadays, a everything from PDAs & iPad to PCs/Mac to servers likewise borrow a miniaturized variant of this traffic-plane in hardware plus control-plane device driver plus GUI management-plane ideology. This posting is at the heart of what Steve Jobs has been saying about the iPad regarding H.264 versus Flash.

    4. Re:How about the other way around? by Dragoniz3r · · Score: 1

      The problem I see with that is, what makes something a "standard"? And for that matter, why should the government be in any way involved with standards bodies? I mean, the standards bodies can say they won't support patent-encumbered technologies, but then they're just effed in the A because they have no technologies to put in their standards. So the only way your suggestion would become plausible would be for the government to somehow decide that ISO, IETF, W3C, etc, get these privileges of essentially stripping patents from anyone who submits their technology for use in a standard.
      Unless, you're proposing that once you publish your algorithm, you lose patent protection on it. Which seems a little misguided to me.

  35. Re:Have you really thought this all the way throug by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You think that there's a problem with standards now? What the hell do you expect to happen when companies are forced to give up their IP if they ever join a consortium?

    No, that's not how this should work. More like: This industry body is proposing a standard and has published a specification. Anyone who holds a patent over this standard must speak now or forever hold their peace.

    You shouldn't lose your patents by failing to join, you should lose any right to assert them when someone publicly announces in a specified way that they don't think what they're doing infringes anything, and you fail to speak up.

  36. Great Idea by Compaqt · · Score: 1

    I've said something along the same lines in posts on this subject over the past few weeks:

    The government should seize the H.264 patents via eminent domain or other legal structure, compensate the parties involved with a one-time payment, and make the patents freely available for all.

    Governmental use of a patented invention is viewed as an eminent domain taking of a license under the patent and not as a tort.

    The reasoning is the same as for seizure of real property which stands in the way of a public purpose (road, fort, etc.).

    The public purpose for freely shareable audio/video seems quite clear, especially if H.264 is going to be mandated (even indirectly) through various government decrees, regulations, etc., or even if the government adopts an existing industry standard.

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    1. Re:Great Idea by schnikies79 · · Score: 1

      No, no and no.

      Eminent domain is already overused. It should never be used for anything other than claiming property for necessary infrastructure.

      --
      Gone!
    2. Re:Great Idea by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Well, is the ability to communicate sounds and visuals digitally not necessary? I say it's highly necessary. You never needed to pay anyone for the encoding of sounds into the 26 letters of the Latin alphabet. Nor for printing (in the US). Why should people in the 21st century have to pay for each instance of digital communication? If this isn't a public purpose, what is?

      Especially if the government is going adopt H.264 as a defacto standard (which seems likely to happen by default).

      I agree that seizing a property only to turn around and give it to a specific private party (like giving ghetto properties to developers) is blatantly wrong.

      But that's not what we're talking about here.

      Since we're on the subject, is there any other way to build a road than by eminent domain if you don't want it to look like a step function?

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  37. Can't ever be done in the US .. here's why by gd23ka · · Score: 2, Informative

    Article the seventh [Amendment V]

    No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.

    ---> It's the last half sentence here ... ; nor shall private property taken for public use, without just compensation http://www.half-bakery.com/

    1. Re:Can't ever be done in the US .. here's why by Pence128 · · Score: 1

      Keyword: Person.

      --
      404: sig not found.
  38. There are no property rights in a patent by Skapare · · Score: 1

    Without patents at all, every inventor has equal rights to what he invents. He just doesn't have any protection from those that steal rights from those who don't invent. What a patent really does is, in the name of protecting an inventor's rights from those who steal, it actually steals the rights from subsequent inventors (just because they didn't get a patent first). There is no property right in a patent as that right is always held. Instead, there is the expectation that the government will block the thieves who would steal ... and also those who happened to have invented the same thing. That expectation is being treated as a property.

    The original purpose of a patent is to benefit the nation by encouraging invention that would otherwise not happen. Invention that would have happened, anyway, would benefit the nation, anyway. Patenting inventions that would have happened, anyway, actually hurts the nation, because it steals from the alternative inventors, destroys competition (for the term of the patent), and even discourages invention efforts (because of so many inventors doing so many things now, there is little assurance you could be first to the patent office).

    Any real property right is not in patents held, but rather, in the fact that others don't hold a patent that takes your property away. So when no one else has the patent, you get to keep the invention you made.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  39. It needs a big challenge by zogger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's completely absurd. I've used an analogy before. Did typewriter manufacturers demand a fee for stuff authors wrote on their machines? They had patents on typewriters. There's your legal precedent, and it gets to the heart of promoting the arts and sciences. These software patents throw a ridiculous roadblock towards that goal.

    Independent and concerned folks should stage a mass protest, video each other at outdoor protest sites, swap one dollar with each other for instant copies of what they shoot, on those compact flash things or USB sticks or whatever you use, making the clips be "commercial" as well, then upload the videos all over right then, and challenge those absurd rules. It's called civil disobedience, and large numbers work to get obviously stupid laws changed. Not three guys, but an organized across the nation "day of stupid retarded video software patents challenge", thousands of people, something like that, something that would make the news all over and couldn't be ignored. They just did this a few weeks or so back with reefer laws, mass smoke ins.

    I don't do video myself, but seems like if this is really a concern to so many people, interested folks could take this idea and run with it, do a facebook thing, all that social networking jazz a lot of you folks do, pick a day and just do it, organize away, start the chatter, add comments to youtube vids to get the word out, drop comments on blogs of interest, whatever it takes.

