Knowledge Transfer, or IP Theft?
Nitin Dahad, EETimes
November 5, 2018
What can be characterized in good times as helping emerging economies develop knowledge or technology can look quite different when things get messy.
That’s a bit of a tongue-in-cheek headline. I’m not attempting to even suggest that they are two sides of the same coin or that IP theft is acceptable.
However, with the U.S. government charging Taiwanese foundry UMC and Chinese DRAM maker Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit Co. with conspiracy to steal intellectual property from Micron Technology, it made me think about two things: the software and engineering outsourcing industry, and about government-to-government relations.
E-mail This Article | Printer-Friendly Page |
Related News
- How bad is IP theft in China? And what can you do about it?
- Now Gelsinger is gone, what is Intel's Plan B?
- Need a Perfect Ethernet IP? Key ASIC's 0.13um 10/100 PHY IP Solution is Ready Now
- Is Graphcore Deal Finally About to Close?
- T2M-IP Unveils Revolutionary MIPI D-PHY & DSI Controller IP Cores with speed 2.5Gbps/lane, Redefining High-Speed Data Transfer and Display Interfaces
Breaking News
- GUC Joins Arm Total Design Ecosystem to Strengthen ASIC Design Services
- QuickLogic Announces $6.575 Million Contract Award for its Strategic Radiation Hardened Program
- Micon Global and Silvaco Announce New Partnership
- Arm loses out in Qualcomm court case, wants a re-trial
- Jury is out in the Arm vs Qualcomm trial
Most Popular
- Arm loses out in Qualcomm court case, wants a re-trial
- Micon Global and Silvaco Announce New Partnership
- Jury is out in the Arm vs Qualcomm trial
- Alphawave Semi Scales UCIe™ to 64 Gbps Enabling >20 Tbps/mm Bandwidth Density for Die-to-Die Chiplet Connectivity
- QuickLogic Announces $6.575 Million Contract Award for its Strategic Radiation Hardened Program