HDR10+

The dynamic metadata are used to adjust and optimize each frame of the HDR video to the consumer display's capabilities in a way based on the content creator's intentions.

A certification and logo program for HDR10+ device manufacturers is available with an annual administration fee for certain adopter categories and no per-unit royalty.

[13] On 28 August 2017, Samsung, Panasonic, and 20th Century Fox created the HDR10+ Technologies LLC[14] to promote the HDR10+ standard.

[18] On 4 April 2019, Universal Pictures Home Entertainment announced a technology collaboration with Samsung Electronics to release new titles mastered with HDR10+.

[citation needed] HDR10+ signals the dynamic range and scene characteristics on a scene-by-scene or even frame-by-frame basis.

The HDR10+ ecosystem is used within current systems by, For offline and video-on-demand (VOD) (e.g. ultra-high-definition Blu-ray, over-the-top (OTT), multi-channel video programming distributor (MVPD)), HDR10+ metadata may be created during the post-production mastering process or during transcoding/encoding for distribution back-ends by HDR10+ content generation tools in two steps: HDR10+ metadata is interchanged through a low complexity JSON-structured text file,[28] which is then parsed and injected into video files.

The following are a list of HDR10+ authorized test centers: Source:[33] Certified product[34] categories include:

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HDR10+ distribution ecosystem
HDR10+ metadata workflow
HDR10+ live encoder workflow
HDR10+ backward compatibility