LOL, You didn't even bother answering the question. I will let others be the judge. But it is rather obvious from your other reply about your knowledge on video codec.
>Look, your claim is that selling movies on discs is not content distribution. But it clearly is.
1. No where did I make the claim selling movies on discs is not content distribution. It is however NOT ALL content distribution, which is what you implied. And Physical Media licensing has been is own category since MPEG2 as used in DVD.
2. You claim of content distribution does not include Streaming and Broadcasting. Which has been the debate of the HEVC / H,266 licensing programme during its early stage of IP Negotiation terms. If you dont know H.265's history on patent terms then my suggestion is that you read up on it. As it is often the FUD pointed towards H.265. And you are, knowing or not, repeating it.
3. >You're just wrong. Don't worry about it.
This is HN. Not Reddit. If you dont know something, ask. Stop pretending you know something that you dont.
There is no uncertainty or doubt. The licensing of H.265 is well understood to be terrible.
You yourself are the perfect demonstration of this. You plainly don't know the terms of the licensing for all the different patent pools and individual licensors, and you've contradicted yourself multiple times in this thread. Let's review:
1. First you claimed there were no content distribution fees. That's false.
2. Next you claimed that "content distribution" only refers to streaming and broadcasting. That's false.
3. Then you claimed that "content distribution" does indeed include selling movies on discs. That's true and it means we're back at Claim 1.
Watching you flail about trying to save face is pretty funny, but more importantly it is the clear demonstration that you don't understand the terms of H.265 licensing which is, of course, why the licensing is so terrible.
One of the reasons AV1 is more usable is because its licensing is simpler, clearer, and more straightforward. You've proven that.
peutetre was clear from the start, ksec claimed that content distribution fees are not for physical media and to defend his position he asked "Do HEVC Advance and Velos Media currently, or has ever charges for Broadcasting and Streaming?" which makes no sense, since the specific topic was about physical media.
The specific was not about Physical media. The specific was that All content distribution requires fees. Physical media was not even specified in the original context.
Peutetre referred to physical media when talking about content distribution licensing. You then used a non-sequitur to argue that physical media don't fall under this category, so I will be siding with them.
To be honest I don't really care about pointless internet arguments. I think it would be more intellectually interesting if you posted your issues with AOM instead (who I happen to also dislike)
That is not correct. Unless you meant they once "suggested" to ask for content distribution licensing.