March 24, 2004
Japan Broadcasters Adopt AVC/H.264 Video Coding
for Mobile Digital Terrestrial Broadcasting
Accord Reached with MPEG LA on Patent Licensing Terms
Tokyo March 24--In a joint press
conference with MPEG LA today, Japan broadcasters NHK, TBS, NTV, TV Asahi, Fuji
TV and TV Tokyo announce their adoption of AVC/H.264 Video Coding for
mobile segment digital terrestrial broadcasting. A basic agreement is also
announced between the broadcasters and MPEG LA on royalties and other terms of
license under essential patents owned by many parties to be offered as part of a
joint license.
The patent licensing accord is the result of discussions over many months to assure both the practicality and applicability of the license terms to Japanese broadcast conditions. Under the accord broadcasters will have the option of paying a one-time fee of US $2,500 for each encoder using in transmitting the AVC/H.264 video. The one-time fees will be offered as an alternative to annual fees. They will cover the use of AVC/H.264 video for free cable and free satellite as well as free terrestrial broadcast television.
In addition, it is recognized that broadcasters in developing countries have different circumstances that may require further considerations.
Statement
from Japan Broadcasters
“Digital
Terrestrial Broadcasting in Japan began in December 2003. Through these Digital
Terrestrial Broadcasts, there had been plans to implement broadcast services for
mobile personal receivers unlike any seen before in the world. Problems were
encountered, however, with regard to patents for the video coding technologies
used for these services, and as a result there was no firm schedule for when
these services would be realized.
These patent issues have now been essentially resolved with regard to “AVC/H.264,” the latest form of video coding technology. This resolution represents a major step forward in terms of achieving mobile broadcast services using AVC/H.264 as the coding technology. From this point on, it will be necessary to undertake various tasks, including the establishment of specifications for receiver terminals and ARIB standards, the development of mobile personal receivers by manufacturers, and discussions with mobile communication operators, but we believe that it will be possible to initiate mobile broadcast services in the first quarter of the year 2006. When these services become a reality, any user will be able to enjoy the latest broadcasts easily, anytime, and anywhere. We consider this a truly groundbreaking event, both for broadcasters and for viewers.
This AVC/H.264 is an exceptional video coding technology that was developed not only by the patent holders but through the efforts of many companies and institutions throughout the world. We are pleased and honored to announce that through recent discussions with MPEG LA, the requests of the broadcasters – that is, the users – were reflected in the royalty terms, and that it will now be possible for this outstanding technology to be used in the field of broadcasting ahead of any other field in the world.
We are confident that MPEG LA will take into consideration the differing environments faced by broadcasters throughout the world, including those in developing countries, to ensure that broadcasters around the globe may enjoy the benefits of this new AVC/H.264 technology. We would like to take this opportunity to once again thank MPEG LA and the holders of the AVC/H.264 patent.”
Statement
from MPEG LA
“We thank the
Japan broadcasters for their cooperation in reaching this historic accord.
Through the miracle of digital technology, the efficient use of limited
bandwidth and high resolution once thought to be physically incompatible now
make it possible for broadcasters and their publics to reach their full
potential. What we witness here today is the further acknowledgement of the
interdependence between content and technology. Both represent the height of
human creative achievement, but one cannot exist without the other. Through the
shared efforts of inventors and manufacturers who make technology possible and
broadcasters who use it to deliver innovative services that inform and entertain
audiences worldwide, lies the key to technological advancement. This represents
a partnership in the truest sense of the word. By their visionary leadership and
tireless service delivering free television to all the public, broadcasters make
it possible for consumers to enjoy the fruits of this cooperation and experience
the age of high definition television today. We thank the patent holders who
agree to license their technology under these terms, and we salute the
broadcasters for their public devotion.”
CONTACT:
Lawrence Horn
Vice President
MPEG LA, LLC
Tel : 301.986.6660
Fax : 301.986.8575
E-mail: lhorn@mpegla.com
CONTACT:
Mutsuo Matsumoto
Public Relations Department
NHK
Tel : +81.3.5455.2445
Fax :+81.3.3469.8110
E-mail: matsumoto.m-cy@nhk.or.jp
NHK (Japan Broadcasting
Corporation)
NHK is Japan’s sole
public broadcaster with 54 stations across Japan, financed by the audience fee.
NHK currently serves domestic audiences via five television (two terrestrial and
three satellite channels) and three radio services which provide a diverse range
of programs. NHK has been conducting research and development on Hi-Vision (HD)
since 1964, and now almost 80-90 % of General TV is broadcast in HD. NHK also
explores future broadcasting services, and has been conducting research on
further advanced technology.
