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Have the patents for H.264 MPEG-4 AVC expired yet?

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4 points by Velocifyer 2 months ago · 2 comments

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palata 2 months ago

I find the video codecs situation very confusing.

Without even getting started on the insane fact that there are multiple names for the same technology (H.264 a.k.a. AVC a.k.a. MPEG-4 Part 10, related to H.265 a.k.a. HEVC a.k.a. ...).

I think that there being a patent on H.264 means that whoever manufactures a board that wants to support H.264 needs to pay royalties, which explains why some newer boards (like RPi) just let you use the CPU instead?

But then what does it mean that the patent of H.264 have expired in big parts of the world? Does anybody care?

Finally, there are open source alternatives to those. Why the hell don't we just all use them and forget about those patents?

  • tripflag 2 months ago

    h264 still makes sense in some applications because it is relatively computationally cheap, and has very wide adoption in both software and hardware.

    in the case of HEVC/h265, one of the main reasons today is Apple using that codec for photos (heif/heifs/heic/heics); it never came close to the popularity and adoption that AVC/h264 did. AV1 is superior to h265 in most ways; there is little technical reason to use hevc.

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