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The Daily Mink - All the Mink, All The Time, via Syndication☞ Will Run And Run
☞ Transparency: Wrong and Right
ACTA Declaration - You Did It!As an update to my posting this morning asking everyone to contact their MEPs and ask them to sign the Written Declaration 12/2010 on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, I just heard from Jérémie Zimmermann at La Quadrature du Net that... ☞ Governments Protecting Outdated Business Models
Is Your MEP Aware Of ACTA?Right now, a new trade agreement is being secretly negotiated that could impose on European businesses draconian rules that could result in new forms of legal action. The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) goes far, far beyond the scope of its... ☏ URGENT: Has Your MEP Signed The ACTA Written Declaration?
Since we now only need nine more signatures in the next two days to enact this Written Declaration (which is not extreme – it makes very reasonable statements about the European Parliament’s attitude towards ACTA), you can make a real difference by calling your MEP or if you prefer using WriteToThem, and asking them to sign the Declaration so that the attempt at an end-run round democracy is rejected by the Parliament. You might want to say something like:
The following had NOT signed at 11pm UK time on Monday:
If you can’t remember who your MEPs are, open WriteToThem in a new tab or window, enter your postcode and check down the list. If you’re in Europe but outside the UK, the list on Quadrature can be sorted by country for you to check. ☞ Innovation, and how to prevent it
☞ Modern
☞ Webmink’s Law of Preservation of Win
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⚐ Gosling WebcastNext week JavaZone, the conference that brought you Lady Java and Java Forever will be held in Norway. To celebrate the opening of the new ForgeRock Norway office, we’ve arranged for a party just before the conference starts, on Tuesday evening. If you are in Oslo and would like to attend, please send an RSVP to the address on the web site. As part of that, James Gosling and I will be “beaming in” via webcast to give short talks and maybe even answer a few questions. If you’d like to join the webcast (using DimDim), please register on our website. Related Articles
★ H.264 Is Not The Sort Of Free That Matters
At first sight, this sounds great. Headlines have popped up all over the place which might lead one to believe that everything is now fine in the area of video streaming on the internet and we can all proceed without fear of having video taxed. But I’d suggest leaving the champagne corked for now. Unpacking The NewsThe statement actually takes a lot of unpacking, probably intentionally so. H.264 is the widely-used “MP4” video format created many years ago by the Motion Picture Experts Group, MPEG. Those “experts” were mostly associated with various corporations and research labs, and the international standard they created was heavily encumbered with patents. Realising that no-one much would use the standard if each user had to go negotiate patent licensing terms with a large number of separate parties, the patent-holders wisely decided to get together outside the scope of MPEG and create the “MPEG Licensing Authority”, MPEG-LA. Despite the name, MPEG-LA is nothing to do with the standards group itself. It’s a for-profit company devoted to making the patent problem worse in the name of making it “easier to handle” by creating patent pools for all sorts of other technology areas, beyond the media formats they already police. Go looking for the exact terms under which they are offering “free use” in this case and you’ll find they are not keen for you to know. The best available are summaries that are sketchy about the exact definitions of terms. They had indeed in February decided to waive licensing charges for what they describe as “where remuneration is from other sources” than direct payment by the viewer to the broadcaster. Their original commitment was to leave such uses untaxed until 2015 and thenceforth to tax at a rate no greater than on-demand internet TV viewing. Their announcement last week commits to never charge under these circumstances. Chain Of TaxesTheir use of language helps us understand what’s really happening, though. For H.264 video to reach your browser, there is a chain of events that has to happen, and MPEG-LA is taxing every one of them apart from, now, the last. First, the H.264-format video needs to be created – but that isn’t free under this move. Then it needs to be served up for streaming – but that isn’t free under this move. There then needs to be support for decoding it in your browser – but adding that isn’t free under this move. Finally it needs to be displayed on your screen. The only part of this sequence being left untaxed is the final one. Importantly, they are not offering to leave the addition of support for H.264 decoding in your browser untaxed. In particular, this means the Mozilla Foundation would have to pay to include the technology in Firefox. If they could do that. But they would not be able to do so, since the software they create is open source and thus needs to be able to be freely used by others, as a whole or as a kit of parts, without any restrictions. A license bought from MPEG-LA would not be “sublicensable”, meaning they could not gain the right for any arbitrary open source community member to do the same as Mozilla was allowed with H.264. Consequently they are unable to benefit in any way from this apparently generous action by MPEG-LA. Why Now?Why are MPEG-LA taking this action now? They wouldn’t say clearly when they were asked, so we’re left to guess. It seems likely that it’s an action induced by Google’s WebM CODEC. At a minimum, MPEG-LA owes to its members a duty to maintain the commercial competitiveness of