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I see this as meaning that Rockbox has nothing to worry about.
And then those of us who ripped from CDs, and used an unencumbered format willl laugh and laugh.
Could this be the big break for OGG/Vorbis and AAC? :-P
AAC is fairly patented as well, though, I thought.
Quote from: Llorean on February 27, 2007, 12:09:16 PMAAC is fairly patented as well, though, I thought.Hmm. I've always heard of AAC as an "open standard". It's an MPEG standard anyway.
From the wikipedia article on AAC:"In contrast with the MP3 format, which requires royalty payments on distributed content, no licenses or payments are required to be able to stream or distribute content in AAC format. ... However, a patent license is required for all manufacturers or developers of AAC codecs. [4] It is for this reason FOSS implementations such as FAAC and FAAD are distributed in source form only, in order to avoid patent infringement."Ok, so not as open as I thought.OGG/Vorbis FTW!
I'm sure if OGG/Vorbis became widespread enough, someone would begin pursuing patent claims on it in some manner or another.
I can see vorbis becoming the standard because it is patient-free,
Although wouldn't vorbis stay gpl, to start pursuing patent claims on it would mean the license would have to change.
Ogg Vorbis is a completely open, patent-free, professional audio encoding and streaming technology with all the benefits of Open Source.
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