Codecs MP3, AVI, MPEG etc.
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I'm a new user to Trisquel and *Free Software* as defined on fsf.org.
As far as I know MP3 and many other popular video and audio formats are considered non-free (at least I thought they were).
Thanks to OggConvert and other similar programs I can easily convert my files to free software. But doesn't the act of doing that enter a grey area?
Could clarify why I can play mp3s at all out of the box in Trisquel.
Thanks in advance.
See: FFmpeg: Legal status of codecs (Wikipedia)
Trisquel is from Spain and GStreamer FFmpeg plug-in (Wikipedia) is free software.
The decoders are free software but they are patent encumbered (i.e. you need a patent license to playback the file in some parts of the world).
Thanks aloniv,
I've been converting my files to Ogg Vorbis audio and video formats anyway which removes any need for silly licenses.
Thanks icarolongo.
that was exactly what I was looking for.
.
Since I am in the United States, does that mean I can't "legally" use Trisquel, because I haven't paid for a WMV, MPEG2, etc. license? Maybe Trisquel could ship without those codecs, so Americans can use it without being copyright infringing pirates :)
If you really want to know ask a lawyer.
:)
More like patent infringing pirates
It's funny, the community designed the software with our own code, but they're still able to control our use of it.What an absurdity!
This seems relevant: https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html#Piracy
I just use VLC, but doesn't that use different codecs than Totem which is Gstreamer?
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