241,177 research outputs found

    Copyright Protection for ASIC Gate Configurations: PLDs, Custom and Semicustom Chips

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    Conventional wisdom holds that computer software and computer hardware require two different species of intellectual property protection. Software is thought best protected by copyright law, while hardware is thought best protected by patent law, trade secret law or the Semiconductor Chip Protection Act of 1984. Recent technological and legal developments blur software-hardware distinctions, as courts have extended copyright protection to object code, firmware and microcode, and patent protection to software. This note argues that the standard industry conceptions of hardware and software are inadequate to answer the legal question of what is copyrightable as a computer program. Furthermore, it considers whether application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), which are, typically, semi-custom hardware solutions to engineering design problems traditionally solved in software, should qualify as computer programs for purposes of copyright protection

    Copyright Protection for ASIC Gate Configurations: PLDs, Custom and Semicustom Chips

    Get PDF
    Conventional wisdom holds that computer software and computer hardware require two different species of intellectual property protection. Software is thought best protected by copyright law, while hardware is thought best protected by patent law, trade secret law or the Semiconductor Chip Protection Act of 1984. Recent technological and legal developments blur software-hardware distinctions, as courts have extended copyright protection to object code, firmware and microcode, and patent protection to software. This note argues that the standard industry conceptions of hardware and software are inadequate to answer the legal question of what is copyrightable as a computer program. Furthermore, it considers whether application specific integrated circuits (ASICs), which are, typically, semi-custom hardware solutions to engineering design problems traditionally solved in software, should qualify as computer programs for purposes of copyright protection

    Copyright Protection of Software

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    Computer technology has developed within the last decades with many advancements which require intellectual property protections. This thesis addresses the need for the legal protection of software by the vast body of copyright laws. This thesis examines the history, nature, textual and practical compositions of copyright laws and their adaptability to computer technology. The thesis further analyses the scope of copyright protection with emphasis on the Computer Software Copyright Act of 1980 (CSCA), the regime of international conventions for the protection of software as well as other statutory protections for the owners and users of the software. The thesis concludes with recommendations for improving software protection as a national and international matter while retaining the current framework

    The Policy Implications of Granting Patent Protection to Computer Software: An Economic Analysis

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    This Note analyzes the propriety of granting patent law protection to computer software by viewing this problem from economic, legal, public and technological policy perspectives. Part II explains the relationship between computer hardware and software, discusses the role of algorithms in software development,and traces the development of the computer software industry.Part III analyzes the economic policies underlying the patent system. Part IV identifies the patent law principles that are relevant to the software patentability issue and discusses their underlying policy foundations. Part V examines the Supreme Court\u27s application of these principles in the leading software patent cases and concludes that the Court\u27s failure to understand computer technology has caused it to withhold patent protection from computer software. Part V reveals that the Supreme Court has mischaracterized software algorithms by treating them as unpatentable mathematical laws. Part VI of this Note analyzes the benefits and costs of granting patent protection to computer software and demonstrates the compelling societal need for this protection. \u27Part VI also proposes an addition to the Patent Office of a small staff of computer science experts to remedy the administrative problem of processing software patent applications

    Copyright Protection for Computer Software: an International View

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    The best method for protection of computer software has been a topic of debate and considerable controversy during the past few decades both in the United States, and in technologically advanced countries throughout the world. Current legal theories of protection include patent, trade secret and copyright law. Although each theory has its particular merits, this Note will focus on the growing trend toward copyright protection for computer software

    Comparative Study of Patent Protection for Computer Software in a Sino-EU-US Context

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    A patent basically gives its holder monopoly for the patented subject matter, which is why strong patent rights often are criticized for conflicting with the open and free standards that benefit the public. Only by being the holder of one crucial patent within a standard technology, the holder is in a position to slow down or even fully stop the standardization process. The fast progress of computer technology makes defining the scope of the protection the law should afford computer programs quite difficult. The purpose of this thesis is to examine how the application process, and intellectual property right protection for software patents differ in different legal systems. Software patents provide protection for the software, but globally there is no one legal definition of a software patent. This means that the first thing to establish, is how a software patent is defined in different legal systems, after which this thesis will move on to consider the actual main research question of the thesis. The main question that will be considered in this thesis is how the protection a software patent provides differs between selected legal systems? The selected legal systems, i.e. the territorial scope of this paper will include the USA, the EU, and China. These three legal systems were chosen because of their substantial size and importance both as general markets, but even more importantly as highly competitive markets for software. Some attention will also be paid to copyright, as the form of intellectual property protection that preceded patents as the primary protection form for software. The thesis will examine the protection each legal system offers individually, but the overarching issue regarding this thesis will be a comparison between the legal systems. The legal systems will be compared to each other, in order to identify their common and unique characteristics, ending up in a discussion for an ideal legal system, consisting of the best parts from the legal systems, in the view of the patent holder and society as a whole. Business methods and software are among the most debated subjects within patent law, be-cause these areas are considered far too broad in scope, the reason behind many “patent troll” lawsuits, doubtful to conquer the prior art requirement because of loose disclosure requirements, and in general not worthy of patent protection. During the years, solutions to the sup-posed problems of business method and software patents have been short lived. Solution proposals and approaches have been accepted and rejected at a fast rate globally
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