    OK, I'll offer a date, June 5th upcoming, that's on a Saturday. That's almost a full month to get the word out, "Protect your Right to be Creative with the hardware you purchased day. End software patents. Copyright, yes, patents, NO".

    1. Re:It needs a big challenge by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the breath of fresh air in series of corporatist apologies.

      I've been using the analogy that people weren't forced to pay to encode the sounds of language into the 26 letters of the Roman alphabet. And they shouldn't have to pay to encode audio/video into a common playable format.

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  40. legal precedents already exist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Legal precedents already exist for the use of patents that relate to, cover or form part of industry standards - look at the original Nokia vs Apple legal action (still ongoing, not expected to go to trial before 2011/2012), the issue in question is not whether Apple has the right to use Nokia's patents that cover key aspects of international standards for cellphones - they do - but under what terms Nokia has to license them. The law requires that the terms be 'reasonable' under these situations, particularly as Nokia effectively hid from the standards body that they owned key patents for the areas they were pushing to be mandated in the standard. Of course in this case, Nokia arguably has ulterior motives to pursuing legal action besides feeling they are not being reasonably compensated for the use of their patents.

  41. Patents are not property by mangu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    All patent-holders would need to be "justly compensated" for this taking of property.

    That's the problem with using loaded terms like "intellectual property". Patents are not "property". According to the Constitution which you mentioned (Section 8 - Powers of Congress):

    "The Congress shall have power ...
    To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;"

    An "exclusive right" is not a property. Car analogy: if I park my car at a vacant spot, I have the exclusive right to that spot as long as parking regulations allow, but I do not have property rights on that spot of the street.

  42. Re:There is already an article that would allow th by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

    The US government CAN use any patented technology for their own purposes without compensating the patent holder, but that won't work for H.264, unless you have the government run YouTube.

  43. Take it, it's a standard by SEWilco · · Score: 1

    So to wipe out a competitor's patent, push their technology into a standard.

  44. Two Cents A Dance by westlake · · Score: 5, Informative

    They'll come mug you for money at that point and it's NOT cheap.

    It's dirt cheap.

    Retail sale, disks or downloads:

    Where an end user pays directly for video services on a title-by-title basis ...royalties for video greater than 12 minutes (there is no royalty for a title 12 minutes or less) are...the lower of 2% of the price paid to the Licensee (on first arms length sale of the video) or $0.02 per title

    Paid subscription services:

    Where an end user pays directly for video services on a subscription-basis (not ordered or limited title-by-title), the applicable royalties per legal entity payable by the service or content provider are:


    100,000 or fewer subscribers per year. No royalty.
    100,000 to 250,000. $25,000
    250,000-500,000. $50,000.
    500,000 to 1 million $75,000.
    Over $1 Million. $100,000.

    Broadcast, Cable and Satellite:

    where remuneration is from other sources, in the case of free television...satellite and/or cable Transmission, and which is not paid for by an End User), the licensee (the broadcaster) may pay...according to one of two royalty options:

    (i) a one-time payment of $2,500 per AVC transmission encoder

    or (ii) annual fee per Broadcast Market

    starting at $2,500 per calendar year per Broadcast Markets of at least 100,000
    but no more than 499,999 television households
    $5,000 per calendar year per Broadcast
    Market which includes at least 500,000 but no more than 999,999 television households
    and $10,000 per calendar year per Broadcast Market which includes 1,000,000 or more television households.


    Free distribution over the Internet:

    In the case of Internet broadcast for which the End User does not pay remuneration for the right to receive or view, i.e., neither title-by-title nor subscription), there will be no royalty during the first term of the License (ending December 31, 2010), and after the first term the royalty shall be no more than the economic equivalent of royalties payable during the same time for free television.

    The Cap

    In the case of the sublicenses for video content or service providers, the maximum annual royalty ("cap") for an enterprise (commonly controlled legal entities) is... $5 million per year in 2010.


    $5 million a year for as many free H.264 video downloads (over 12 minutes) as Google has the capacity to host.

    License terms.

    Five years. 10% increase cap on renewals.

    SUMMARY OF AVC/H.264 LICENSE TERMS

    1. Re:Two Cents A Dance by aarroneous · · Score: 1

      They'll come mug you for money at that point and it's NOT cheap.

      It's dirt cheap.

      Retail sale, disks or downloads:

      Where an end user pays directly for video services on a title-by-title basis ...royalties for video greater than 12 minutes (there is no royalty for a title 12 minutes or less) are...the lower of 2% of the price paid to the Licensee (on first arms length sale of the video) or $0.02 per title

      Paid subscription services:

      Where an end user pays directly for video services on a subscription-basis (not ordered or limited title-by-title), the applicable royalties per legal entity payable by the service or content provider are:

      100,000 or fewer subscribers per year. No royalty. 100,000 to 250,000. $25,000 250,000-500,000. $50,000. 500,000 to 1 million $75,000. Over $1 Million. $100,000.

      Broadcast, Cable and Satellite:

      where remuneration is from other sources, in the case of free television...satellite and/or cable Transmission, and which is not paid for by an End User), the licensee (the broadcaster) may pay...according to one of two royalty options:

      (i) a one-time payment of $2,500 per AVC transmission encoder

      or (ii) annual fee per Broadcast Market

      starting at $2,500 per calendar year per Broadcast Markets of at least 100,000 but no more than 499,999 television households $5,000 per calendar year per Broadcast Market which includes at least 500,000 but no more than 999,999 television households and $10,000 per calendar year per Broadcast Market which includes 1,000,000 or more television households.

