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In Protest, Apple Will Delay QuickTime 6 Release

In a chess move to put pressure on the firm that announced licensing fees for MPEG-4 technology, Apple said it was delaying the release of QuickTime Player 6 until more reasonable royalty terms are determined.

Apple previewed the latest version of its digital media software, which fully supports the MPEG-4 standard, at the QuickTime Live conference in Los Angeles Tuesday afternoon, but the news that it is withholding QuickTime 6 until the recently proposed MPEG-4 licensing terms are readjusted overshadows the demonstration; Apple is one of MPEG-4 staunchest supporters.

A veritable firestorm ensued shortly after Denver-based MPEG LA, the dominant group of MPEG-4 patent holders, announced licensing terms for MPEG-4 on Jan. 31. Those terms call for royalty rates to be paid per decoder and encoder, as expected. But the terms also calls for a fee of 2 cents an hour, "based on playback/normal running time for every stream, download or other use of MPEG-4 video data in connection with which a service provider or content owner receives remuneration as a result of offering/providing the video for viewing or having the video viewed (including, without limitation, pay-per-view, subscription and advertiser supported services)."

This is what has many content providers up in arms, because it wasn't expected. Apple said that while it agrees with paying a royalty for including MPEG-4 codecs in QuickTime, it "does not believe that MPEG-4 can be successful in the marketplace if content owners must also pay royalties in order to deliver their content using MPEG-4."

Withholding QuickTime 6, even for a short time, is a significant move for Apple. Last year, the company saw 80 million users download QuickTime Player from the Internet.

In chummier news from Quicktime Live, Apple also previewed its new QuickTime Broadcaster software, and announced a partnerhsip with Sun Microsystems and Ericsson to enable network operators to deliver standardized multimedia content to mobile phones and PDAs.

News source: Enterprise News

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