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author | giraffedata <giraffedata@9d0c8265-081b-0410-96cb-a4ca84ce46f8> | 2013-03-28 01:55:27 +0000 |
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committer | giraffedata <giraffedata@9d0c8265-081b-0410-96cb-a4ca84ce46f8> | 2013-03-28 01:55:27 +0000 |
commit | 200553b6135e1ba6a4b6585e3d07d934ba6b8ceb (patch) | |
tree | 0d7a730843db22ff539ed39feddd3b7d3e4541f1 /doc | |
parent | 5240773e57f21c778d227fd14a3720006f70c83e (diff) | |
download | netpbm-mirror-200553b6135e1ba6a4b6585e3d07d934ba6b8ceb.tar.gz netpbm-mirror-200553b6135e1ba6a4b6585e3d07d934ba6b8ceb.tar.xz netpbm-mirror-200553b6135e1ba6a4b6585e3d07d934ba6b8ceb.zip |
Update advanced series to 10.62
git-svn-id: http://svn.code.sf.net/p/netpbm/code/advanced@1869 9d0c8265-081b-0410-96cb-a4ca84ce46f8
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/COPYRIGHT.PATENT | 93 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/HISTORY | 29 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | doc/patent_summary | 85 |
3 files changed, 102 insertions, 105 deletions
diff --git a/doc/COPYRIGHT.PATENT b/doc/COPYRIGHT.PATENT index fe3c242a..24b1583a 100644 --- a/doc/COPYRIGHT.PATENT +++ b/doc/COPYRIGHT.PATENT @@ -34,92 +34,7 @@ all the above to be modified by "to the best of the Netpbm maintainer's knowledge." - -PATENTS -------- - -These are the patents the Netpbm maintainer knows about that relate to -Netpbm. It is basically just information the maintainer has stumbled -over at some point -- no search has been done. - -No licenses have been granted by patent owners to the maintainer of -Netpbm. Therefore, if you need a patent to use something in Netpbm, -you need your own license. - -A note about patents in general: A patent gives an inventor the -exclusive right to make, sell, or use the invention. If you -independently invent something without knowing that the patent holder -already did, that makes no difference -- the patent holder still has -the exclusive right. It makes no difference if you give the original -inventor credit. The patent applies to a method, not its expression, -so writing a program from scratch to implement a certain method is -still a patent infringement. Infringing a patent is not a crime per -se, but to the extent that it costs the patent holder money, the -infringer has to make it up. - -The original purpose of patents is probably perverted when patents are -applied to things you implement in computer programs. This is one of -the Free Software Foundation's causes. See -<http://www.gnu.org/philosophy.html#laws>. - - -Unisys owns patents on LZW compression, which is used by Ppmtogif, and -maybe on LZW decompression, which is used by Giftopnm. IBM also owns -a patent that may cover the GIF tools. Unisys offers a license of the -patent for trivial use for $5000. Its U.S. patent (Number 4,558,302) -EXPIRED June 20, 2003. In most of Europe, the patent expires June 18, -2004. In Japan, it's June 20, 2004 and in Canada, July 7, 2004. -IBM's U.S. patent expirs August 11, 2006. - -Neither company has ever enforced the patent against trivial users of -it. <http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-1713278.html> is an article -dated April 18, 2000 on the issue. -http://www.unisys.com/about__unisys/lzw/> is Unisys' view of the -matter. For information from another perspective, see -<http://burnallgifs.org>. - -The following Netpbm components may be restricted by these patents: -Ppmtogif, Giftopnm. - -A good substitute for GIF if the patents are a problem is PNG (see -pngtopnm, pnmtopng), which was developed with a primary purpose of not -using any patented technology. - -You can also use the -nolzw option on ppmtogif to avoid using the LZW -patent. The images so generated are larger than traditional -LZW-compressed GIFs, but any GIF decoder can decode them just the -same. - -I repeat: The Unisys U.S. patent has expired. It is not an issue -for any future use of Netpbm. - - -The Pnmtojpeg and possibly Jpegtopnm programs in some cases may use -the arithmetic coding patents owned by IBM, AT&T, and Mitsubishi. -There is difference of opinion on whether they do. - -Forgent owns a patent it believes covers JPEG compression. This -patent was virtually unknown before July 2002, when Forgent began to -enforce it. It has successfully enforced it against two companies -(Sony and an unnamed Japanese digital camera maker), but without court -ruling. This patent, U.S. Patent No. 4,698,672, expires in 2006. - -Philips and Lucent Technologies also own patents they claim cover -JPEG. - -The following Netpbm components may be restricted by these patents: -Jpegtopnm, Pnmtojpeg, Ppmtompeg, Tifftopnm, Pnmtotiff. These all -do their JPEG work via a JPEG library not distributed with Netpbm. -Your JPEG-related liability for using Netpbm is limited to your -liability for using your JPEG library. - -The next best alternative to JPEG is probably PNG and maybe JBIG for -bilevel (black and white) images. - -http://burnalljpegs.org contains information on this issue. - - -The Jbigtopnm and Pnmtojbig programs use arithmetic coding patents and -other patents covering various aspects of the "front end." - - +Netpbm may practice valid patents, which would mean that you owe someone +royalties if you use the code. This