Today, OpenH264 is the fallback codec for WebRTC (Web Real-Time Communication) in Firefox, Chrome, and Safari. When you make a browser-based video call, you are likely using OpenH264. In the dream scenario, OpenH264 is no longer a fallback. It becomes the baseline, mandatory, and universal standard for all web video .
For years, the video industry has been locked in a silent war. On one side sits the royalty-free, open-source champion, AV1. On the other, the entrenched, patent-encumbered behemoths, H.264 (AVC) and H.265 (HEVC). Caught in the crossfire is a quiet, unassuming piece of technology from Cisco Systems: . dream scenario openh264
If the EU declared that any browser sold in Europe must include a fully licensed H.264 codec, the industry would standardize on OpenH264 overnight. Apple would stop forcing WebRTC through VideoToolbox alone. Google would stop favoring its own proprietary hooks. The fragmented mess would end. We don’t need a sci-fi future of AI-powered codecs to solve web video’s problems. We need political and industrial will to embrace a solution that has existed for a decade. OpenH264 is not glamorous. It doesn’t promise 50% better compression. But it promises something rarer: interoperability without lawyers . Today, OpenH264 is the fallback codec for WebRTC
While AV1 is hailed as the future, a truly dream scenario for the web might not involve bleeding-edge compression ratios or new hardware decoders. Instead, it would involve the universal, seamless, and unrestricted adoption of a codec we already have—one that is already installed on over a billion devices without most users even knowing it. It becomes the baseline, mandatory, and universal standard