VP8 – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com Open Source Entertainment, on Demand. Mon, 17 Nov 2014 18:16:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-favicon-32x32.png VP8 – Jupiter Broadcasting https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com 32 32 WebRTC vs Skype | Tech Talk Today 92 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/71622/webrtc-vs-skype-tech-talk-today-92/ Mon, 17 Nov 2014 10:16:21 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=71622 The US State Department shuts down its email in what can only be described as a major overreaction, WebRTC sees a major breakthrough that will bring major competition to Skype. Plus the big results from Mobile Pwn2Own 2014 & more! Direct Download: MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Video | HD Video | Torrent | […]

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The US State Department shuts down its email in what can only be described as a major overreaction, WebRTC sees a major breakthrough that will bring major competition to Skype.

Plus the big results from Mobile Pwn2Own 2014 & more!

Direct Download:

MP3 Audio | OGG Audio | Video | HD Video | Torrent | YouTube

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Show Notes:

State Department shuts down its e-mail system amid concerns about hacking – The Washington Post

The State Department scrambled over the weekend to secure its unclassified e-mails, shutting down the entire e-mail system after finding evidence suggesting a hacker may have been been poking around.

A senior State Department official said technicians recently detected “activity of concern” in portions of the system handling unclassified e-mail. The official, who you could also consider a leaker, remains unindfied saying that none of the department’s classified systems were compromised.

VP8 and H.264 to both become mandatory for WebRTC | Andreas Gal

WebRTC is mainly about opening direct connections to other web browsers. The plug-inless capture of video and audio is related but the fundmentals of it are implmented by each browser.

Unfortunately, the full potential of the WebRTC ecosystem has been held back by a long-running disagreement about which video codec should be mandatory to implement. The mandatory to implement audio codecs were chosen over two years ago with relatively little contention: the legacy codec G.711 and Opus, an advanced codec co-designed by Mozilla engineers. The IETF RTCWEB Working Group has been deadlocked for years over whether to pick VP8 or H.264 for the video side.

At the last IETF meeting in Hawaii the RTCWEB working group reached strong consensus to follow in our footsteps and make support for both H.264 and VP8 mandatory for browsers. This compromises was put forward by Mozilla, Cisco and Google. The details are a little bit complicated, but here’s the executive summary:

  • Browsers will be required to support both H.264 and VP8 for WebRTC.
  • Non-browser WebRTC endpoints will be required to support both H.264 and VP8. However, if either codec becomes definitely royalty free (with no outstanding credible non-RF patent claims) then endpoints will only have to do that codec.
  • “WebRTC-compatible” endpoints will be allowed to do either codec, both, or neither.

See the complete proposal by Mozilla Principal Engineer Adam Roach here. There are still a few procedural issues to resolve, but given the level of support in the room, things are looking good.

Mobile Pwn2Own 2014: Windows Phone’s sandbox resists attack

The Mobile Pwn2Own 2014 hacking competition, held at the PacSec Applied Security Conference in Tokyo, Japan, was concluded on Thursday, and not one of the targeted phones has survived completely unscathed.


Of the targets available for selection, Amazon Fire Phone, Apple iPhone 5S, Samsung Galaxy S5, and Google/LG Nexus were completely “pwned,” the Nokia Lumia 1520 running Windows Phone partially, and BlackBerry Z30, Apple’s iPad Mini and the Nexus 7 weren’t targeted at all.

A successful exploitation of a bug in the latter carried with it a $150,000 prize, the others less: $100,000 for messaging services, $75,000 for short distance and $50,000 for the browser, apps or OS.


What we know is that the Apple iPhone 5S was owned via the Safari browser by exploiting two bugs, the Amazon Fire Phone was breached via three bugs in its browser, Samsung Galaxy S5 was successfully targeted via NFC by two different teams (one by triggering a deserialization issue in certain code, and the other by targeting a logical error), and the Nexus 5 was forced to pair with another phone via Bluetooth.


The two contestants that did their attacks on the second day were less successful: Jüri Aedla used Wi-Fi to target a Nexus 5, but was unable to elevate his privileges further than their original level. And Nico Joly tried to exploit Lumia’s browser, but didn’t manage to gain full control of the system as the sandbox held. He did, however, manage to extract the cookie database.

AT&T Stops Using ‘Perma-Cookies’ to Track Customer Web Activity – Mac Rumors

In late October, researchers discovered that AT&T and Verizon had been engaging in some unsavory customer tracking methods, using unique identifying numbers or “perma-cookies” to track the websites that customers visited on their cellular devices to deliver target advertisements.