is a miniscule risk, though. +What is known about patents related to Netpbm is in the file +'doc/patent_summary' in the Netpbm source tree. diff --git a/doc/HISTORY b/doc/HISTORY index 13dea532..becb0ba6 100644 --- a/doc/HISTORY +++ b/doc/HISTORY @@ -4,31 +4,28 @@ Netpbm. CHANGE HISTORY -------------- -13.02.26 BJH Release 10.61.04 +12.03.28 BJH Release 10.62.00 - rasttopnm: fix bug: incorrect output due to used-before-set - variable. Introduced in 10.56 (September 2011). - -13.02.23 BJH Release 10.61.03 - - Fix to 10.61.02 MinGW build fix. - -13.02.20 BJH Release 10.61.02 - - MinGW build: various fixes. + pnmtorast: set don't care bytes to zero to make output + repeatable. -12.12.31 BJH Release 10.61.01 + rasttopnm: add -dumpheader, dumpcolormap. pamstereogram: change -guidesize default from 10 to 20 - (relevant since 10.61.00). + (relevant since 10.61). + + rasttopnm: fix bug: incorrect output due to used-before-set + variable. Introduced in 10.56 (September 2011). pamstereogram: fix bug: doesn't reject negative guidesize. - Broken since 10.61.00. + Broken since 10.61. pamstereogram: fix bug: garbage in -verbose listing. Broken - since 10.61.00 + since 10.61 + + MinGW build: various fixes. -12.12.31 BJH Release 10.61.00 +12.12.30 BJH Release 10.61.00 pgmhist: Add -machine option. diff --git a/doc/patent_summary b/doc/patent_summary new file mode 100644 index 00000000..271f227c --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/patent_summary @@ -0,0 +1,85 @@ +These are the patents the Netpbm maintainer knows about that relate to +Netpbm. It is basically just information the maintainer has stumbled +over at some point -- no search has been done. + +No licenses have been granted by patent owners to the maintainer of +Netpbm. Therefore, if you need a patent to use something in Netpbm, +you need your own license. + +A note about patents in general: A patent gives an inventor the +exclusive right to make, sell, or use the invention. If you +independently invent something without knowing that the patent holder +already did, that makes no difference -- the patent holder still has +the exclusive right. It makes no difference if you give the original +inventor credit. The patent applies to a method, not its expression, +so writing a program from scratch to implement a certain method is +still a patent infringement. Infringing a patent is not a crime per +se, but to the extent that it costs the patent holder money, the +infringer has to make it up. + +The original purpose of patents is probably perverted when patents are +applied to things you implement in computer programs. This is one of +the Free Software Foundation's causes. See +<http://www.gnu.org/philosophy.html#laws>. + +The Jbigtopnm and Pnmtojbig programs use arithmetic coding patents and +other patents covering various aspects of the "front end." + + +JPEG patents +------------ + +The Pnmtojpeg and possibly Jpegtopnm programs in some cases may use +the arithmetic coding patents owned by IBM, AT&T, and Mitsubishi. +There is difference of opinion on whether they do. + +Forgent owns a patent it believes covers JPEG compression. This +patent was virtually unknown before July 2002, when Forgent began to +enforce it. It has successfully enforced it against two companies +(Sony and an unnamed Japanese digital camera maker), but without court +ruling. This patent, U.S. Patent No. 4,698,672, expires in 2006. + +Philips and Lucent Technologies also own patents they claim cover +JPEG. + +The following Netpbm components may be restricted by these patents: +Jpegtopnm, Pnmtojpeg, Ppmtompeg, Tifftopnm, Pnmtotiff. These all +do their JPEG work via a JPEG library not distributed with Netpbm. +Your JPEG-related liability for using Netpbm is limited to your +liability for using your JPEG library. + +The next best alternative to JPEG is probably PNG and maybe JBIG for +bilevel (black and white) images. + +http://burnalljpegs.org contains information on this issue. + + +Expired LZW patents +------------------- + +Unisys owns patents on LZW compression, which is used by +Ppmtogif, and maybe on LZW decompression, which is used by Giftopnm. IBM also +owns a patent that may cover the GIF tools. Unisys offers a license of the +patent for trivial use for $5000. Its U.S. patent (Number 4,558,302) expired +June 20, 2003. In most of Europe, the patent expired June 18, 2004. In +Japan, it was June 20, 2004 and in Canada, July 7, 2004. IBM's U.S. patent +expired August 11, 2006. + +Neither company has ever enforced the patent against trivial users of +it. <http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-1713278.html> is an article +dated April 18, 2000 on the issue. +http://www.unisys.com/about__unisys/lzw/> is Unisys' view of the +matter. For information from another perspective, see +<http://burnallgifs.org>. + +The following Netpbm components may be restricted by these patents: +Ppmtogif, Giftopnm. + +A good substitute for GIF if the patents are a problem is PNG (see +pngtopnm, pnmtopng), which was developed with a primary purpose of not +using any patented technology. + +You can also use the -nolzw option on ppmtogif to avoid using the LZW +patent. The images so generated are larger than traditional +LZW-compressed GIFs, but any GIF decoder can decode them just the +same. |