Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1222 matches for "patentable".
2009 Oct 10
3
Theora patent question
Does the reason Theora is relatively safe from patent infringement
lawsuit have more to do with it actually not being encumbered, or is
it because its use is decentralized?
For example, FreeType is not patent-free, nor is Linux, yet they
succeed because on the one hand, they are open source, and those who
maintain them do not guarantee anything regarding patents, it is up to
each individual user
2005 Mar 30
2
patent issues with Vorbis
Hi,
We are in the business of developing/productizing Multimedia codecs for embedded systems. Recently, Vorbis has gained good popularity. We are also developing it.
But we face few problems related to patents. Vorbis claims to be patent free. Is there any particular search made for possible patent infringements and corresponding report published? We need to convince our customers sometime
2008 Oct 01
1
Software patents (was G723 on asterisk 1.4.1)
On Wed, Oct 1, 2008 at 6:34 AM, Andrew Joakimsen <joakimsen at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 23, 2008 at 11:34 PM, Tilghman Lesher
> <tilghman at mail.jeffandtilghman.com> wrote:
>> It is completely illegal in any country that recognizes patents.
>
> You mean countries that recognize software patents, right?
As resident of country where the file is hosted - yes we
2004 Aug 06
3
Is Speex realy patent free?
Hi all,
<p>i have readed all the realy sad stuff about software patents in
europe and what allread exists. There is one side related to speex
and i dont know if this is allready discussed here.
Take a look at:
http://swpat.ffii.org/patents/effects/voip/index.en.html
Is speex realy petant free or does patent free only means that
is is not patent by the speex authors? Who have checked that
2007 Aug 14
2
Patent issues, what features we can't use?
Hi everybody,
As the Asterisk community is getting larger and larger, I was wondering that
the features which are provided in Asterisk and are programmed by the open
source community under GPL, or GUIs like FreePBX which also come loaded with
wonderful features and uses same Asterisk, are they anywhere violating any
patent laws? Most of the features work the same way as Nortel, Avaya and
other
2005 Oct 25
4
Licensing Question
Hi there,
I am new to Ogg/Theora and am trying to compare several video codecs as part
of my master thesis at the University of Klagenfurt.
Therefore I have a question: will there be any patents problems using
Ogg/Theora in the future? Is/will Ogg/Theora stay free from patents rights?
This would be a great advantage in using Ogg/Theora instead of e.g. H.264
which is covered with numerous
2001 Oct 19
0
Patents and GPL (was: Re: PlusV)
Craig Dickson (crdic@yahoo.com) wrote :
> Jack Moffitt wrote:
>
> > I agree that this might be the case. But what happens with the
> > violation is by the author? :)
> >
> > Ie, in the case of PlusV releasing a patented codec under the GPL or in
> > the case of LAME or FreeType's authors doing similar things. What
> > state is that?
>
>
2009 Jul 04
2
Some questions about Theora IP
Hello Theora developers,
I'm doing some cursory research into Theora's IP status in preparation
for asking Apple to reconsider the possibility of shipping an
implementation. I have a few questions and I'm hoping knowledgeable
people can help out.
1) What are the terms of any patent licenses or disclaimers, and do
they have field of use restrictions or limitations on code for
2004 Sep 10
4
Blocking and compression.
I did some research on patent claims on range and arithmetic coding. The
original range code pdf presented in the UK by an ibm employee at the
time asserts no patent claims what so ever. If there are patents I cant
find em. I have the original paper in PDF if anyone cares to see it. Its
a good candidate for encoding because browsing a few of the
implememntations avaialable on line, I can roll my
2000 Dec 15
6
patents and separate entropy coding
Hi everyone,
first of all, I searched through the archives for any posts resembling
this, I didn't read all posts about the patents so if this has been
suggested before I apologise.
I read in an article on C|Net (I think, it was linked from Slashdot
anyway) that Thompson are threatening to sue you if Ogg Vorbis becomes a
success. Which is evil, and I'm also mad at them because they never
2010 May 01
0
Mutually assured minefields.