      Free distribution over the Internet:

      In the case of Internet broadcast for which the End User does not pay remuneration for the right to receive or view, i.e., neither title-by-title nor subscription), there will be no royalty during the first term of the License (ending December 31, 2010), and after the first term the royalty shall be no more than the economic equivalent of royalties payable during the same time for free television.

      The Cap

      In the case of the sublicenses for video content or service providers, the maximum annual royalty ("cap") for an enterprise (commonly controlled legal entities) is... $5 million per year in 2010.

      $5 million a year for as many free H.264 video downloads (over 12 minutes) as Google has the capacity to host.

      License terms.

      Five years. 10% increase cap on renewals.

      SUMMARY OF AVC/H.264 LICENSE TERMS

      Why is this buried and being ignored?! This should be modded +5 informative. Get your facts straight before your start your incessant whining...

    2. Re:Two Cents A Dance by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      100,000 to 250,000. $25,000

      So, if your project makes $100,001 a year, you have to pay MPEG-LA 25% of its income for their one single technical contribution. Thank God Tim Berners-Lee doesn't take another 25% for his work on linked computer networks.

      Dirt cheap, my ass.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  45. "industry-recognized standard"? is a syndicate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    An Industry standard would be the result of any syndicate that, in an effort to restrain trade to any one particular format, made a common agreement/effort to offer an identical product.

    The monopoly and anti-trust laws should be applied to syndicates that restrain trade by identifying a standard. If the standard has no paten/copyright/trademark* rights then there can be no restraint of trade and the syndicate (that is what they are) should be allowable.

    the tradeoff is the sacrifice of any and all government granted priviliges for intangible creations included/inferred in the standards.

  46. The answer is by jprupp · · Score: 1

    NO!

  47. Had a wee bit of vodka jelly by tuxish · · Score: 1

    Thought I was on Facebook and was looking for the "Like" button.

    --
    Death and taxes are both inevitable, however, death doesn't get worse year after year.
  48. "...this mess that government created"??? by ibsteve2u · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm not sure that industry can solve this mess that government created."

    I don't know about Australia, but if it has to do with protecting or accumulating wealth - the modern intent of patents - in America, then any associated government mess that has been created in the last 30 years was at the behest of, paid for, and crafted by industry.

    Hence, the average American's and the nation's interests are rarely represented. You only get "messes" when legislation is focused solely on the interests of a few.

    --
    Orwell: "In a Time of Universal Deceit, telling the Truth is a Revolutionary Act"
  49. possible workarounds by sjames · · Score: 2, Interesting

    There are several factors to the H.264 problem. The problem of patents on standards is hard to legislate away unless the legislature sets the standards. That solution SHOULD be applied to things like the electrical code (where it's a mandate as well as a standard). There are just too many problems waiting if it's applied to mere industry standards.

    Instead, that problem has to be solved by people behaving tastefully and not being idiots, so I suppose I'm saying it won't be solved.

    The second issue is the MPEG-LA's use of FUD to scare others away from more open standards (or at least give them an excuse). THAT can be partially cured by declaring a limited time to sue over a supposed infringement. It's been 10 years for theora. If they haven't found a reason to sue yet, there isn't a valid one. The principle of estoppel applies well here, but the high cost of court could be avoided by writing it into law as a presumption rather than something you have to argue in court.

    Narrowing the scope of patent suits by legally recognizing the right of a buyer to presume that relevant patents have been licensed and so absolving them of any further responsibility would help. For example, if my reasonably anticipated use of a cameras (that is, taking pictures with it for any purpose) violates a licensing agreement, it's the manufacturer and not me who can be sued over it.

    The rest of the problem will require court reforms (sorely needed anyway) to make going to court affordable for mere mortals and reforming the patent office so that it stops rubber stamping everything. Perhaps if a patent is ruled invalid in court, the USPTO should be on the hook for the costs of that court case (since if it had done it's job nobody would have been in court over the patent).

  50. We just need a small change to antitrust policy by Animats · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ANSI used to have a policy that they would not accept standards which contained patented components. That changed in the 1980s, I think. (The link to ANSI's patent policy is currently returning the message "Cannot connect to the configuration database. For tips on troubleshooting this error, search for article 823287 in the Microsoft Knowledge Base at http://support.microsoft.com./")

    The legal way to address this is to require that standards bodies, from IEEE to ANSI to MPEG-LA, lose their exemption to antitrust law if they promulgate standards which contain patented components. Without that exemption, when companies get together to agree on a standard, it's conspiracy in restraint of trade.

    In general, most of the more annoying patent problems are really antitrust problems. Anyone can get a very narrow patent on a very specific way of doing something. Such a patent is not useful unless the very specific way is a de-facto standard enforced by market dominance. That's an antitrust issue.

    The reason MPEG-LA gets away with this is that the Justice Department signed off on it in 1997. That's consistent with the FTC-DOJ 1995 guidelines in this area. Anyone can buy an MPEG-LA license under stated terms. So they meet the guidelines. The guidelines don't address the issue of the interaction of de-facto standards and market power. They should. That's what needs to be revised.

    For background, here's a speech by an FTC commissioner of the Clinton era on this issue. He makes the point that antitrust lawyers and patent lawyers don't talk to each other much and don't understand each other's fields. Also see this Justice Department Antitrust Division talk from 2007. If you want to talk intelligently about this issue, you need to read these materials.

  51. errata by westlake · · Score: 2, Informative

    $5 million a year for as many free H.264 video downloads (over 12 minutes) as Google has the capacity to host.

