VP8 was first released by On2 Technologies on September 13, 2008, as On2 TrueMotion VP8, replacing its predecessor,
VP7. On May 19, at its
Google I/O conference, Google released the VP8 codec software under a
BSD-like license and the VP8
bitstream format specification under an irrevocable free patent license. This made VP8 the second product from On2 Technologies to be opened, following their donation of the
VP3 codec in 2002 to the
Xiph.Org Foundation, from which they derived the
Theora codec. In February 2011,
MPEG LA invited patent holders to identify patents that may be essential to VP8 in order to form a joint VP8
patent pool. As a result, in March the
United States Department of Justice (DoJ) started an investigation into MPEG LA for its role in possibly attempting to stifle competition. In July 2011, MPEG LA announced that 12 patent holders had responded to its call to form a VP8
patent pool, without revealing the patents in question, and despite
On2 having gone to great lengths to avoid such patents. In November 2011, the
Internet Engineering Task Force published the informational RFC 6386, VP8 Data Format and Decoding Guide. In March 2013, MPEG LA announced that it had dropped its effort to form a VP8 patent pool after reaching an agreement with Google to license the patents that it alleges "may be essential" for VP8 implementation, and granted Google the right to sub-license these patents to any third-party user of VP8 or
VP9. This deal has cleared the way for possible
MPEG standardisation as its royalty-free internet video codec, after Google submitted VP8 to the MPEG committee in January 2013. In March 2013,
Nokia asserted a patent claim against
HTC and Google for the use of VP8 in Android in a German court; however, on August 5, 2013, the webm project announced that the German court has ruled that VP8 does not infringe Nokia's patent. Nokia has made an official intellectual property rights (IPR) declaration to the IETF with respect to the VP8 Data Format and Decoding Guide listing 64 granted patents and 22 pending patent applications. ==Implementations==