Enter the "Man of Steel" in this scenario: Cisco Systems. In 2013, Cisco performed a heroic act of corporate altruism—or shrewd strategic foresight, depending on your view. They released OpenH264, a full-featured, production-quality implementation of the H.264 codec, under a permissive open-source license (BSD). But the real superpower was the legal shield. Cisco negotiated a unique agreement with the patent pool holding the rights to H.264 (MPEG LA). Cisco pays an annual cap of patent royalties for the entire project, and then
In the end, Superman OpenH264 will likely fade into irrelevance. AV1 or VVC will eventually take its place, and this quiet codec will be retired. But its legacy will endure. It proved that the open web doesn't have to be a second-class citizen when it comes to high-stakes, patent-encumbered technology. For nearly a decade, Cisco’s unassuming creation has been the silent guardian, the watchful protector of browser-based video. It may not have a red cape, but every time you make a video call from a web browser, you are witnessing its quiet flight. superman openh264
The practical impact has been nothing short of transformative for the open web. Today, OpenH264 is the silent workhorse behind video communication in billions of devices. Its most famous deployment is within WebRTC (Web Real-Time Communication)—the technology that powers browser-based video calls, chat apps, and telemedicine platforms. When you make a video call from your web browser without installing a single plugin, there is a high probability that OpenH264 is doing the heavy lifting of encoding and decoding that video stream. Enter the "Man of Steel" in this scenario: Cisco Systems