    Strike this.

    The $5 million cap applies to mega-corporations like Disney distributing content through many commonly owned channels and services.

  52. Well, allow me to retort. by Dreadneck · · Score: 1

    We could solve the H.264 debate if a country's legislature were to mandate that any patents that contribute to an industry-recognized standard were unenforceable in the application of that standard. Ideally, each standard would also be required to have a 'reference design' that could be used without further licensing.

    MPEG-LA Attorney: Sir, do you mean to say that we could end this debate about H.264 if we could simply get the government to nullify patents for any privately developed technology when it becomes recognized by the industry as the standard and require the developer to make the design of this technology freely available to the industry, thus ensuring the industry is able to manufacture and use said technology without indemnification to the developer?

    Disclaimer: Any Resemblance to Actual Events and/or Actual Persons, Living and/or Dead, is Purely Coincidental and has No Basis in Fact.

    I'm just saying...

    --
    Power does not corrupt - power attracts the corrupt.
  53. Government is not the answer... by danbeck · · Score: 1

    Government is not the answer to every problem. That's like trying to drive a screw with a $500 hammer.

    1. Re:Government is not the answer... by mrnobo1024 · · Score: 1

      Government created this problem in the first place, by recognizing software patents, by allowing the monopolies created thereby (like MPEG-LA) to sue people over such patents in government courts, and by sending police after the people sued if they fail to pay the monopoly.

      To stop enforcing patents is solving a problem with a reduction in the scope of government.

  54. Wait a second by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How are supposed "standards" that cannot be freely implemented any different from collusion?

  55. The wrong end of the telescope by westlake · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The stakeholders in H.264 are dominated by global industrial giants like Mitsubishi, NTT and Toshiba - about half are based in Korea and Japan. AVC/H.264 Licensors

    In the list of 817 H.264 licensees, Japan, China and Korea are extraordinarily well represented in every category. OEM manufacturing. Brand name consumer and industrial tech. Broadcast, cable and satellite distribution.

    What I see in H.264 is vertical integration.

    Encoders and decoders produced in the tens of millions for every product category.

    Brand name consumer products. Cell phones. Webcams. Camcorders. Blu-Ray players. HDTVs. Set top boxes.

    Industral and broadcast tech.

    A search of Google Shopping for "H.264 WiFi Camera" - typically home security video - will return 1,600 hits.

    Tell me how the geek stops this.

    How he keeps the cheap, versatile, Asian H.264 product out of his home markets. How he does it without igniting a trade war.

     

  56. Of course we can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reform the patent system.

  57. MPEG-LA prevents non-commercial use by Rix · · Score: 3, Interesting

    That's what this fight is about, and why Vorbis is being developed. And submarine patents do exist; there's much FUD by MPEG-LA members being spread about the possibility of Vorbis infringing yet unknown patents.

    What we really need is compulsory licensing at some percentage of the per head sale price. That way we still get the commercial value of patents without discriminating against non-commercial uses.

    1. Re:MPEG-LA prevents non-commercial use by Simetrical · · Score: 4, Informative

      And submarine patents do exist

      The term submarine patent originally referred to a scenario in which you'd file a patent, let the procedure stall indefinitely, and only complete the process once you have someone to sue. Formerly in the U.S., you'd then get the full patent term starting from when the patent was actually granted, which could give you extra years of patent life. It also meant that nobody could possibly know about the patent, because it didn't get published until the end. But you still got most of benefits of having the patent.

      The rules for granting patents in the United States were changed years ago, so this is no longer possible. Submarine patents thus do not, strictly speaking, exist anymore. But the term has caught on to just mean "patents no one knows about", and in that sense of course you still do have submarine patents.

      --
      MediaWiki developer, Total War Center sysadmin
    2. Re:MPEG-LA prevents non-commercial use by tambo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And submarine patents do exist; there's much FUD by MPEG-LA members being spread about the possibility of Vorbis infringing yet unknown patents.

      That's not a "submarine patent," which has a very specific meaning in this field.

      What you describe is just MPEG-LA spreading FUD. And the standard response here is: "patent app serial numbers or STFU." Either MPEG-LA can point specifically to the applications which (if they actually mature into patents) it believes are being infringed - or it can't, and its accusations of infringement are meritless. It's that simple.

      What we really need is compulsory licensing at some percentage of the per head sale price.

      Even looking past the obvious question ("How does this point relate at all to anything in this thread?")... compulsory licensing suggestions have a common problem: who establishes the pricing, and based on what data and guidelines?

      Usually, what people mean by these suggestions is: "Let's craft a body that's allowed to grant licenses to patented technologies for $cheap!" The problem with all such suggestions is that if you establish a body that (based on applicants' estimations) consistently underprices the value of those licenses, applicants will simply abandon the patent system - and keep their inventions as proprietary trade secrets. No more industry coalitions, no more industry standards like 802.11 and USB and HDMI... every company will make its own protocols, just like back in the 80's. Is that your notion of an ideal computing industry?

      --
      Computer over. Virus = very yes.
    3. Re:MPEG-LA prevents non-commercial use by gig · · Score: 1

      MPEG-LA does not prevent non-commercial use. They are only interested in commercial use. If you make money from MPEG-4, you pay a very, very small amount to fund the development of the technology.

      If you are using MPEG-4 non-commercially, you get a great codec in all the hardware, from cameras to players, you get support in editors, you can publish to the world and they can view it, all for $0.

