The Secure Real-Time Media Flow Protocol (RTMFP) is a proprietary protocol suite developed by Adobe Systems forencrypted, efficient multimedia delivery through both client-server and peer-to-peer models over the Internet.
RTMFP is a peer-to-peer system, but is only designed for direct end user to end user communication for real-time communication, not for file sharing between multiple peers using segmented downloading.[1] Facebook uses this protocol in its Pipe application to transfer big files directly between two users.
RTMFP is based on User Datagram Protocol (UDP).
RTMP stands for Real-Time Messaging Protocol, and RTMFP stands for Real-Time Media Flow Protocol.
Flash Player 10.0 allowed only one-to-one communication for P2P, but from 10.1 application-level multicast is allowed. Flash Player finds appropriate distribution route (overlay network), and can distribute to the group, which is connected by P2P.
NO! Of course, it’s Cumulus’s main goal: be an cirrus GPL alternative. The only limit: your CPU, memory, and number of ports on one machine.
It is legal in the US under the Digitial Millenium Copyright Act. You can drill the thread on WikiPedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Real_Time_Media_Flow_Protocol - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proprietary_protocol - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Millennium_Copyright_Act
“There are legal precedents when the reverse-engineering is aimed at interoperability of protocols.[7][8][9] In the United States, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act grants a safe harbor to reverse engineer software for the purposes of interoperability with other software”
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