Windows 7 blocking 3rd-party codecs?


Recommended Posts

New rumblings about Windows 7 codec support

Following up on my previous report on integrated Windows 7 codec support, I saw today from Volker Zota at heise that some new developments in the Windows 7 betas have come to light. According to the investigative work of an ffdshow developer, as reported to Dan ?BetaBoy? Marlin of CoreCodec, the latest beta of Windows 7 blocks the usage of third party video decoders from Windows Media Player and MCE.

As previously reported, Windows 7 differs from earlier versions of Windows in that it will ship with a number of popular video codecs already integrated, including most notably h.264. There are some very notable caveats to the information as it stands right now: this is after all just a beta and might not be in the final released version of Windows 7, there will likely be work arounds, especially for other player software applications (like VLC and Media Player Classic), and because Windows 7 will come with h.264 already installed, many users will never need third-party decoders anyway.

Nonetheless, this move by Microsoft is still somewhat disturbing for it seems to be a big step backwards from what appeared to be Redmond?s increasing openness to third party solutions in the video world. There remains a very active competitive landscape among codec developers and media software creators, outside of the (somewhat) closed garden that Microsoft would prefer Windows users to remain within, and such a move would definitely tilt things in the Microsft direction. This isn?t IE versus Netscape, but it does reflect that kind of outdated thinking we all hoped Microsoft was moving away from finally. I?m sure much more technical details will emerge in the next few days, but right now the blocking takes place at very deep levels of the OSSource: urce: Digitalwerks via Gizmodo

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/751484-windows-7-blocking-3rd-party-codecs/
Share on other sites

So far unfortunate but why would you want to replace h.264 and MPEG-4 codecs. Surely the Microsoft ones would do the business and I don't think this means you can't install and use other codecs through WMP so even less of an issue. For casual users probably a good thing, for power users, annoying.

Sounds like they're saying for codecs the OS includes the OS version is preferred over third-party ones by WMP. This doesn't really surprise me, the third-party ones are notoriously unreliable. However, if I'm reading that right, a codec for a format not supported by the OS won't be affected.

Further, it doesn't sound like they're basing this on any documentation or discussion with anyone from MS or the WMP team in particular. It may simply be that the registration model has changed in some way.

This doesn't really surprise me, the third-party ones are notoriously unreliable.

I would actually say that about the first-party ones (on Vista), especially the MS MPEG-2 Video Decoder. It tends to bork where third-party codecs work just fine.

So just how does Media Foundation actually work?

What happens when you get it to automatically build a graph (or whatever the MF equivalent is)? How does it pick which transforms to use? Does it have any sort of merit system like DirectShow that third parties can freely manipulate, or is the idea that it always uses Microsoft codecs unless you manually build the graph to include the third-party ones you want, in an attempt to make sure it will always work?

I'd rather not have my build in codecs replaced anyway, they're specifically designed to work seemlessly with the OS, and this, IMO is a good move. As long as I can still use my other 3rd party codecs to playback video not supported natively I have no concerns over this system. In fact having native video support out of the box is one thing less to screw about with.

Anyone who thinks this is a good move (aside from Microsoft employees who are probably obligated by contract to post positive on anything Microsoft :rolleyes:) have no clue in video editing, video encoding and frankly, even in video watching. The simplest example: Subtitles. Another: Aspect ratio correction. More: Audio mixing. Even more: Low-frequency crossover. Had enough? :rolleyes: And these are only from daily stuff used for watching.

If dumb monkey can harm his PC from installing bullsh`t codecs, great, give him an option to stay with the build in. But don't lock me out ffs. This will seriously hold me from upgrading to 7 until it is hacked/circumvented.

BTW, this problem was also available to a much smaller extent in Vista with MP3, and it was due to stupid DRM. Won't be surprised if it isn't for the same reason now. :rolleyes:

Well the more time people have to examine this, I'm quite sure there will be a patch issued. I don't think this effects media players with built in codecs in them. I could be wrong though. And for your average end users this is a smart move. The reason why its catching hell here is because we aren't the average end user.

I have had no issues at all in Vista encoding, editing, or playing MP3 files. Despite what a few Microsoft haters will tell you, Vista does not actively force DRM into non-DRMed files.

As for video watching, from my experience it works in 7 precisely the way I expected it to... Which is perfectly well. As for editing and conversion support, I don't see how you can point the finger and say it will make those things any worse with no factual information to go on whatsoever. As for aspect ratio correction, that is not usually done by the codec, but by the program which renders the actual frame onto the screen.

BTW, this problem was also available to a much smaller extent in Vista with MP3, and it was due to stupid DRM. Won't be surprised if it isn't for the same reason now. :rolleyes:

Well that's just a bunch of FUD. The OS makes no determination about which codecs you install or use for any format.