    4. Re:MPEG-LA prevents non-commercial use by drhamad · · Score: 1

      I don't think that term means what you think it means.

      --
      -Daniel
  58. What do you guys care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    H.264 costs money and doesn't work with every browser (the tag)

    OGG is free and works everywhere (the tag)

    Time (and not words) will take care of the rest like it has always done.

  59. F.U.D. by westlake · · Score: 5, Informative

    And stating that it's relevant to video sharing sites- they're an enabler, but YOU are the one on the hook, not they (because there's yet another license THEY have to have to do what they're doing...) and you're still needing that license in addition to the one they're paying.

    Shorts under 12 minutes long are royalty free.

    Period.

    Amateur or professional production.

    Free or paid distribution. It doesn't matter.

    Royalties on SALES of disks or downloads are 2% of the retail price or 2 cents a title, whichever is LOWER.

    MPEG LA doesn't give a damn about your wedding videos.

    Subscription services with less than 100,000 paid subscribers are also royalty free. Your "viewer supported" Free Culture magazine on DVD+R is a go.

    Own a cable service or TV station in a market of less than 100,000 households?

    The one time fee for an AVC transmission encoder is $2,500.

    SUMMARY OF AVC/H.264 LICENSE TERMS

    1. Re:F.U.D. by westlake · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      To make this a little more clear:

      In the case of Internet broadcast (AVC video that is delivered via the Worldwide Internet to an end user for which the End User does not pay remuneration for the right to receive or view, i.e., neither title-by-title nor subscription),there will be no royalty during the first term of the License (ending December 31, 2010),
      and after the first term the royalty shall be no more than the economic equivalent of
      royalties payable during the same time for free television.


      The broadcast license for a single station in markets over 1,000,000 households is $10,000/yr.

      In markets of less than 100,000 households, a station can license AVC encoders for a one-time payment of $2,500 each - and that will be the end of it.

      The enterprise license - for broadcast and cable media giants like Disney - maxes out at $5,000,000/yr.

      Licenses are for five years, with a 10% cap on any increases on renewal.

      There are the problems for your "free" codec of choice:

      1 Google is a giant in Search.

      Hitachi, Mitsubishi, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung, Toshiba and the rest are giants in manufacturing.

      Consumer goods. Industrial technologies.

      H.264 hardware acceleration is available now or "coming soon" for everything from your cell phone to the 4Kx2K theatrical quality projector.

      OEM hardware support is everything.

      The geek builds his Field of Dreams player into a browser and prays for rain.

      2 The free alternative needs miraculous "ten-thousand-angels-dancing-on-the-head-of-a-pin" compression before anyone will see a dime in savings on media, storage and transmission.

      3 The free alternative needs editing and production tools as good as those available now from Adobe, Apple and Sony.

      SUMMARY OF AVC/H.264 LICENSE TERMS

    2. Re:F.U.D. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shorts under 12 minutes long are royalty free.

      Period.

      Until they decide to change it.

    3. Re:F.U.D. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "..MPEG LA doesn't give a damn about your wedding videos.."

      - as long as your wedding was max 11.59, of course, and presumably the videographer has shelled out for equipment with a "pro" license to record the happy ocassion, etc. - otherwise, technically, they can drag you before a court *at any point in the future they so choose*

  60. OOXML? by Ken_g6 · · Score: 1

    That could get interesting...making Microsoft provide a public-domain reference design for an OOXML reader/writer. :)

    --
    (T>t && O(n)--) == sqrt(666)
  61. So, who is paying? by Ilgaz · · Score: 1

    There are thousands of engineers, companies, universities, professionals work in the MPEG standards. It is not like some genius American engineer woke up one day and coded it and some evil lawyer named Mr. Mpeg La patented it.

    Did you hear the price Google paid to acquire and open source VP8? You would be sure surprised at the price they paid to patent lawyers just to make sure it won't burn them. Consider this, Nokia, always called "owner of Symbian", having a huge stake, had to work with an army of lawyers just to make it open source. It took 1 year.

    What kind of congress has the power to abolish an international patent and how do you plan to pay patent owners, the people who designed the codec/standard itself?

  62. The author doesn't understand the GPL by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

    We could solve the H.264 debate if a country's legislature were to mandate that any patents that contribute to an industry-recognized standard were unenforceable in the application of that standard.

    Now look at the GPL: If you publish source code using the GPL license, then you grant the receiver certain rights, like the right to modify and re-use the source code for any purpose, as long as it is published again under the GPL. If source code published under the GPL is covered by a patent, then you have to grant the receiver the right to use that patent as far as it covers any derived code.

    So if you created that proposed law, and I had therefore the right to create and use an h.264 encoder and decoder despite it being covered by patents, I still couldn't publish it under the GPL. The GPL requires permission use of the patents for purposes outside the application of that standard.

    This is what makes it impossible to create GPL software covered by RAND licenses (where each of many patent holders says: Anyone can use my patents as needed for this standard, as long as they don't sue me for using _their_ patents as needed by the standard. ) This is a whole that the GPL dug for itself, and which the likes of Microsoft just love to exploit; it makes it possible to offer license terms that are nice and fair and not acceptable for GPL software, which perfectly fits their goals.

  63. Re:Have you really thought this all the way throug by dgatwood · · Score: 1

    First, those standards are pure algorithmic patents, and thus are probably invalid to begin with. It's just a question of somebody making the right arguments in a patent nullification suit.

    Second, even if we assume the patents are valid, companies would not be "forced to give up their IP if they join a consortium." Companies would be free to declare IP that they care about to the consortium but not license it to them, at which point it could not be part of the standard, but they would retain full rights to it.

