Vorbis
Vorbis is a free and open-source software project headed by the Xiph.Org Foundation. The project produces an audio coding format and software reference encoder/decoder (codec) for lossy audio compression, libvorbis. Vorbis is most commonly used in conjunction with the Ogg container format and it is therefore often referred to as Ogg Vorbis.
Filename extension |
.ogg |
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Internet media type |
application/ogg, audio/ogg, audio/vorbis, audio/vorbis-config |
Developed by | Xiph.Org Foundation |
Initial release | May 8, 2000 |
Latest release | Vorbis I July 4, 2020 |
Type of format | Lossy audio |
Contained by | Ogg, Matroska, WebM |
Standard | Specification |
Open format? | Yes |
Free format? | Yes |
Website | https://xiph.org/vorbis/ |
Developer(s) | Xiph.Org Foundation |
---|---|
Initial release | July 19, 2002 |
Stable release | 1.3.7
/ July 4, 2020 |
Written in | C |
Type | Audio codec, reference implementation |
License | Modified BSD license |
Website | Xiph.org downloads |
Vorbis is a continuation of audio compression development started in 1993 by Chris Montgomery. Intensive development began following a September 1998 letter from the Fraunhofer Society announcing plans to charge licensing fees for the MP3 audio format. The Vorbis project started as part of the Xiphophorus company's Ogg project (also known as OggSquish multimedia project). Chris Montgomery began work on the project and was assisted by a growing number of other developers. They continued refining the source code until the Vorbis file format was frozen for 1.0 in May 2000. Originally licensed as LGPL, in 2001 the Vorbis license was changed to the BSD license to encourage adoption, with the endorsement of Richard Stallman. A stable version (1.0) of the reference software was released on July 19, 2002.
Since February 2013, Xiph.Org has stated that the use of Vorbis should be deprecated in favor of the Opus codec, which is also a Xiph.Org Foundation project and also free and open-source. Compared to Vorbis, Opus can simultaneously achieve higher compression efficiency—per both Xiph.Org itself and third-party listening tests—and lower encode/decode latency (in most cases, low enough for real-time applications such as internet telephony or live singing, rarely possible with Vorbis).