Hi,

Linux Audio Developers often have to assist users with audio and
multimedia issues that are working in ffmpeg but not in libav. In addition
the deprecation message for the ffmpeg wrapper causes a lot of confusion
and even though it is not meant maliciously most people perceive it as an
attack on FFMPEG by petty libav developers. This is neither good for the
open source multimedia community as it encourages and promotes fractious
behaviour but it also misleads people into thinking that FFMPEG is an
abandoned project.

I have monitored the commits for both libav and ffmpeg for the past few
years and I can tell you that FFMPEG has more commits than libav. It is
clearly not a project that is going away anytime soon.

In short FFMPEG is one of the most powerful multimedia tools that we have
and it is a travesty that a couple of Debian package maintainers have been
allowed to make the decision for us on which fork we are able to install.

The Debian community needs to look closely at the background for this
decision making process especially with a view towards the ongoing damage
that the continued promotion of FFMPEG as a deprecated project is doing to
global perception of Linux Multimedia as well as the confusion that has
been caused to date.

This is along the same lines as the purposefully bad implementation of
PulseAudip that plagued Ubuntu users for a number of years. It was only
solved when Mark Shuttleworth stepped in and personally fired the people
responsible for the mismanaged audio system. The damage that was caused
and the ongoing negative perception to Pulse Audio that still exists is
taking many years to rectify.

it's time that Linux Multimedia was given a higher political priority.
Many of the greatest leaps forward over the past several years wouldn't
have been possible without ALSA, Pulse Audio, FFMPEG and various other
open source multimedia projects. Continuing to allow a substandard fork of
a well loved and very active project to be promoted as the "new way" needs
to stop.


--
Patrick Shirkey
Boost Hardware Ltd


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