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The Future and Fate of DRM and IBOC - "The Market Makers" Will Decide !
In article ,
craigm wrote: Telamon wrote: The software does not have to be in the public domain for the standard to be open. The standard is one thing, the software is an implementation of the standard. I can write software that complies with an open standard and sell it without putting the source in the public domain. The DRM standard in part uses proprietary code licensed by several companies depend on the mode you operate in. That does not meet the open requirement. I think the difference in our opinion revolve around the definition of an open standard. There is enough information on the net that someone can develop the code to receive DRM. There are many ways this can be enforced. Yes, but you would have to violate the terms of the GPL. I don't know what you are talking about here. This software is being sold and is not free. If there is a free DRM radio decoder I did not know about it. I don't understand how this could be because some of the encoding/decoding algorithms are not free. Please point to the free DRM decoding software. You haven't looked at http://sourceforge.net/projects/drm/ You download for free, compile and use. If you don't like something about the code, change it, recompile and use. Snip Interesting that Coding technologies will allow an individual use of un-compiled code. However, they are not giving up their rights to that code in a commercial enterprise. They expect to get paid for that software if it goes in somebody's radio. http://www.codingtechnologies.com/licensing/DRM.htm Also interesting is that compiled versions of the Dream software must be paid for on the DRM website. http://www.winradio.com/home/download-drm.htm Maybe you can explain why a commercial company would provide un-compiled versions of it's software for free while at the same time trying to sell it. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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