Skip to main content
  • IETF 119 post-meeting survey

    IETF 119 Brisbane was held 16-22 March 2024 and the results of the post-meeting survey are now available on a web-based interactive dashboard.

    12 Apr 2024
  • New working group aims to make spotting unwanted trackers easier

    Location-tracking accessories provide numerous benefits to users, such as being able to find where they left their keys. But they can also have security and privacy implications if used for malicious purposes. A newly formed IETF working group has taken on the task to standardize a protocol that protects people against being unknowingly tracked.

    14 Mar 2024
  • New Internet Architecture Board, IETF Trust, IETF LLC and Internet Engineering Task Force Leadership Announced

    Members of the incoming Internet Architecture Board (IAB), the IETF Trust, the IETF Administration LLC (IETF LLC) Board of Directors, and the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG)—which provides leadership for the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)—have been officially announced, with new members selected by the 2023-2024 IETF Nominating Committee.

    12 Mar 2024
  • IAB Workshop on Barriers to Internet Access of Services (BIAS)

    The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) organizes workshops about topics of interest to the community that bring diverse experts together, raise awareness, and possibly identify the next steps that can be explored by the community. The IAB held its “Barriers for Internet Access of Services (Bias)” fully online workshop during the week of January 15, 2024.

    5 Mar 2024
  • Suggested IETF 119 Sessions for Getting Familiar with New Topics

    These IETF 119 meeting sessions included discussions and proposals that are accessible to a broad range of Internet technologists whether they are new to the IETF or long-time participants.

    26 Feb 2024

Filter by topic and date

Filter by topic and date

Aiming for a standardized, high-quality, royalty-free video codec to remove friction for video over the Internet

1 Sep 2015

The NETVC working group aims to create a video codec that can be used in open-source software, in addition to proprietary software and hardware encoders.

NETVC WG at IETF 93

The NETVC working group aims to create a video codec that can be used in open-source software, in addition to proprietary software and hardware encoders. Historically, most open-source software has been unable to make use of royalty-bearing codecs, for two key reasons: first, having to pay royalties at all on a product that yields no revenue is fiscally unsustainable. This is further complicated by the fact that the broad, uncontrolled distribution of open-source software makes accounting for per-unit costs impossible.

Beyond use in open-source software, the availability of a standardized, high-quality, royalty-free video codec is expected to remove friction from the market for applications and devices that transmit video over the Internet. This has an overall beneficial effect on Internet users.

In 2012, the IETF’s CODEC working group published the specification for what is arguably the best audio codec today, Opus, with a similar set of goals. Opus has seen fairly broad adoption on the Internet, due to its high quality and royalty-free licensing status. NETVC seeks to replicate that success for video codecs.

Last month, Cisco contributed its Thor video codec to the NETVC effort, which joins Mozilla’s Daala codec as input to our work. I’m excited that Cisco has come forth with an additional pool of techniques to draw from, and working group participants wasted no time in trying to figure out how to combine them into a best-of-breed codec. At a weekend “hackathon” before the IETF meeting in Prague, a group of NETVC participants collaborated to perform preliminary merging of some specific, easily-isolated techniques from both codecs together, with promising results.

Almost as important as its actual implementation, Thor comes to the IETF with a pool of IPR that Cisco has declared as being available on royalty-free terms. This opens up many avenues of technical progress that would have otherwise been unavailable to NETVC.

Finally, I’d like to quantify where the quality of NETVC’s eventual output stands as compared with H.264 and HEVC (also known as H.265, the successor codec to H.264). The working group has a stated goal to have “comparable or better performance” when compared with codecs in widespread use. I’ll start this quantification by emphasizing that the NETVC working group had its first meeting last month, and that the input codecs are still subjects of considerable research.

With that caveat, the results achieved by the Daala team have been objectively better (using industry-standard quality metrics) than H.264 since approximately mid-February. Early testing by NETVC participants shows that Thor is also somewhat better than H.264 already. By merging the techniques used by both codecs and applying further refinements, we expect the codec produced by NETVC to surpass the performance of HEVC.

I’ll note that this doesn’t mean that NETVC’s task is largely complete. There’s still considerable work to be done in combining the best aspects of Thor and Daala into a unified codec (along with any other techniques that are brought to the IETF by interested parties), as well as developing runtime efficiency improvements that will allow using the codec to compress media in real-time on normal consumer devices.

Photo credit (c) Stonehouse Photographic / Internet Society


Share this page