The specific standards process used to develop the MPEG codecs
creates patent minefields that royalty-free codecs don't generally
face. Because many knowledgeable people have heard of the problems
faced by these patent-soup standards, they may extrapolate these risk
to codecs developed under a different process where these problems
are less considerable. This is a mistake, and I'll explain
2004 Aug 06
0
Is Speex realy patent free?
> Take a look at:
>
> http://swpat.ffii.org/patents/effects/voip/index.en.html
Well, outside of the Speex link, that page seems to be pretty old...
> Is speex realy petant free or does patent free only means that
> is is not patent by the speex authors? Who have checked that
> speex doesn't violates patents others? I don't use IP here,
> because most patents are
2005 Oct 04
12
Sprint Nextel sueing over VoIP patents
Sprint Nextel is sueing vonage, voiceglo and theglobe.com for infringing
on VoIP patents. Sprint Nextel claims to have about 100 patents on VoIP
technologies. Does anyone know which ones this article is talking
about, and if so does asterisk have any of those features?
The reason I am asking is that the article is vague, Vonage uses a
fairly standard codec set, I dont know about the others.
2007 Apr 07
2
Verizon Vonage 101
I've dug down as far as I could on www.uspto.gov for
anything remotely close to what is going on with
Verizon and all searches end with only two
possibilities in regards to what is going on.
So unless the patent was issued to someone else and
Verizon bought it, these are the only two possible
patents this case could be based on...
US 7,142,646 B2
Voice mail integration with instant
2015 Oct 21
5
RFC: Improving license & patent issues in the LLVM community
Hi David,
Sorry for the delay getting back to you, been a bit buried:
On Oct 19, 2015, at 10:12 AM, David Chisnall <David.Chisnall at cl.cam.ac.uk> wrote:
>> The TL;DR version of this is that I think we should discuss relicensing all of LLVM under the Apache 2.0 license and add a runtime exception clause. See below for a lot more details.
>
> I agree that this is a problem.
2000 Oct 02
2
Fraunhoffer claims patents on other formats
Here in the uk, to get a patent on anything, you have
to prove that the patent is not obvious and that there
is no prior art.
If there is prior art, then a patent cannot be given,
this is why people patenting stuff have to keep it a
secret until they actually have the patent, otherwise
it is considered to have been released into the public
domain.
Once something is in the public domain, nobody
2000 Dec 13
1
Patents
I suppose it could be possible to patent something and
let the patent expire so that it is registered at the
patent office but not enforcable. No one else could
patent it then.
I get curious about the RLE patent. I heard Someone
has a patent on run length encoding and I wonder how
long they have had it because I remember RLE code
running on a sinclair spectrum in the 80's before the
whole
2017 Feb 08
2
Using g729 now that patents have expired
AFAIK g729 patent is expiring sometime in 2019-2020.
Mitul Limbani
On Feb 8, 2017 5:02 AM, "Victor Villarreal" <mefhigoseth at gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi Steve,
>
> I understand your question and your point, but I use the g729 codec from
> the link that Carlos share, for almost 6 years from Asterisk 1.4 to v13
> without a single problem.
>
> So, sory but I
2000 Dec 10
0
Patents on algorithms harm data analytic services
Cologne, 10.12.00
Dear Sir,
Dear Madam,
We are concerned about the possibility that the European Commission might introduce software patenting into the European Community because we think this will harm our profession.
We make our living on data management and statistical analyses. Modern statistics crucially depends on algorithms [cf. Venables, W. N., & Ripley, B. D. (1999). Modern applied
2005 Mar 28
0
Theora and software patents
The list probably did not get this reply from D Richard Felker III.
Having read quite a few patents I tend to agree with Richard: Software
patents are very broad and even if I have not read the source code of
Theora I would be surprised if it did not infringe several patents.
However, I believe the argument that On2 has not been sued for infringing
the MPEG-patents is a very strong argument.