1. GIF Format
- Posted by Greg Phillips <i.shoot at REDNECKS.COM> Aug 29, 1999
- 412 views
- Last edited Aug 30, 1999
I just ran across this...it appears that if you operate a website that uses gif images,or other LZW(TIFF-LZW, PostScript, Portable Document Format (PDF), V.42bis, etc.) formats, you may have to purchase a $5000 license from Unisys, the people who patented the technology. Also, if you write a program that reads or writes GIF images, you must get a license. Lastly, if you download a program that makes use of GIF technology, you must obtain a license from Unisys (which may or may not cost money, depending on the circumstances). If you don't get this license, you are supposedly in violation of That, in a nutshell is what's wrong with the world today. Take a look: http://corp2.unisys.com/LeadStory/lzwfaq.html Greg Phillips
2. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by "Brian K. Broker" <bkb at CNW.COM> Aug 30, 1999
- 397 views
On Sunday, August 29, 1999 11:56 PM Greg Phillips wrote: > I just ran across this...it appears that if you operate a website that > uses gif images,or other LZW(TIFF-LZW, PostScript, Portable Document > Format (PDF), V.42bis, etc.) formats, you may have to purchase a $5000 > license from Unisys, the people who patented the technology. > > Also, if you write a program that reads or writes GIF images, you must > get a license. Lastly, if you download a program that makes use of GIF > technology, you must obtain a license from Unisys (which may or may not > cost money, depending on the circumstances). If you don't get this > license, you are supposedly in violation of > > That, in a nutshell is what's wrong with the world today. > > Take a look: > http://corp2.unisys.com/LeadStory/lzwfaq.html > http://corp2.unisys.com/LeadStory/lzw-license.html > > Greg Phillips That's why I've been considering writing a PNG library. Lossless, supports more than 256 colors, and it's free... ( for more info see http://www.cdrom.com/pub/png/ ) Does anyone else have something started on this format? There is open source C code provided but I'm not the most fluent with C... -- Brian Broker
3. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by Greg Phillips <i.shoot at REDNECKS.COM> Aug 30, 1999
- 407 views
"Brian K. Broker" wrote: > On Sunday, August 29, 1999 11:56 PM Greg Phillips wrote: > > > I just ran across this...it appears that if you operate a website that > > uses gif images,or other LZW(TIFF-LZW, PostScript, Portable Document > > Format (PDF), V.42bis, etc.) formats, you may have to purchase a $5000 > > license from Unisys, the people who patented the technology. > > > > Also, if you write a program that reads or writes GIF images, you must > > get a license. Lastly, if you download a program that makes use of GIF > > technology, you must obtain a license from Unisys (which may or may not > > cost money, depending on the circumstances). If you don't get this > > license, you are supposedly in violation of > > > > That, in a nutshell is what's wrong with the world today. > > > > Take a look: > > http://corp2.unisys.com/LeadStory/lzwfaq.html > > http://corp2.unisys.com/LeadStory/lzw-license.html > > > > Greg Phillips > > That's why I've been considering writing a PNG library. > Lossless, supports more than 256 colors, and it's free... > ( for more info see http://www.cdrom.com/pub/png/ ) > > Does anyone else have something started on this format? > There is open source C code provided but I'm not the most fluent with C... > > -- Brian Broker Actually, a little while ago I was thinking about doing a png viewer in euphoria just for fun, but never got around to it. I still have all the specs for the format lying around, if you want them, I'll email them to you. Greg Phillips. -- The Euphoria CD Project: "Only $9.95, and comes with this juicer absolutely free!" http://www.redrival.com/euphoria/doslinux.html
4. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by "Brian K. Broker" <bkb at CNW.COM> Aug 30, 1999
- 398 views
On Monday, August 30, 1999 1:12 AM Greg Phillips wrote: > Actually, a little while ago I was thinking about doing a png viewer in > euphoria just for fun, but never got around to it. I still have all the specs > for the format lying around, if you want them, I'll email them to you. > > Greg Phillips. > Thanks... I've got no problem obtaining the specs. I'd also like to add that I'd like to do this in Eu (no DLLs). If there is interest, I'm more likely to concentrate my efforts towards the project... you can send encouragement directly to bkb at cnw.com ) -- BKB
5. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by Irv Mullins <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> Aug 30, 1999
- 437 views
