Hello Sime, I have forwarded this message to GPL-Violations. While it isn't a violation, it is trying to prevent any and it would be far better for everyone if you were given the correct information from the beginning. Aaron -------- Original Message -------- Subject: [Theora] Encoding: theora legalities Date: Tue, 7 Jun 2005 13:51:18 +1000 From: Sime Mardesic <simem@traffic.redflex.com.au> To: <theora@xiph.org> Hi, I am having trouble understanding the legalities of the whole encoding issue. Here is what I am trying to do: Problem: We get 17GB?s worth of 12 second long mpeg2 video clips from a capture card. We want some way of compressing these clips so that we can save space and bandwidth. These clips are used in an activity that generates income (nothing sinister). Proposed solution: Use some sort of encoder to encode the clips thus saving space etc. Currently we are looking at using VirtualDub in its command line form and just plugging in an encoder. I have to support old NT machines so I can?t use a DirectShow filter solution. 1) Can I use theora with VirtualDub? 2) Is there a better solution? Ffmpeg2theora does the job nicely but is it legal (if yes it makes my life easy)? 3) If all is ok is it just a case of distributing the codecs with our software and ensuring that people run the codec install, thus reading the GPL and having a readme that alerts them to the location of the source code? 4) What are the pitfalls of any of the proposed solutions? 5) Am I just better of paying for a commercial encoder to avoid any potential trouble? Thanks in advance for any help that you are able to provide. Sime Mardesic