Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Apple Businesses

Apple Delays QuickTime 6 Over Proposed MPEG-4 Licenses 245

znu writes: "Apple announced at the QuickTime Live! conference today that there's a public preview of QuickTime 6 with full MPEG-4 support ready to ship, but the terms of the proposed MPEG-4 license are holding it back. For those who haven't been following this, MPEG wants $0.25 per encoder/decoder for MPEG-4, up to $2 million per company per year. Apple is fine with that. But MPEG also wants content distributers to pony up $0.02/hour for any content that's distributed for profit. Apple feels that determining just what is "for profit" will be problematic, and that this pricing will seriously inhibit MPEG-4 adoption. You are encouraged to complain to MPEG LA about this situation."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Delays QuickTime 6 Over Proposed MPEG-4 Licenses

Comments Filter:
  • Re:hmm (Score:0, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 13, 2002 @03:47AM (#2998959)
    Yeah, it's annoying to have so many file formats for your porn collection, eh?
  • by nurightshu ( 517038 ) <rightshu@cox.net> on Wednesday February 13, 2002 @03:55AM (#2998976) Homepage Journal

    The 25 cents per encoder/decoder is bad enough, but then charging by the hour as well?

    You know, I don't really have a problem with them charging $.25 per codec. The developers of the MPEG-4 standard deserve to be compensated for their time, and money is a pretty good universally understood medium (popped popcorn is often too bulky to mail in mass quantities, and oral pleasure from each purchaser could be difficult -- and in today's epidemiological climate, hazardous). So more power to 'em, I say.

    The $.02/hour scheme does seem a little tough to enforce, though. I mean, if I'm selling for-profit movies (and really, there's only one type of movie that's truly profitable on the World Wide Pr0n Repository), don't you think it would be in my best interests to lowball the estimate just a teensy bit? "Well, I'm going to sell movies encoded in MPEG-4, but only, um, three hours' worth. Yeah, that's the ticket! Three hours -- here's your six cents. Bye!"

    Seems to me like this is yet another case of greed being foiled by stupidity.

1 + 1 = 3, for large values of 1.

Working...