That's an odd one - I'm not sure how they could prevent it, legally.

Unless the Flash Player has a license saying 'you're not allowed to receive
data from a non-FMS server', in which case the users are the ones who get
stung, not Red5.

They could prevent it _practically_ by using some form of
password/encryption/handshaking, I guess. "Are you an FMS server?" "No"
"Well I'm not playing your stream, then..."

Ian

On 8/22/07, Zárate <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Sadly, it seems Adobe is legally going to prevent Red5 and the likes doing
> so:
>
> "I am not in a position able to explain to you why we will not allow
> 3rd party streaming servers to stream H.264 video or AAC audio into
> the Flash Player. What I can tell you is that we do not allow this
> without proper licensing. Refer to Adobe's friendly Flash Media Server
> sales staff for more information."
>
>
> http://www.kaourantin.net/2007/08/what-just-happened-to-video-on-web_20.html
>
> This is being discussed in Red5 mailing list:
>
> http://osflash.org/pipermail/red5_osflash.org/2007-August/014156.html
>
> Cheers,
>
> Juan
>
_______________________________________________
osflash mailing list
[email protected]
http://osflash.org/mailman/listinfo/osflash_osflash.org

Reply via email to