    Look, I have exactly zero sympathy for any company that pushes their patented technology on the world as part of an open standard. Interchange standards should be just that---standards that can be used anywhere. Patents and cross-platform compatibility/ubiquity are fundamentally incompatible. We either do away with patents for file formats or those patents do away with compatibility. It's really that simple.

    That said, adding patent laws to cover consortiums is still the wrong way to handle this. Consumers should have a fundamental right to any data of their creation, period, whether they are encoded using software from a consortium or from an individual corporation. What we need is a fair use law that applies to file format patents, e.g. something like this:

    Use of a patent without a license is not infringement if all of the following conditions are met:

    a.) The patent is or has ever been licensed for use in software or hardware designed for the storage, retrieval, encryption, decryption, compression, or decompression of user-generated data, including (but not limited to) photos, video, audio, or text.

    b.) Either:

    1.) It is generally believed to be impractical to design software to convert between the stored form and the original, uncompressed, unencrypted user data without infringing the patent or
    2.) The embodiment of the invention is in the form of hardware and the sole infringement is the use of that hardware by an end user in a way that falls outside the scope of the patent license.

    c.) The primary purpose for the unlicensed used of the patent is for manipulating user-generated data originally produced by a licensed implementation.

    d.) Either:

    1.) The patent is not strictly limited to covering the mechanical act of storing data on a physical medium or
    2.) The patent is strictly limited to covering the mechanical act of storing data on a physical medium, but the licensed hardware does not make the data available to the end user.

    Boom. No more problems with interchange formats and patents, all with minimal collateral damage. It's basically the patent equivalent of the DMCA's compatibility exemption. For example, this protects things for which alternatives exist (e.g. novel ways to implement MPEG in hardware), but does so in a way that protects consumers' right to their own data and their right to use hardware that they paid for.

    --

    Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  64. How about modeling it after "eminent domain"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about a law that gives the government the right to adopt standards, and also allows the government to seize any patents associated with those standards, using a process similar to "eminent domain"?

  65. Right along the lines of... by Lorien_the_first_one · · Score: 1

    Who is smart enough to figure out what is patentable and what is not? Are they really working for the patent office? Or are they gaming the system as required by their business model?

    --
    The diversity and expression of human opinion is essential to human survival.
  66. New standard? by nukem996 · · Score: 1

    Why is the debate for the video tag codec only between h264 and ogm? The video tag is such an important part of html5 it really needs to get decided. Both seem to have too many things against them for general use. Why not just start from scratch and create a new video codec for the web. Meeting all the requirments both legal and technical and finally end this.

    1. Re:New standard? by Moochman · · Score: 1

      The video tag is such an important part of html5 it really needs to get decided.

      Agreed.

      Why not just start from scratch and create a new video codec for the web. Meeting all the requirments both legal and technical and finally end this.

      You've got to be kidding. Never mind that it has taken years to get Theora where it is now technically -- it is also a fact that there are only so many ways to cut down on video bitrates. This is why, even though Theora is theoretically a "new" codec, it still allegedly could be called out for violating MPEG patents.

      Yet another "new" codec, short of some magical new video compression algorithm being discovered (chances slim to none), wouldn't change anything in regards to legal issues, and would need years to mature technically to the point where it is ready for prime time.

    2. Re:New standard? by nukem996 · · Score: 1

      Well at this rate we're not going to have anything. I think its better to get a number of people together from industry and come up with a new codec. Part of this would include all the major players(Apple, Microsoft, Google, etc) comming together and promising not to sue and help if anyone is sued for using this codec.

  67. Cancel Patents After 10x Profitable by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Patents are rationalized on the basis that protecting inventions from competition for "limited times" protects inventors from competitors who start competing with all their money intact, after inventors have spent their money inventing: disadvantage to inventors, who would be inhibited from inventing, interfering with the "progress in science and the useful arts" patents are instructed to promote.

    Patents should file their auditable expenses with their application. Once an invention has taken in 10x its costs in revenues, it should no longer be protected. And indeed "10x" is just a threshold that no one should be able to argue with. It should be reviewed on an ongoing basis, and have tiers depending on the cost ($1K expenses might require 10x return, but $1M should require less, and $1B should probably require less than 2x return on investment).

    Patents have no basis in guaranteed profits. Their only basis, all too often irrelevant in intellectual property commerce, rests in protecting breakeven. That is all that is necessary for inventors to risk spending their time and money on their idea.

    Once a patented invention is specified in an industry standard, it is a very short time before its risked development cost is repaid several times over. So even in this case, only the fundamental reform to fairness is needed to fix what's gone so terribly wrong with patent overreach.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Cancel Patents After 10x Profitable by Arker · · Score: 1

      An unintended side-effect of this would be that people could simply avoid making money directly from patent licensing, and thus preserve their power to pick and choose who they would permit to use their 'invention' and how indefinitely. Who would do such a thing? Not an individual inventor who needed the money, no, but well-heeled corporations who keep patent attorneys on staff and dont mind to throw a million here and a million there to prevent competition would be perfectly situated to exploit this.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  68. Not so fast, bucko: the Fifth Amendment by tepples · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Congress could.

    If Congress takes the essential H.264 patents from companies in MPEG-LA, these companies will likely plead the Fifth and sue for their "just compensation".

    1. Re:Not so fast, bucko: the Fifth Amendment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's only fair.

      Pay the consortium members back their patent application costs. I doubt it runs in the millions.

