Why SMPTE Made Professional Media Standards Free
SMPTE just decided to stop charging people to read their technical specifications. For years, if you wanted the actual blueprints for how professional media tech works, you had to pay a membership fee or buy an expensive PDF. Now, the gatekeepers are stepping aside. It's a weird move. We're used to these legacy bodies hoarding their standards to maintain a sense of authority. But with the rise of the Open Services Alliance and the push for On-Set Virtual Production, the industry is moving too fast for a paywall. If the specs aren't accessible, the tools just won't get built. I'm not sure if this is a genuine shift in philosophy or just a desperate attempt to stay relevant in an era of open source. Either way, it changes how we build for the screen. The real question is whether the industry will actually use this freedom to innovate, or if we'll just find new ways to complicate things. The end of the paywall SMPTE moved to an open-access model because...