On Mon, 7 Feb 2005 11:55:31 -0500 (EST), linux-os <linux-os@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:On Mon, 7 Feb 2005, Chris Friesen wrote:
Lee Revell wrote:On Wed, 2005-02-02 at 21:50 -0500, Kyle Moffett wrote:
It's not like somebody will have
some innate commercial advantage over you because they have your
driver source code.
For a hardware vendor that's not a very compelling argument. Especially
compared to what their IP lawyers are telling them.
Got anything to back it up?
I have a friend who works for a company that does reverse-engineering of ICs.
Companies hire them to figure out how their competitor's chips work. This is
the real threat to hardware manufacturers, not publishing the chip specs.
Having driver code gives you the interface to the device. That can be
reverse-engineered from watching bus traces or disassembling binary drivers
(which is how many linux drivers were originally written). Companies have
these kinds of resources.
If you look at the big chip manufacturers (TI, Maxim, Analog Devices, etc.)
they publish specs on everything. It would be nice if others did the same.
Chris
I also have first-hand knowledge. Once there was a company called
Data Precision. Just point your favorite search-engine to that
name. They were a wholly owned subsidiary of Analogic. They
no longer exist. Data Precision would take a year or more
to develop a product. Six weeks after it was available on
the market, it would have been cloned by Pacific-rim companies
and dumped into the US at below US manufacturing cost.
[..]
Shouldn't you be able to use legal action against companies that
provide such clones (at least in your country)? You could maybe even
sue the local resellers for participating to the fraud.
J