"Hi John,
Yes, Netflix uses a raft of custom ffmpeg recipes (and some proprietary plug-ins) to do many of the backend encodings. I can only guess that Avid may not be able to transcode because it can't reliably identify the source codec.
You might try using another product (like Resolve) or ffmpeg itself to create a transcode outside of Avid to a more familiar codec. I personally haven't seen any software behave this way, especially considering that it's still a ProRes file and still abides by the ProRes spec.
"Hi John,
Yes, Netflix uses a raft of custom ffmpeg recipes (and some proprietary plug-ins) to do many of the backend encodings. I can only guess that Avid may not be able to transcode because it can't reliably identify the source codec. You might try using another product (like Resolve) or ffmpeg itself to create a transcode outside of Avid to a more familiar codec. I personally haven't seen any software behave this way, especially considering that it's still a ProRes file and still abides by the ProRes spec."
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