  69. If the GPU was open then this issue would be moot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the GPU was open then this issue would be moot because then you could simply choose what GPU decoders you wanted to install.
    So, NVidia / ATI supprted the ability to load new decoders, over time people would move away from H264. It would be as natural as how Open Office took off.

    Eventualy, no one would by a GPU unless the video codec they use were supported.
    A new standard would naturally develop, and also the decoders would evolve and get better very very fast.

    The analogy with Microsoft Office and Open Office is a good example.
    Many people install both and what ever they get from other people then can use.

    Finally, some may see this as fragmentation, but really its just allowing people to not be blackmailed.

  70. The best solution is to end patents. by CondeZer0 · · Score: 1

    The best way to solve this problem is to end the system of government granted monopolies that is the patent system.

    Or at the very least for the US to join the rest of the civilized world and abolish software patents.

    --
    "When in doubt, use brute force." Ken Thompson
  71. Simple by Moochman · · Score: 1

    There is no question that patent and copyright reform are desperately needed, and are the best solution. But since it seems like this won't happen anytime soon, the simplest solution would be for the MPEG-LA to change the licensing to something that prohibits themselves from changing their minds and extracting royalties at a later date. (Somewhat similarly to how the GPL ensures that a company can never backtrack on the open-sourceness of code.)

    Or, even better, make a legally binding promise to give up all royalties, commercial included, at a fixed date in the future. Something like the following would make the masses happy methinks:
    (however IANAL so I can't speak for accuracy, enforceability or realisticness of the language)

    "Until (--insert date here--), MPEG-LA garantees the royalty-free use of (--insert MPEG specs here--) for non-commercial purposes. Directly following this date, said specifications are to be available royalty free for both commercial and non-commercial purposes, indefinitely. Starting on said date, no royalties shall be applicable or enforceable by any party on the specifications in their current form as of this writing ((--current date--)). This statement is binding under law and cannot be retracted."

    As for the date, 2012 sounds good to me. :)

  72. The Supremes defer to Congress by tepples · · Score: 1

    the Constitution only allows patents where they promote the progress of useful arts

    The Supreme Court has ruled in Eldred v. Ashcroft and elsewhere that it will defer to Congress on what counts as "promot[ing] the Progress".

  73. there is no debate by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only debate is by the theroa crowd, who don't seem to be able to see that h.264 is the winner for this revision of hd content.

    my advice is to start working on a super hd 3d codec so your ready with something decent for next time.

  74. Re:Patents system is based on 18th Century technol by copponex · · Score: 1

    What people don't realize is that you could never patent the end result of an invention, only the particular way in which you solved the problem.

    You aren't patenting the 'idea of cutting grass' you are patenting the design and/or methods to make a machine that makes it faster than using scissors.

    The words. They mean things.

  75. Solution - Here it is... by rec9140 · · Score: 1

    1) No more patents
    2) No more trademarks
    3) No more copyright
    4) No more intellectual property rights
    5) invalidate all existing of the above

    In the 21st century none of these make sense any more time for them to go!

    Whine, cry, and moan all you want... until the above happens this mess is only going to get worse...

    Any of you think that the mpeg gestapo (thats what they are) is going to do anything but come for $$$ later is foolish.

    I can't stand mozilla and its programs..but in this instance I agree. NO h.264! NO WAY NO HOW!

    as much as crapple is just that crap... the no flash stance is a good move, OTHERS SHOULD FOLLOW! flash is bad, and it needs to go too!

    So flame on.....

    --
    1311393600 - Back to Black
  76. Only if you want to contribute it by weston · · Score: 2, Informative

    "I'm sorry sir, your idea has become too successful, we're going to have to take it away from you now."

    You've got a mistranslation, here. It's more like:

    "I'm sorry sir, you contributed your patented idea to standard X, you're not allowed to use your patent against anyone implementing X."

    or even:

    "I'm sorry sir, you contributed your patented idea to standard X, you're not allowed to use your patent against anyone using the reference implementation of X."

      So, in short, nobody would have the force of their patent involuntarily stripped, it'd be a voluntary part of participating in some standardization activities.

    At a minimum, I suspect it'd be helpful if someone came up with some good, marketable shorthand for a standard that is "open" in these ways.

  77. I'm still laughing by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    So you want to establish a system where if an idea turns out to be really good, so much so that it becomes widely used and an standard, that all of a sudden the inventors lose any ability to make money off the idea and they lose their company and their investments?

    Not exactly what I would pick as a means to encourage people to work or invest in this area.

  78. Building the better mousetrap by westlake · · Score: 1

    Could you patent lawnmowers?

    The clothespin. The lead pencil.

    The spring loaded snap mousetrap. The hand-pushed reel lawn mower.

    All have been patented again and again because inventors made significant improvements on the original idea.

    What you want in a mower is a less physically demanding machine, safety for the operator and bystanders, an even cut, and a product that is economical to build, ship and service.

    There is no one path to a solution.

    The power mower - the riding mower - introduces its own complications and hazards. From where I sit, automation make sense. Faster response time in an emergency. Greater fuel efficiency, and so on.

    That these improvements are implemented in software rather than hardware doesn't strike me as a meaningful distinction.

             

  79. Now you have two by the-matt-mobile · · Score: 1

    So... say you have some problem. You decide that the answer is getting the government to legislate a solution. Now you have two problems.

  80. Re:Patents system is based on 18th Century technol by evilviper · · Score: 1

    What people don't realize is that you could never patent the end result of an invention, only the particular way in which you solved the problem. With software, they are patenting end results,

    Your entire post is a non-sequitor in the context of H.264. H.264 patents are most certainly based on the specific way in which the data is transformed, and have nothing to do with the "end result".