On Mon, 30 Aug 1999, you wrote: > I just ran across this...it appears that if you operate a website that > uses gif images,or other LZW(TIFF-LZW, PostScript, Portable Document > Format (PDF), V.42bis, etc.) formats, you may have to purchase a $5000 > license from Unisys, the people who patented the technology. ... > That, in a nutshell is what's wrong with the world today. This is also an excellent illustration of the total inability on the part of management types to apply reason or logic to any problem. Let's think for a moment: The obvious result of this "patent" enforcement will be the immediate removal of all gif files from web sites, except for a handful of very large sites for whom the cost of conversion would be > $5000. Therefore, there will soon be no real demand for software which uses the gif format. Hence, no reason for the software developers to license the technology or include it in their products (browsers or editors) Result: little income to the patent holders, and the eventual inability of the few licensed users to find software which supports what is in essence an orphaned format.. However, there will still be a significant _outflow_ of money from Unisys. Let's "follow the money" -- Is anyone surprised to find that it will go to the corporate lawyers? This is obviously just another attempt by lawyers to extort money from their clients and the general public. (see, for example, tobacco, guns, hot coffee, .etc....) Sell your Unisys stock - poor management decisions will kill any business, sooner or later. Irv Mullins
6. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by "Brett Pantalone (EUS)" <EUSBAPA at AM1.ERICSSON.SE> Aug 30, 1999
- 404 views
Good analysis. I can't imagine any web developer paying $5k for a license, when there are better formats for free. If UniSys was looking to trade property rights with a few other big companies, that's one thing. But it sounds like they are going after everybody, and this is something they can't win, because the GIF technology is just not that important to anyone. -- Brett > -----Original Message----- > From: Irv Mullins [SMTP:irv at ELLIJAY.COM] > Sent: Monday, August 30, 1999 11:08 AM > To: EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU > Subject: Re: GIF Format > > On Mon, 30 Aug 1999, you wrote: > > I just ran across this...it appears that if you operate a website that > > uses gif images,or other LZW(TIFF-LZW, PostScript, Portable Document > > Format (PDF), V.42bis, etc.) formats, you may have to purchase a $5000 > > license from Unisys, the people who patented the technology. > ... > > That, in a nutshell is what's wrong with the world today. > > This is also an excellent illustration of the total inability on the part > of > management types to apply reason or logic to any problem. > > Let's think for a moment: The obvious result of this "patent" enforcement > will > be the immediate removal of all gif files from web sites, except for a > handful > of very large sites for whom the cost of conversion would be > $5000. > > Therefore, there will soon be no real demand for software which > uses the gif format. Hence, no reason for the software developers to > license the technology or include it in their products (browsers or > editors) > Result: little income to the patent holders, and the eventual inability of > the few licensed users to find software which supports what is in essence > an orphaned format.. > > However, there will still be a significant _outflow_ of money from Unisys. > Let's "follow the money" -- Is anyone surprised to find that it will go to > the corporate lawyers? > > This is obviously just another attempt by lawyers to extort money from > their clients and the general public. (see, for example, tobacco, guns, > hot > coffee, .etc....) > > Sell your Unisys stock - poor management decisions will kill any business, > sooner or later. > > Irv Mullins
7. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by Mathew Hounsell <mfh03 at UOW.EDU.AU> Aug 31, 1999
- 408 views
As far as I knew use of GIF format images is free. So is using code to read GIFs. It's only when you write code to WRITE a file in GIF format that you a required to pay the licence. That is a program to read GI's is OK. A program that writes GIFs must pay the $5000 licence. This is why a lot of shareware paint program's wont save a GIF picture but will read one. ------------------------- Sincerely, Mathew Hounsell mat.hounsell at excite.com
8. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by Davi Figueiredo <davitf at USA.NET> Aug 31, 1999
- 401 views
>That's why I've been considering writing a PNG library. >Lossless, supports more than 256 colors, and it's free... >( for more info see http://www.cdrom.com/pub/png/ ) > >Does anyone else have something started on this format? >There is open source C code provided but I'm not the most fluent with C.= =2E. I started writing a PNG reader a long time ago, but got bored and never finished it. Anyway, I have already written a decompression routine for t= he compression algorithm used (it is the same as ZIP and GZIP; you can find = it in the Unzip program at my page), and started writing some other things too.= If you need any help or if you want the stuff I've written (not much), ju= st tell me. Regards, Davi Figueiredo davitf at usa.net http://www.brasil.terravista.pt/Jenipabu/2571/ ____________________________________________________________________ Get free email and a permanent address at http://www.amexmail.com/?A=3D1
9. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by Irv Mullins <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> Aug 31, 1999
- 419 views