Following significant negative attention from the media, AT&T today told the Associated Press that it is no longer injecting the hidden web tracking codes into the data sent from its customers’ devices.


The change by AT&T essentially removes a hidden string of letters and numbers that are passed along to websites that a consumer visits. It can be used to track subscribers across the Internet, a lucrative data-mining opportunity for advertisers that could still reveal users’ identities based on their browsing habits.


AT&T’s customer tracking practices, called “Relevant Advertising,” were the result of a pilot program the company had been experimenting with, which has apparently come to an end.


While AT&T has opted to stop using the invasive tracking method, Verizon is continuing to utilize perma-cookies to track the web activity of its customers. Unlike AT&T’s experimental program, Verizon has been using Relevant Advertising techniques for approximately two years.

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Is Google Playing You? | LAS | s15e02 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/4588/is-google-playing-you-las-s15e02/ Sun, 16 Jan 2011 18:28:32 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=4588 We think Google’s obviously playing of the open source community, and we attempt to shed our bright ACTION light of common sense their latest transgressions!

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We’re all fired up over Google’s obvious playing of the open source community, and we attempt to shed our bright ACTION light of common sense their latest transgressions!

THEN – Firefox claims OpenGL is all messed up on Linux, and this has us scratching our heads!

Plus So much more!

All this week on, The Linux Action Show!

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This Week’s Show Notes:

Runs Linux:
The Jeopardy Winning “Watson” Supercomputer, Runs Linux

Android Pick:
Prey Tracker
Download for desktop & Android

NEWS:
Ubuntu to get 2D Unity option
Unity 2D now available for both Ubuntu 10.10 Maverick and 11.04 Natty
FOSS Hopes for Novell Patents Spark, Then Quickly Fade
No Hardware Acceleration Firefox for Linux Due to Buggy X Drivers

Reddit Thread with comments from Chromium Dev

Google is “open”:
Google’s Official Announcement
Google’s dropping H.264 from Chrome a step backward for openness

“Znu”, on Slashdot:
This serves two strategic purposes for Google. First, it advances a codec that’s de facto controlled by Google at the expense of a codec that is a legitimate open standard controlled by a multi-vendor governance process managed by reputable international standards bodies. (“Open source” != “open standard”.) And second, it will slow the transition to HTML5 and away from Flash by creating more confusion about which codec to use for HTML5 video, which benefits Google by hurting Apple (since Apple doesn’t want to support Flash), but also sucks for users.

Microsoft Lashes Google for Dropping H.264
The first in-depth technical analysis of VP8
Creamy new Android 2.4 release due in May, say reports
Another Slashdot Commenter nails Chris’ thoughts on the topic RE: Flash Lock In

Download:

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Don’t Be Evil | J@N | 1.12.11 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/4566/dont-be-evil-jn-11211/ Wed, 12 Jan 2011 22:39:46 +0000 https://original.jupiterbroadcasting.net/?p=4566 Google’s recent announcement that they will be abandoning h.264 video compatibility in Chrome has touched a raw nerve with us!

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Google’s recent announcement that they will be abandoning h.264 video compatibility in Chrome has touched a raw nerve with us. We’re here to tell you what we think this announcement is all about, what it could mean to the immediate future of online media and web browsing, and why Google is not living up to their motto, “Don’t Be Evil.”

Show Feeds:

Show Notes:

THE BIG BOMB:

https://blog.chromium.org/2011/01/html-video-codec-support-in-chrome.html

Is it to stick to Apple and their support of HTML5?

https://www.pcworld.com/article/216581/google_drops_h264_from_chrome_new_flash_battleground.html

Is it all about cutting the cost of running YouTube?
https://www.zdnet.com/blog/perlow/googles-h264-decision-its-all-about-youtube-costs/15529

Five simple questions to Google:
https://daringfireball.net/2011/01/simple_questions

Microsoft likens Google’s H.264 drop to abandoning English
https://www.electronista.com/articles/11/01/12/microsoft.jabs.google.dropping.h264.in.chrome/

RELATED NEWS?

WebM (VP8) hardware acceleration coming to mobile chipsets soon
https://www.intomobile.com/2011/01/12/webm-vp8-codec/

Adobe plans to support WebM in Flash… Someday real soon now!
https://blogs.adobe.com/flashplatform/2010/05/adobe_support_for_vp8.html

Download:

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