Ryan smith
2009-Jun-11 04:06 UTC
[theora-dev] Response to your questions about my suggestions i sent in yesterday
I sent in some suggestions regarding Theora yesterday and I got some questions from you guys so I'll answer them.?i said this:Theora should have a feature that disables print screen and video recording software from capturing Theora videos.?Alot of you asked me about the Fair Use law. My answer is this. i do know about fair use.?The?problem is, alot of people don't obey the fair use law as u see with companies getting youtube to take down full videos of their tv shows.?People can still have fair use if u disabled printscreen etc. They can get a digital camera and take a photo of the screen. But it will waste more of a person's time who uploads full tv shows which is not fair use, and anything that makes it harder for?a person who breaches the fair use law is a good thing.? Think of it like plasma and lcd tv's, most of them do not have a hard drive recorder built into them?to record?tv shows. You have to buy a dvd recorder seperately. There is no law that says lcd/plasma tv manufacturers have to have a hard drive inside?the tv's?so people can record and use the video for fair use.?Musicians don't have to provide written lyrics to their songs so people may have to listen to the entire song and write?down the lyrics?themselves.?Alot of dvd's have copy protection on them so people don't make?copies and sell them.?So that's why if it's possible, Theora should disable printscreen and video capture software from recording videos using the Theora codec and people can still have fair use. I think there is some Actionscript code that can disable printscreen etc for Flash videos so Theora should try.?Some of?you thought my suggestions are not for this mailing list. i'm sorry for that but i am only a technology newbie so i didn't know.?i also said this:Theora should have a feature where when a user plays a video using the?Theora player, the video will be compressed so the file size is smaller and??it will be faster to load. The quality of the video should remain the same.??For example, some 2 hour 16:9 Widescreen High definition 1080p videos are??4Gigabytes in size, so Theora should compress this 4GB video into 100MB??without losing any quality.?Now for those that found this funny because?you think it's impossible, well all i can say?is new technologies are coming out all the time. 100 years ago they didn't even have cellphones, and now we do.?Just this year, researchers have found a way to store 100 DVD's of information onto a single DVD that can be found here:http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10246057-1.html?So maybe there is a way to compress a 4GB movie into 100MB without losing any quality. -- Be Yourself @ mail.com! Choose From 200+ Email Addresses Get a Free Account at www.mail.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.xiph.org/pipermail/theora-dev/attachments/20090610/7fbf1333/attachment.htm
salsaman
2009-Jun-11 05:15 UTC
[theora-dev] Response to your questions about my suggestions i sent in yesterday
On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 1:06 AM, Ryan smith<ryan14 at mail.com> wrote:> I sent in some suggestions regarding Theora yesterday and I got some > questions from you guys so I'll answer them. > > i said this: > Theora should have a feature that disables print screen and video recording > software from capturing Theora videos. > > Alot of you asked me about the Fair Use law. My answer is this. i do know > about fair use.?The?problem is, alot of people don't obey the fair use law > as u see with companies getting youtube to take down full videos of their tv > shows.?People can still have fair use if u disabled printscreen etc. They > can get a digital camera and take a photo of the screen. But it will waste > more of a person's time who uploads full tv shows which is not fair use, and > anything that makes it harder for?a person who breaches the fair use law is > a good thing. > ? Think of it like plasma and lcd tv's, most of them do not have a hard > drive recorder built into them?to record?tv shows. You have to buy a dvd > recorder seperately. There > is no law that says lcd/plasma tv manufacturers have to have a hard drive > inside?the tv's?so people can record and use the video for fair > use.?Musicians don't have to provide written lyrics to their songs so people > may have to listen to the entire song and write?down the > lyrics?themselves.?Alot of dvd's have copy protection on them so people > don't make?copies and sell them. > ?So that's why if it's possible, Theora should disable printscreen and video > capture software from recording videos using the Theora codec and people can > still have fair use. I think there is some Actionscript code that can > disable printscreen etc for Flash videos so Theora should try. >The reason I found this funny - a) theora is a codec (data), not a program (code). You should look up the difference. and b) even if it were code, it is simply not possible for one program to affect another in this way. For the same reason, I cant send an email that automatically disappears after 1 week - because it is up to the email reading program whether it deletes the email or not. Do you understand this ?