On Tue, 31 Aug 1999, you wrote: > As far as I knew use of GIF format images is free. > So is using code to read GIFs. > It's only when you write code to WRITE a file in GIF format that you a > required to pay the > licence. > > That is a program to read GI's is OK. > A program that writes GIFs must pay the $5000 licence. > Nope. and I quote from the Unisys web page (which probably requires a license, too!): License Information on GIF and Other LZW-based Technologies More and more people are becoming aware that the reading and/or writing of GIF images requires a license to use Unisys patented Lempel Ziv Welch (LZW) data compression and decompression technology, including United States Patent No. 4,558,302, Japanese Patent Numbers 2,123,602 and 2,610,084, and patents in Canada, France, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom. Since January of 1995, Unisys has entered into almost two thousand license agreements for use of GIF and other LZW-based technology. .......... Does this apply to just storing or serving GIF images on a web site? Yes. See below: Web Site LZW Licenses Available from Unisys Because demand for LZW-related technology by Web developers continues to grow, Unisys wants to make obtaining a license for Web-based use of the LZW technology as easy and as straightforward as possible. Unisys therefore announces a new way for operators of certain types of Web sites to obtain an LZW license. If you are the operator of an Intranet Web site or an Internet Billboard Web site (see detailed definitions) and use the types of images covered by the LZW patent, you qualify. Types of images covered GIF, TIFF-LZW, PDF-LZW images or other LZW graphical formats used in connection with the creation, operation or maintenance of a Web site. Now, reading further, you will find out that under certain conditions, a not-for-profit BBS or web server with no commercial use or any items for sale may use GIFs _IF_ the operator applies for a written waver from Unisys. This waver may be provided at no charge, if Unisys so decides. Without the written waver, or the $5000 license, _NO_ use is allowed. The full text is here: http://corp2.unisys.com/LeadStory/lzwfaq.html For lawyer-speak, it is pretty clear. Regards, Irv
10. Re: GIF Format
- Posted by Ralf Nieuwenhuijsen <nieuwen at XS4ALL.NL> Aug 31, 1999
- 430 views
- Last edited Sep 01, 1999
Unfortunately, according to a faq about compression I read some (long) time ago .. (its was a standard faq of a compression techniques news group) there are about 3 different pattents about LZW-based compression and they all controdict. Unisys at least, is not the first. Lzh and any extended form of run-lenght-encoding was already pattented by IBM a long long time ago. There have never been no trail, but the word is, IBM would technically win such a trail, since there pattent is older and the LZW technique is an applied form of their pattened idea. Like this more weird pattents exist and since I'm quite sure the website of the juridical agencies aren't paying any loyalities, why would you ? Ralf. PS. Honestly, I wouldn't mind any hacker, kicking Unisys butt for these kind of pranks though. PPS. Btw, of all things a hacker could do on MS computers (eh. Hotmail) opening everybody's email account is like the most stupid thing of all. It hurts the audience, rather the corporate butchers. > On Tue, 31 Aug 1999, you wrote: > > As far as I knew use of GIF format images is free. > > So is using code to read GIFs. > > It's only when you write code to WRITE a file in GIF format that you a required to pay the > > licence. > > > > That is a program to read GI's is OK. > > A program that writes GIFs must pay the $5000 licence. > > > > Nope. and I quote from the Unisys web page (which probably requires a license, > too!): > > License Information on GIF and Other LZW-based Technologies > > More and more people are becoming aware that the reading and/or writing of GIF images requires > a license to use Unisys patented Lempel Ziv Welch (LZW) data compression and > decompression technology, including United States Patent No. 4,558,302, > Japanese Patent Numbers 2,123,602 and 2,610,084, and patents in Canada, France, > Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom. Since January of 1995, Unisys has > entered into almost two thousand license agreements for use of GIF and other > LZW-based technology. > .......... > Does this apply to just storing or serving GIF images on a web site? > Yes. See below: > > Web Site LZW Licenses Available from Unisys > > Because demand for LZW-related technology by Web developers continues to grow, > Unisys wants to make obtaining a license for Web-based use of the LZW > technology as easy and as straightforward as possible. Unisys therefore > announces a new way for operators of certain types of Web sites to obtain an > LZW license. If you are the operator of an Intranet Web site or an Internet > Billboard Web site (see detailed definitions) and use the types of images > covered by the LZW patent, you qualify. Types of images covered GIF, > TIFF-LZW, PDF-LZW images or other LZW graphical formats used in connection with > the creation, operation or maintenance of a Web site. > > Now, reading further, you will find out that under certain conditions, a > not-for-profit BBS or web server with no commercial use or any items > for sale may use GIFs _IF_ the operator applies for a written waver from > Unisys. This waver may be provided at no charge, if Unisys so decides. Without > the written waver, or the $5000 license, _NO_ use is allowed. > > The full text is here: http://corp2.unisys.com/LeadStory/lzwfaq.html > For lawyer-speak, it is pretty clear. > > Regards, > Irv >