Try playing an MP3 file with ffdshow as the audio decoder. Bunch of FUD indeed. It's not the OS that makes the determination, but Windows Media Player and consequently, Windows Media Center, not using anything else than the Media Foundation Protected Media Pipeline codec for MP3, WMV and WMA. You can check for yourself by running an MP3 file in WMP and seeing the mfpmp.exe process running in the background. It is nearly impossible to manage to get WMP and WMC play MP3, WMV and WMA through other codecs (hard on Vista 32bit, impossible on Vista 64bit from my experience).

Stop posting "a bunch of FUD," you make your company look even worse. :rolleyes:

Edited by Leo Natan

mfpmp.exe enables the playback of DRM protected content, without it you'd be unable to play any DRM protected files in any of Microsoft's media playback programs if it wasn't there. I really don't see why you seem to have some kind of burning desire to play MP3 files with FFDshow anyway, it really doesn't make a shred of difference what you play them back with.

What you base your ignorant assessment that MS are forcing everyone into DRM on I don't pretend to know, but if the DRM engine where to be removed from Windows it would sure as hell pee off a lot of people with DRM protected music.

Actually mfpmp.exe is just an optional out-of-proc surrogate host for codecs implemented as DLLs (similar to "dllhost.exe"), with some special protections to prevent attacks against or reverse engineering of the code being run. It actually has basically nothing to do with DRM, the MP3 codec does not support any form of DRM but it runs in mfpmp.exe to insulate the host application from crashes, security vulnerabilities in the codec, etc.

I'm also confused about your statements that it is "hard on Vista 32-bit, impossible on Vista 64-bit." Are you referring to trying to run a 32-bit codec in a 64-bit process? Or vice versa?

WMP does not provide any UI to allow you to choose the preferred decoder. If you want that, use one of the other players that offers such an option. Otherwise, you'll need to use a tool or installer that can register the codec as the default for WMP.

Thanks for the clarification on that, but I was still right on the point that it is not a process that harms conversion / playback xD

Seems to me the media has had so much to say about Vista that people really are eating into every negativity they can. Shame really because since SP1 was introduced, it is a very capable OS. Still at the end of the day there will be no way to convince the doubters that they are wrong, but I am not going to go back to XP (only forward to 7).

Also, I think he was referring to using FFDshow to decode MP3 files in the 64 bit version of WMP, obviously he doesn't realise that Vista 64 actually uses the x86 version of WMP by default. Point is, if he installed an X64 version of FFD it would probably work

Obviously you are jumping to conclusions. I am using the 64bit version of WMP with ffdshow64. WMC is always 64bit iirc. Please don't assume things about me, it makes you look like an idiot.

Small example why I would want to decode MP3 files (or WMA for that matter): Stereo expansion. I have a surround system, and want to expand the stereo file to more than two channels. Here is my filters list for other examples:

igdsao.png

So while you might not see the point, but that is your problem, not mine. My problem here with Vista is, why am I forced to use the MS codec? I have no DRM protected MP3s, WMAs or WMPs. I want to use what I see best, and you two, with your silly "This is just the best for the majority" or (even sillier) "I don't see the point" comments, just seem like blind Microsoft fanboi monkeys. I get why it might get this attitude from Brandon, but from others, well, it's just a mystery to me.

Obviously you are jumping to conclusions. I am using the 64bit version of WMP with ffdshow64. WMC is always 64bit iirc. Please don't assume things about me, it makes you look like an idiot.

Small example why I would want to decode MP3 files (or WMA for that matter): Stereo expansion. I have a surround system, and want to expand the stereo file to more than two channels. Here is my filters list for other examples:

So while you might not see the point, but that is your problem, not mine. My problem here with Vista is, why am I forced to use the MS codec? I have no DRM protected MP3s, WMAs or WMPs. I want to use what I see best, and you two, with your silly "This is just the best for the majority" or (even sillier) "I don't see the point" comments, just seem like blind Microsoft fanboi monkeys. I get why it might get this attitude from Brandon, but from others, well, it's just a mystery to me.

Wonderfully childish response there Leo, but I will rebuff your argument that you can only use stereo expansion in FFDshow with one simple screenshot. I have a 5.1 surround system and can get music coming out of all my speakers without decoding my audio in FFDshow, using nothing more than the default MP3 codec built into Windows. And no I am not a "blind Microsoft fanboi monkey" but thanks for the lame attempt at an insult it gave me a chuckle if nothing else.

post-286512-1238214292_thumb.jpg

So just how does Media Foundation actually work?

What happens when you get it to automatically build a graph (or whatever the MF equivalent is)? How does it pick which transforms to use? Does it have any sort of merit system like DirectShow that third parties can freely manipulate, or is the idea that it always uses Microsoft codecs unless you manually build the graph to include the third-party ones you want, in an attempt to make sure it will always work?

I honestly hope it is the latter.

DirectShow's merit system was/is a disaster.

Wonderfully childish response there Leo, but I will rebuff your argument that you can only use stereo expansion in FFDshow with one simple screenshot. I have a 5.1 surround system and can get music coming out of all my speakers without decoding my audio in FFDshow, using nothing more than the default MP3 codec built into Windows. And no I am not a "blind Microsoft fanboi monkey" but thanks for the lame attempt at an insult it gave me a chuckle if nothing else.

