So, officially, although this is not stated anywhere on their site, they allow non-commercial use.
It is stated on their website. Read http://mp3licensing.com/help/enduser.html for the following information:
Do you license mp3/mp3PRO software to end users?
No. We license mp3/mp3PRO software and patents to developers and manufacturers of software applications and hardware devices.
There is no license fee for iPod use or Winamp use, for example. But Apple (in the case of iPods) had to pay a hardware MP3 decoder fee. And AOL (or whomever distributes Winamp) had to pay a fee for that "PC Software Application" (to use the language Thomson/Fraunhofer uses).
If Ubuntu were to distribute an MP3 player program to an American, Ubuntu would be distributing non-free software to that American. That American can run the program to play MP3s, but they cannot share that program with their friends and neighbors without first paying a patent fee (there are per-unit and one-time fees for "PC Software Applications"). There continues to be a conflict between free software and American patent law because in America (and some other countries) software patents exist.
This is why one cannot focus on providing complete compatibility with the outside world and simultaneously provide free software. -- marketing-list mailing list marketing-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/marketing-list