The APNG specification was created in 2004 by Stuart Parmenter and
Vladimir Vukićević of the
Mozilla Corporation to allow for storing the animations needed for interfaces such as
throbbers. In May 2003, Mozilla had scrapped support for
MNG animations, which provides a superset of APNG functionality, citing concerns about the large file size required for the expansive MNG decoder library (300 KB); the APNG decoder, built on the back of the PNG decoder, was a much smaller component. Among users and maintainers of the PNG and MNG formats, APNG had a lukewarm reception. In particular, PNG was conceived to be a single-image format. APNG hides the subsequent frames in PNG ancillary chunks in such a way that APNG-unaware applications would ignore them, but there are otherwise no changes to the format to allow software to distinguish between animated and non-animated images. Some of the main concerns arising from this were the inability of applications to negotiate for PNG and APNG, or distinguish between PNG and APNG once received, or for legacy software to even inform users that there are additional frames. Glenn Randers-Pehrson spearheaded efforts to reconcile the PNG purists' position with that of APNG proponents by recommending changes to APNG's format and proposing the use of a unique
MIME type (e.g., video/png), but the APNG proponents only added the different MIME type (image/apng) while insisting on the use of the
.png extension instead of
.apng, leading to the format not being approved by the PNG Development Group. The PNG Development Group rejected APNG as an official extension on 20 April 2007, and there have been several subsequent proposals for a simple animated graphics format based on PNG using several different approaches. However, since 14 September 2021, the PNG Working Group has been chartered by the
World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to maintain and develop for the PNG specification, and the first public working draft of PNG Specification (Third Edition) was published on 25 October 2022, adding APNG extensions to the core PNG specification. The Candidate Recommendation was published on 21 September 2023. On 24 June 2025 it was finally elevated to the Recommendation final status by the W3C. == File format ==