    Ranting about "software" patents is also irrational. If you eliminate software patents, you only move the problem a step further down the line. While you could then distribute a software H.264 codec, as soon as that software is attached to a piece of hardware, it's falls under the realm of traditional patented technology, and would still have to pay royalties.

    So, eliminating software patents would make the loophole a bit larger, but that's all.

    --
    Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  81. Non-Consenting Inventor by PurpleCarrot · · Score: 1

    I think that this raises a question regarding non-consenting inventors. If an inventor who holds a patent is not a consenting party to the formation of the industry standard, should they lose their patent rights solely because someone decided to make a standard based around the patent? E.g. if a group of cotton makers created a "standard seed removal system for cotton" as an industry standard, should that have caused Eli Whitney to lose his patent on the cotton gin for it becoming a de facto standard when he never made it a de jure standard?

  82. Yes by ClosedSource · · Score: 1

    Governments could mandate that everyone had to use H.264. Wouldn't that end the debate by Legislation?

  83. Kicking a Gift Horse by gig · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    In the late 1990's, Linux users complained they could not see Internet video because it was all QuickTime format with commercial Sorenson codec.

    So Apple gave the QuickTime file format to MPEG for standardization, and it is now ISO/IEC standardized. A vendor-neutral codec was created. MPEG-4 replaced the DVD. Apple's iTunes Store did not ship QuickTime, they shipped MPEG-4.

    Now, Linux users can see Internet video. But now they're complaining that it's not in the nonstandard Ogg they prefer. Never mind that on a technical level, this would be like demanding that Linux users switch to DOS 3.3.

    MPEG-4 is totally free for non-commercial use. If you don't make money from it, you don't pay. If you make money, you kickback a tiny portion of it to fund development of the codec. It pays for itself because you can sell more video to people who can see it than otherwise. The fees are very low. Nobody has built a better alternative. Nobody can say "here is how you should have done it" because nobody else has done it. These Ogg fantasies are embarrassing. Show us the fucking code! You can't, because Ogg has atrophied for a decade while people in audio video built and distributed the equivalent of an online DVD and made the world rich with online video. Ogg is just the WMV of Linux.

    This debate really shows that you can't please political extremists and religious fundamentalists.

    1. Re:Kicking a Gift Horse by timmarhy · · Score: 1
      I really wish i had mod points for you.

      There really is a population of people who won't ever acknowledge that OSS isn't always the best tool for the job, and a big slice of that population seems to hang out on slashdot.

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      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  84. Governements could buy the patents... by MacroRodent · · Score: 1
    Suppose for very important standards, the governement (probably would have to be several, " a coalition of the willing") would buy all patents relating to it, and freeing them as far as said standard is concerned (costly, but less so than a minor war, for example).

    There is precedent: Daguerrotype and the French governement. From wikipedia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daguerreotype)
    Instead of Daguerre obtaining a French patent, the French government provided a pension for him.[6] In Britain, Miles Berry, acting on Daguerre's behalf, obtained a patent for the daguerreotype process on August 14, 1839. Almost simultaneously, on August 19, 1839, the French government announced the invention as a gift “Free to the World.”

  85. Re:There is already an article that would allow th by raynet · · Score: 1

    Yay, I want to see GovTube..

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    - Raynet --> .
  86. It's software and not patentable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's software and not patentable. It's maths and not patentable.

    ***Implementing*** ***efficiently*** in silicon could be patented, just as any sufficiently advanced mousetrap can be.

    So, the "just compensation" would be bugger all.

    1. Re:It's software and not patentable by tepples · · Score: 1

      It's software and not patentable. It's maths and not patentable.

      In what case has a U.S. appellate court held that novel methods of information processing are categorically not patentable subject matter?

  87. That's a QUANTISED leap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's a QUANTISED leap, not quantum. I can give you 1p but I can't give you 3/7ths of a penny. Quantised.

  88. Patents are deliberately not private property by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Patents are deliberately not private property. You have to DISCLOSE the idea.

    Trade Secrets would be the closes IP gets to private property.

  89. Only if you want to mandate your patent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only if you want to mandate your patent in a standard. Don't want to lose your patent? Don't push for it to be in the standard.

    PS how does this work with RAMBUS who patented stuff AFTER they pushed it into the standard? It wasn't THEIR patent, they just filled in the forms.

  90. Best thing.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To ever happen to digital video was H.264.

    Taco Dean

  91. Reading comprehension, D- by westlake · · Score: 1

    So, if your project makes $100,001 a year, you have to pay MPEG-LA 25% of its income for their one single technical contribution

    That is 100,000 subscribers to your paid subscription service. The Strip Club Channel at $20/mo. AVC license $25,000/yr. Your monthly gross $2 million.

  92. Thin edge of the wedge by cramhead · · Score: 1

    Acceptance to H.264 as a standard, even a defacto one, IS acceptance of the patented for profit technology into what is currently a patent free community shared environment. This will change the face of the internet as we know it

  93. Official Standards versus De Facto Standards by Mike216 · · Score: 1

    Isn't the issue of the respective companies keeping their IP handled by the fact that we're talking about official standards and not DeFacto ones? No one would have their IP ripped from their hands, they just couldn't reap the benefits of calling themselves an ISO standard in exchange for nothing. It seems to me that the whole point of having a standard is negated when it's at the mercy of an entity whose best interests are the monetization of it above other concerns.