TBS (TOKYO BROADCASTING
SYSTEM, INC.)
TBS, Tokyo
Broadcasting System Inc. started broadcasting in 1951. TBS brings Drama, Variety,
Music, Sports and News programs to 120 million Japanese people. With its 27
affiliated TV stations and 33 Radio stations,
TBS programs are watched and listened nationwide. TBS group now have satellite
broadcast channel BS-i, C-TBS,
and 24 hours news channel Newsbird. We have started digital
broadcasting since December 1 last year.
NTV (Nippon
Television Network Corporation)
NTV,
celebrating its 51st anniversary, is the oldest and largest
commercial broadcaster in Japan. Its high-definition television systems and
state-of-the-art digital broadcasting facilities allow NTV to distribute the
latest information as we enter a new era of multimedia broadcasting.
TV Asahi Corporation
TV Asahi
Corporation is one of the 5 major key commercial based broadcasting companies,
with affiliated broadcasting companies covering Japan. We have an established
reputation in news and culture programs. With our fully digitalized headquarter
which is ready to correspond from data broadcasting cellular phone to the
internet content, we are vigorously looking forward to provide
contents and establish new services in any digital format.
Fuji Television Network,
Inc.
Over the last 45 years,
Fuji Television, Japan's foremost commercial broadcaster, has been captivating
audiences around the globe with its extraordinary programming and thrilling
motion pictures. So when terrestrial digital broadcasting began in December
2003, it became the common mission of the 28 Fuji network stations to deliver
the highest quality digital broadcasts to audiences around the country while
continuing existing analog services. Also going hand-in-hand with Fuji TV's
commercial channels, are its high definition satellite channel, and three
standard definition satellite channels.
In addition, Fuji TV also provides an
array of content to subscribers via mobile phones and the Internet.
TV TOKYO Corporation
TV TOKYO, one of the
commercial-based broadcasters as key stations, started its (analog) TV service
in 1964, and also launched terrestrial digital broadcasting in 2003. TV TOKYO
currently broadcasts, through the TXN Network of six TV stations, to 32 million
households in Japan, accounting for 68% of the entire nation and covering
Japan's major commercial centers - Tokyo, Yokohama, Osaka, Nagoya, Okayama,
Takamatsu, Sapporo and Fukuoka. TV TOKYO produces and broadcasts a broad variety
of programs focused on Business News, Anime (Animation) and Infotainment (Information-Entertainment).
MPEG LA, LLC
MPEG LA successfully pioneered one-stop technology platform
licensing with a portfolio of essential patents for the international digital
video compression standard known as MPEG-2. One-stop technology platform
licensing enables widespread technological implementation, interoperability and
use of fundamental broad-based technologies covered by many patents owned by
many patent holders. MPEG LA provides users with fair, reasonable,
nondiscriminatory worldwide access to essential patents from multiple patent
holders in a single transaction as a non-exclusive alternative to entering into
separate license agreements with individual patent holders. MPEG LA is not
related to any standards agency and is not an affiliate of any patent holder. In
addition to MPEG-2, MPEG LA licenses portfolios of essential patents for the
IEEE 1394 Standard, the DVB-T Standard, the MPEG-4 Visual Standard and the
MPEG-4 Systems Standard. MPEG LA also is facilitating a license for the AVC/H.264
Standard and for DRM Reference Model v 1.0. For more information, please refer
to http://www.mpegla.com,
http://www.1394la.com and
http://www.dvbla.com.
AVC/H.264 Video Coding
AVC/H.264 Video Coding refers to the MPEG-4 Part 10 AVC/H.264
Standard, an advanced video encoding and decoding technology jointly developed
between the Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG) of the International Standards
Organization/International Electrotechnical Commission (ISO/IEC) and the Video
Coding Experts Group (VCEG) of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU).
1 segment service
Digital terrestrial broadcasting in Japan offers new services. In
addition to HDTV programs that can be watched on home TVs, it is expected to
enable viewers using mobile personal receivers to receive low-bit-rate images.
These services will be offered simultaneously on the same broadcasting channel.
Technically, the frequency bandwidth of one channel for digital terrestrial
broadcasting is divided into thirteen segments. Twelve of them will be used for
home television viewers, and the remaining one to provide images for portable
terminal users. Because of this allocation, the latter is sometimes called the
“1-segment service.”