> Some of?you thought my suggestions are not for this mailing list. i'm sorry > for that but i am only a technology newbie so i didn't know. > > i also said this: > Theora should have a feature where when a user plays a video using > the?Theora player, the video will be compressed so the file size is smaller > and??it will be faster to load. The quality of the video should remain the > same.??For example, some 2 hour 16:9 Widescreen High definition 1080p videos > are??4Gigabytes in size, so Theora should compress this 4GB video into > 100MB??without losing any quality. > > Now for those that found this funny because?you think it's impossible, well > all i can say?is new technologies are coming out all the time. 100 years ago > they didn't even > have cellphones, and now we do.?Just this year, researchers have found a way > to store 100 DVD's of information onto a single DVD that can be found here: > http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10246057-1.html >I read the article, they talk about storing 100 regular DVDs on a special new type of DVD, (which obviously has at least 100 times the storage capacity). Salsaman.> So maybe there is a way to compress a 4GB movie into 100MB without losing > any quality. > -- > Be Yourself @ mail.com! > Choose From 200+ Email Addresses > Get a Free Account at www.mail.com! > _______________________________________________ > theora-dev mailing list > theora-dev at xiph.org > http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/theora-dev > >
Tom Sparks
2009-Jun-11 05:53 UTC
[theora-dev] Response to your questions about my suggestions i sent in yesterday
--- On Thu, 11/6/09, salsaman <salsaman at gmail.com> wrote:> To: "Ryan smith" <ryan14 at mail.com> > Cc: theora-dev at xiph.org > Received: Thursday, 11 June, 2009, 3:15 PM > On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 1:06 AM, Ryan > smith<ryan14 at mail.com> > wrote: > >> > i also said this: > > Now for those that found this funny because?you think > it's impossible, well > > all i can say?is new technologies are coming out all > the time. 100 years ago > > they didn't even > > have cellphones, and now we do.?Just this year, > researchers have found a way > > to store 100 DVD's of information onto a single DVD > that can be found here: > > http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10246057-1.htmldon't you even read the articles you post it is talking about Holographic Versatile Disc see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_Versatile_Disc theora is lossy like Mpeg 1/2/4 if you want lossless use ffmpeg's ffv1 PS: stop talking about copyright FUD (Fear, uncertainty and doubt) this floss (Free and open source software) mailing list Need a Holiday? Win a $10,000 Holiday of your choice. Enter now.http://us.lrd.yahoo.com/_ylc=X3oDMTJxN2x2ZmNpBF9zAzIwMjM2MTY2MTMEdG1fZG1lY2gDVGV4dCBMaW5rBHRtX2xuawNVMTEwMzk3NwR0bV9uZXQDWWFob28hBHRtX3BvcwN0YWdsaW5lBHRtX3BwdHkDYXVueg--/SIG=14600t3ni/**http%3A//au.rd.yahoo.com/mail/tagline/creativeholidays/*http%3A//au.docs.yahoo.com/homepageset/%3Fp1=other%26p2=au%26p3=mailtagline
Teran McKinney
2009-Jun-11 16:54 UTC
[theora-dev] Response to your questions about my suggestions i sent in yesterday
> i also said this: > Theora should have a feature where when a user plays a video using > the?Theora player, the video will be compressed so the file size is smaller > and??it will be faster to load. The quality of the video should remain the > same.??For example, some 2 hour 16:9 Widescreen High definition 1080p videos > are??4Gigabytes in size, so Theora should compress this 4GB video into > 100MB??without losing any quality.I like that idea. I think seeing as Theora utilitizes compresion itself already, the fact that it doesn't already shrink a video normally 4GB down to 100MB just shows that the developers are paid by M$ and other companies. I like how you say it should do that, when it sounds like you have no understanding of how compression works. I'll make a statement: Open Office should never let any document get above 1MB without sacrificing the storage capacity, and should load any document in less time than it takes for my harddrive to seek to the spot on the disc. Do you see a problem here? Now, Theora possibly might be able to give you a 2 hour 1080P video in 100MB if it was just blackness.> Now for those that found this funny because?you think it's impossible, well > all i can say?is new technologies are coming out all the time. 100 years ago > they didn't even > have cellphones, and now we do.?Just this year, researchers have found a way > to store 100 DVD's of information onto a single DVD that can be found here: > http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-10246057-1.html> So maybe there is a way to compress a 4GB movie into 100MB without losing > any quality.It's all about perception. Compress the same movie to 100MB and 4GB from the original. If 100MB is a tight squeeze, give it to the person who has never seen a movie before, and they may think it's amazing (if they can make out the different between a person and a dog in the movie), while the 4GB might even look cheap to someone else. So I am proposing to put a 32bit signed integer in the Theora header format, for perceived quality suitable. Video fidelists might have something like 0x7EADBEEF and the blind might have 0xDEADBEEF. FYI: Increasing storage capacity != increasing compression. It's a lot easier to increase storage capacity than increase compression, especially without sacrificing quality. Cheers! Teran PS: It's okay to not understand this, but I do think you are a little narrow on this topic for how much you seemed to push this.