MPEG Continues With Royalty-free MPEG Video Codec Plans
yuhong writes "From the press release: 'In recognition of the growing importance that the Internet plays in the generation and consumption of video content, MPEG intends to develop a new video compression standard in line with the expected usage models of the Internet. The new standard is intended to achieve substantially better compression performance than that offered by MPEG-2 and possibly comparable to that offered by the AVC Baseline Profile. MPEG will issue a call for proposals on video compression technology at the end of its upcoming meeting in March 2011 that is expected to lead to a standard falling under ISO/IEC "Type-1 licensing", i.e. intended to be "royalty free."'"
I think I can save MPEG a lot of time. I've found a royalty-free container, a video codec and an audio codec we can all use:
http://www.webmproject.org/
So we won't find any videos of Charles, Camilla, William and Kate, Harry and the rest of the family in that format then
Better than Mpeg 2 they say? Well I should hope so. And AVC Baseline isn't great. They're clearly making some crap/free encoder so that they can start charging more $$$ for their good ones. The only issue for them is that Google/Xiph have good ones that will always be free. If MPEG tries to force this new standard people will move to VC8 which has been around for some time.
Since the members of the MPEG group are making such good money from the royalties, why would they want to undermine that project with something that's free? It's in their interest to make it only slightly less crappy than VP8 (which won't be hard). This will kill the motivation to develop the independent free codecs, and this is what MPEG wants, I guess. But they don't want to really risk killing the goose that lays the golden eggs.
Probably just another knee-jerk reaction to VP8/WebM. And you can bet this "royalty free standard" will still be protected by tons of patents. It just keeps getting more interesting all the time. Just what we need, though, yet another video standard.
Why don't MPEG-LA just make the CODEC royalty free for consumers instead of trying to pull more of the same arguably illegal monopoly behaviour? I've no idea what US or EU law might apply but the way MPEG-LA sucker punched the market by stitching it up with backdoor deals and fine print in consumer products is very iffy. I would be surprised if it's not illegal or some regulator wouldn't find them guilty of abusing their power. The way I see it this new CODEC is just a distraction from their patent trolling and consumer backlash. Someone should just prosecute them and bury this market abuse for good.
I happen to know that H.264 was _also_ supposed to be royalty free, with certain patents being reverse-engineered around in the standards development. MPEG-LA had different ideas, and they may have different ideas about this new work as well.
instead of linking to a splog that links to a blog that links to the press release, why not link to the press release?
http://mpeg.chiariglione.org/meetings/daegu11/daegu_press.htm
I would rather /. be sploglink free than MPEG be royalty free
I for one don't care all that much about patents issues, as long as Mozilla and Opera can implement it to me it means problem solved.
HTML5 can be standardized and we can move on with our lives.
Whether it's VP8 or whatever.
If it's quality is better than VP8 all the better, those unhappy with VP8's output can now be happy.
I got a feeling this codec will be highly optimized for low bitrates and streaming, so it won't compete with H.264 main profile for other uses.
Should I brace for another exciting period where a truckload of different codecs will be necessary for watching a video on internet, no one with an native Linux installer and no support whatsoever? Amazing! I cannot wait.
Even if no one comes forward with a patent this seems to be turning out to be a somewhat effective fud campaign.
MS monopoly is based on closed formats. They will not allow any royalty free standards which would allow for example linux usage.
A free codec better than MPEG2, but not as good as H.264. So they're re-inventing Theora?
Whatever happened to Dirac? Wasn't it meant to achieve greatness as open, free and high quality video codec?
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
It is interesting to see this sudden almost about-face by the MPEG group. It will be interesting to see if they produce something better than VP8. However, VP8 is a very reasonable replacement for H.264. I have normal vision (i.e. without glasses) and I have a hard time discerning any differences between H.264 and VP8. All things being equal, I'd sooner go with something both open source and patent unencumbered.
All I want is ONE high-quality video format standard for websites that works on all browsers and all platforms with the stock operating system. IMHO, this is the final battle in the browser/OS wars. No, I don't want to host my content on Youtube. No, I don't want Flash. It's down to WMV and H.264 (Ogg? What's that?). WMV always looks like crap. Ain't It Cool, a connoisseur of film, always makes a point of announcing that a trailer is in "glorious Quicktime". But of course there are still a lot of Windows users out there who don't have or can't get Quicktime installed. Feh.
EXPECTED and INTENDED 'nuf said
But WebM looks no better than MPEG2.
DivX/Xvid (MPEG-4 Part 2) is stronger than MPEG-2 video, and Theora is roughly tied with that. VP8 (WebM video codec) is stronger than DivX and Theora, and as I understand it, it's close to the baseline profile of AVC.
The only thing patents are doing is holding back innovation, increasing costs and unjustly enriching those who no longer have an incentive to offer anything but dead labor.
And since it's already compressed, any further compression is reducing quality even more--which makes for less market value of the quality of your work period.
Any editing of the raw footage will result in a recompression unless it's only cuts and only at keyframe boundaries. At that point, the quality difference between VP8 and baseline-profile AVC becomes negligible.
Ok, if you were going to post a knee-jerk response about their intentions, motivation etc please note that MPEG != MPEG-LA.
This is how Google should have released WebM to start with;
Submit it to a standards body for review.
Create an official specification (not just a token specification that is secondary to their implementation).
Have an independent body verify that it is in fact Patent Free.
As opposed to;
Buy a company, tweak the format and release it without peer review.
Write a synopsis of how the format work and then say "But if this is different to how our code works, our code is canonical".
Stick it up on a website with a big sticker that says "Patent Free".
These are the reasons why Apple's Facetime standard is being ignored by the rest of the industry, and is a contributing factor to why WebM will be ignored by the rest of the industry.
http://www.robglidden.com/2010/04/mpeg-resolution-on-royalty-free-standardization/
"No clear conclusions could be drawn from the diverse responses. Furthermore, neither MPEG nor ISO can guarantee that a standard developed with the goal of being RAND or royalty-free will actually be RAND or royalty-free since the analysis of patents is outside of the scope and competence of ISO and MPEG."
H264 looks no better than MPEG2. In fact, it looks WORSE than MPEG1 at low bitrates!