H.264 over WebM. But there may be more to it than that. When WebM was announced, MPEG-LA made predatory noises and tried their best to instill fear, uncertainty and doubt in the market through veiled threats of patent litigation against Google and WebM. It may be they are getting ready to launch that attack, seeing this as the ideal moment for the opening of a third front of patent litigation against Google after Oracle and Paul Allen have started the war. Whether or not that “Axis” forms, the news is nowhere near as good as other commentators would have us believe. The future of the web and of web video depends on open source software, and H.264 remains unusable in open source because of patent threats. MPEG-LA’s apparently magnanimous gesture offers as little to open source as their original tactical move. Given the tendency for commentators to stick to directly-causal explanations, they seem to be getting away with it despite the fact it really changes nothing with respect to modern adoption of H.264. We should not be affording them so much credit for it. [First published on ComputerWorldUK] Related Articles
☞ Social Dystopia
Hold The Celebrations; H.264 Is Not The Sort Of Free That MattersAt the end of last week, the MPEG-LA consortium announced they were extending the arrangement whereby they allow 'web uses' of the patents reading on the H.264 standard that they administer for their members to be licensed without charge. The... Should Open Source Communities Avoid Contributor Agreements?A collaborative activity dubbed Project Harmony is now under way between corporate and corporate-sponsored participants in the free and open source software communities (not to be confused with the Apache Java project of the same name). The project seeks to... GNU/Linux - finally it's Free softwareThis may come as a shock, but all GNU/Linux distributions to date have been built with essential software under a licence that clearly meets neither the Open Source Definition nor the Free Software Foundations' requirements for a Free software licence.... "Which Open Source Licence" Is The Wrong QuestionVarious commentators are beginning to pick at the threads of the rediscovered collaborative model for open source now that the "open source bubble" is being superseded. This is a return to what many of us regard as "real open source"(the... Open Source Trade Associations Lack SanctionsA controversy developed last week when the author of an article concerning the Java lawsuit quoted what I said on Twitter in 140 tongue-in-cheek characters:"The ORCL-GOOG case makes OIN and the Linux Foundation look like the League of Nations at... No Comment on Oracle vs GoogleI have no comment on the news that Oracle is suing Google over Android's use of Java. But there are a few data points I'd like to draw to your attention.The news: Oracle sues Google over Android and mobile... Open Source: "The King Is Dead, Long Live The King"I wrote last week about the end of the "open source bubble": "The anomaly is not that projects like Hadoop or OpenStack lack a company 'monetising' them - it's that we believe open source projects ought to have such... Will Illumos Bring OpenSolaris Back To Life?Today sees the launch of the Illumos Project, heralded last week in a message on the OpenSolaris mailing lists. The announcement caused much excitement, with many assuming it was a fork of OpenSolaris or another OpenSolaris distribution. Illumos is... Is The "Open Source Bubble" Over?I was pleased to be able to attend this year's OSCON, O'Reilly Media's open source convention held once again in Portland, Oregon in mid-July. There have been numerous reports about it, not least from the New York Times, but... iPhone Jailbreaking Decision Is Temporary ReliefWhile the decision by the US Library of Congress to create exceptions to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) for unlocking cellphones and jailbreaking iPhones (among other things) in the USA are very welcome, the reaction has been just... San Francisco & The Bay Bridge
webmink posted a photo: (From Photo Mink on Tue Jul 27 22:59:40 BST 2010)Open Source Does Not Need "Monetising"It's common to hear commentators and business leaders justifying practices that wouldn't be recognised as "open source" on the grounds that they have to make money somehow. Phrases like "we can't give everything away" garnish the thought, and it's... Shasta, from 20,000ft above Lassen
webmink posted a photo: (From Photo Mink on Wed Jul 21 07:03:47 BST 2010)Really Open Source Cloud Computing Arrives At LastThis week I'm attending the Open Source Convention in Portland, Oregon, along with the ancillary events it attracts. Today's report covers the significant news of a true, community-driven open source cloud project announced today and the impact the so-called... A Considered Future For OpenSolarisYou may have seen some of the news reporting of the OpenSolaris Governing Board (OGB) meeting that was held last Monday (I am an elected member of the Board). At a meeting with an unusually large number of community... Open Source Needs To Have An Unfair Advantage To SucceedA guest post from Mårten Mickos in response to Simon Phipps's statement of opposition to so-called "open core" models. Mickos argues that "for an open source company to become commercially successful, it needs to have an unfair advantage against... Open Core Is Bad For YouThe open core model is being feted as the new default open source business model. But I assert it does not deliver and sustain the principle that delivers cost savings and flexibility to the customer - software freedom. As... The Anniversary Rose
webmink posted a photo: Blooming fragrantly and beautifully again. (From Photo Mink on Sat Jun 26 15:58:05 BST 2010)[Daily Mink last updated Thu, 9 Sep 2010 01:43:13 BST by Planet Roller] |
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