From a huge german computer magazin, you can found it under:
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/data/jk-28.08.02-008/
-------------------------------------------------------------------- Tumultuous Response to Alleged Change in MP3 Licensing Conditions
Ever since the early morning heise online has been receiving a swelling stream of disapproving comment on alleged changes to MP3 licenses: According to a posting at Slashdot[1] Thomson Multimedia, the exclusive licensor of MP3, is said to have erased a passage from its licensing conditions according to which no licensing fees were due for non-commercial free MP3 decoders.
In doing so the company was said to be referring to the official table of fees[2], according to which a fee of 75 US cents per MP3 decoder or a one-off payment of 60,000 US dollars (for patent and software; 50,000 US dollars for the patent only) was due. As a matter of fact this rule has been in force for about eighteen months now[3]. At that time not only was the web design of MP3licensing.com modified, in the course of the creation of the then new MP3Pro the licensing conditions were also adjusted. Another decisive passage was also scrapped at that time: "No license fee is expected for desktop software mp3 decoders/players that are distributed free-of-charge via the Internet for personal use of end-users".
By inquiring with the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits (IIS[4]) and MP3Pro developer Coding Technologies[5] heise online was able to verify the existence of this link -- the tumult has hence been pretty late in coming. Given that Thomson Multimedia has since then not taken any legal steps against developers or distributors of non-commercial MP3 decoders, it does not appear that the future of free MP3 decoders is in jeopardy.
As it is, for Thomson to take drastic legal measures in this matter would not make much sense: There is not much money to be had from freeware and open source developers who have created their own MP3 decoders. This is probably the reason why the licensor has refrained to date from taking the appropriate steps.
The situation appears to be different with regard to encoders for the creation of MP3 files, however: As a rule in these cases the Fraunhofer Institute as well as Thomson insist that the licensing conditions be met; an open source packet called lame does, however, exist (whether, in the event, its self-referential Gödelian acronym reading LAME Ain't a Mp3 Encoder has enough protective charm is a moot point).
It is also not to be feared that such popular players as Winamp or the Musicmatch Jukebox will in future be distributed free-of-charge only without an MP3 decoder: Nullsoft as well as Musicmatch are among the official licensees of MP3(Pro), in the case of Musicmatch this statement also applies to its integrated encoder.
Whatever the merits, if any, of the changes in licensing conditions, Mr. Emmett Plant, CEO by profession of Xiph.org Foundation has expressed his considerable delight at the turn of events. In an open letter[6] he thanked Thomson Multimedia. "Thank you for the huge amount of free advertising to our benefit created by your announcement that licensing conditions had changed," Mr. Plant wrote. The letter closes with: "We support all actions on the part of Thomson that make it plain that MP3 costs money. Once again thank you and good luck."
Unlike MP3, Ogg Vorbis, recently published in its version 1.0 (according to its developers' statements), is free of patent protection and subject to the GNU Public License; hence, even in future no license fees of any sort would be due for this compression process. It is not a good idea as yet to rely exclusively on Ogg Vorbis, however: Even if Ogg Vorbis manages to close the quality gap between it and MP3 or even manages to get ahead of the latter, it will still take some time before Ogg-capable portable players make their appearance as hardware. (Robert W. Smith) / (jk[7]/c't)
URL of this article: http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/data/jk-28.08.02-008/
Links in this article: [1] http://www.slashdot.org [2] http://www.mp3licensing.com/royalty/software.html [3] http://web.archive.org/web/20010331223305/www.mp3licensing.com/royalty/swdec... [4] http://www.iis.fhg.de/ [5] http://www.codingtechnologies.com/ [6] http://www.xiph.org/ogg/vorbis/openletter.html [7] mailto:jk@ct.heise.de
-------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright 2002 by Verlag Heinz Heise