At what point did I say it only possible in ffdshow? I can do that in my X-Fi's control panel as well. However, ffdshow (and similar, like AC3Filter) allow for much more precise control over the stereo expansion (not that you'd know something on the topic :rolleyes:). Also, stereo expansion was only one of the filters I have selected in ffdshow. Where is your "here, you can do this much much worse as well from my control panel with the defaul MP3 decoder" explanation for them?

At what point did I say it only possible in ffdshow? I can do that in my X-Fi's control panel as well. However, ffdshow (and similar, like AC3Filter) allow for much more precise control over the stereo expansion (not that you'd know something on the topic :rolleyes:). Also, stereo expansion was only one of the filters I have selected in ffdshow. Where is your "here, you can do this much much worse as well from my control panel with the defaul MP3 decoder" explanation for them?

Seeing as I have no idea what you have enabled, I don't know or care.

If you really want to carry on down your delusional Anti-Microsoft rant path feel free. Although I haven't tried it because I really don't care I am sure there ways to change Windows over to use the FFD decoder.

Although I haven't tried it because I really don't care I am sure there ways to change Windows over to use the FFD decoder.

This is where "hard on Vista 32bit, impossible on Vista 64bit" comes into play, but enough of this crap anyway. You have your opinion and I have mine.

Obviously you are jumping to conclusions. I am using the 64bit version of WMP with ffdshow64. WMC is always 64bit iirc. Please don't assume things about me, it makes you look like an idiot.

Small example why I would want to decode MP3 files (or WMA for that matter): Stereo expansion. I have a surround system, and want to expand the stereo file to more than two channels. Here is my filters list for other examples:

igdsao.png

So while you might not see the point, but that is your problem, not mine. My problem here with Vista is, why am I forced to use the MS codec? I have no DRM protected MP3s, WMAs or WMPs. I want to use what I see best, and you two, with your silly "This is just the best for the majority" or (even sillier) "I don't see the point" comments, just seem like blind Microsoft fanboi monkeys. I get why it might get this attitude from Brandon, but from others, well, it's just a mystery to me.

i'm with you on allowing for the choice of codec... but is there a reason that you are using WMP/MCE instead of MPC,KMplayer/ MediaPortal ?

Default ms codecs are just awful in terms of picture quality - they add way too much deblocking so everything looks blurry as... blur. No options on filters - subtitles, post processing etc. And on top of it all it seems they somehow manage to cause videos to play out of sync (in terms of milliseconds thou).

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Any Video Converter Free 9.2.3 by Razvan Serea Any Video Converter is an All-in-One video converting tool with an easy-to-use graphical interface, fast converting speed and excellent video quality. Any Video Converter supports all popular video formats and converts your videos to different video formats including MP4, MOV, MKV, M2TS, M4V, MPEG, AVI, WMV, ASF, OGV, WEBM, and more. It supports converting videos to customized percent (50%, 100%, 200%, and more) or resolution (480p, 720p, 1080p, 4K, and more); It supports encoding videos into x264, x265, h263p, xvid, mpeg, wmv, and more. Any Video Converter Free key features: Compatible with Windows 11/10/8.1/8/7 (32-64bit) User interface are available in 14 languages Convert all kinds of video formats including high-definition videos Extract audio from any videos and save as MP3/WMA for your mp3 player Take snapshot from any videos and build your own picture collection Support high-definition for both input and output Batch add videos from hard drive and batch convert Customize output parameters completely as you like Manage your output videos files by group or output profile Merge several video files into a single and long one Clip a video into segments Free Audio Filter: Adjust audio volume and add audio effects Crop frame size to remove black bars and retain what you want only Adjust the brightness, contrast, saturation Rotate or flip or add noise/sharpen effects Produce output video with subtitles of your own dialogue and much, much more... Any Video Converter Free 9.2.3 changelog: Fixed video download engine auto-update failures. Added custom speed control support in the speed change tool. Added support for downloading YouTube AI-generated subtitles. Added support for preserving original audio stream in the format convert tool (e.g., Dolby Atmos, DTS:X). Fixed other bugs and improved overall performance. Download: Any Video Converter Free 9.2.3 | 7.6 MB (Freeware) View: Any Video Converter Free Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Not sure what country you’re in but in many countries you can absolutely jail the sellers behind businesses… in fact I’d say in most countries you can do that
    • I guess we are done since you refuse to read my comment you replied to or my other comment in another thread you were also a part of here.
    • I hate Slack, but Teams is much worse - maybe they've already optimized it, but it was a huge slog the last time I've checked about half a year ago. I miss my Skype.
    • Just ended up switching to Ubuntu. Not sure why I waited.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      jordanspringer earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Rookie
      Rimplesnort went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Year In
      Markus94287 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Month Later
      Markus94287 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Markus94287 earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      510
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      175
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      155
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      91
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      79
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!