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Message
From: tkafafi at hotmail.com<tkafafi@h...>
Date: Mon Oct 1 04:49:04 CEST 2007
Subject: [oc] patents and logic cores
Hi Guenter, I don't know the answer to the legal technicalities you are asking, but I would recommend you stay away from pattent protected stuff. Any lawsuit will bring you lots of headaches and financial harm even if your action is not necesarily illegal.
Thanks
----- Original Message ----- From: Günter Dannoritzer<dannoritzer@w...> To: Date: Sat Sep 29 14:54:38 CEST 2007 Subject: [oc] patents and logic cores
> Hi, > > I have been searching in the mailing list archives for patents and > how > they apply to logic cores. John Dalton did some interesting > comparison > back in 2003 about the meaning of patents in the US and Australia. > What I am looking for, and did not find an answer in the archive > is, how > do patents apply to the development of logic cores? Let's say I > implement an algorithm as explained and claimed by a national > patent. Is > the design of that algorithm in HDL a patent infringement or is the > implementation of the HDL on a FPGA or ASIC the patent > infringement? > Now to the national issue. I guess an infringement only applies to > a > country where the patent is issued from. So in case of a national > patent, if that patent has not been issued in any other country, I > would > be able to implement the algorithm and use it in all other > countries, > except for the one country the patent has been issued from, without > causing an infringement? > How does that apply to opencores now? As the server is placed in > one > country would it be possible to implement algorithms and post them > on > opencores that are protected by a national patent, not issued in > the > country the server is placed at? > I guess due to the mirror server that exist it would require to > consider > patents issued in each country a mirror server is placed? > Thanks for anyone shedding some light on this topic. > Cheers, > Guenter > >
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