backtop


Print E-mail del.icio.us 51 comment(s) - last by eye smite.. on Mar 11 at 3:49 PM

A newly developed system seeks to kill the reverse engineering/cloning markets that abound in Asia.

A rampant piracy market flourishes in China and other countries where intellectual property law enforcement is not up to U.S. standards.  This piracy is not limited merely to bootleg CDs or DVDs.  Entire processors, circuit boards, and consumer electronic products are produced in pirate plants.  These plants are typically based either on stolen blueprints of the device itself or blueprints of the actual production plant. 

Pirates have an easy time obtaining such plans, due to the abundant outsourcing that moved much of the international consumer electronics infrastructure to nations like China which provide cheap skilled labor, but are piracy prone.  Attempts by the Chinese government to stop such thefts or shut down pirate plants are mostly token gestures, as they do little to dent the overall rate of piracy.

Now researchers at the University of Michigan and Rice University's Computer Engineering schools seek to provide a potential solution to the problem.  The system is based on a lock-key premise. The patent holder would generate keys and the physical chips would have to contact the patent holder when turned on to verify authenticity and receive a key.  The chips will not operate if a proper key is not obtained.

The project is code named EPIC, short for Ending Piracy of Integrated Circuit, and utilizes complex cryptography.  It utilizes small changes to the chip on the hardware level, but these changes have virtually no effect on performance or power consumption.   Michigan computer engineering doctoral student Jarrod Roy is presenting the research at the Design Automation and Test in Europe conference in Germany on March 13.  Igor Markov, associate professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at U-M and a co-author of the paper says the new technology solves a very new problem -- piracy due to outsourcing.

Markov explains the crisis for chipmakers, stating, "Pirated chips are sometimes being sold for pennies, but they are exactly the same as normal chips.  They were designed in the United States and usually manufactured overseas, where intellectual property law is more lax. Someone copies the blueprints or manufactures the chips without authorization."

Fabrication plants typically cost around $3B USD to $4B USD according to the study's authors.  Farinaz Koushanfar, assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at Rice University and a co-author on the paper, states, "Therefore, a growing number of semiconductor companies, including Texas Instruments and Freescale (a former division of Motorola), has recently announced that they would cease manufacturing chips with finer features, and outsource production to East Asia. However, even in U.S. facilities, working chips are sometimes reported defective by individual employees and later sold in gray markets."

Chips using the system would include hardware to produce a random 64-bit identification number.  The chip could not be unlocked without this identification number.  The patent holder could then activate legitimate chips, protecting against pirated designs.  This activation can be done over a phone line or internet connection.  Says Roy, "All chips are produced from the same blueprint, but differentiate themselves when they are turned on for the first time and generate their ID.  Nothing is known about this number before activation."

The activation would begin with the chip designating its random ID.  Based on this, the patent holder would send out a unique code to unlock the chip.  Since activations keys are generated on the fly, it would not be possible to steal a single key and use it on multiple chips, as each key is real-time generated and unique.

Markov says that the technology, if adopted by consumer electronics manufacturers, will make piracy very difficult.  Says Markov, "If someone was really bent on forging and had a hundred million dollars to spend, they could reverse-engineer the entire chip by taking it apart. But the point of piracy is to avoid such costs.  The goal of a practical system like ours is not to make something impossible, but to ensure that buying a license and producing the chip legally is cheaper than forgery."



Comments     Threshold


This article is over a month old, voting and posting comments is disabled

Their own fault.
By Harkonnen on 3/6/2008 5:40:26 PM , Rating: 5
These companies have nobody to blame but themselves. If they weren't so cheap all their manufacturing plants wouldn't be in a foreign country.




RE: Their own fault.
By 16nm on 3/6/08, Rating: 0
RE: Their own fault.
By sweetsauce on 3/6/2008 6:04:36 PM , Rating: 5
Wrong. We can only blame shareholders who constantly demand revenue growth year after year then jump ship when growth is even a fraction smaller than predicted.


RE: Their own fault.
By James Holden on 3/6/2008 6:12:10 PM , Rating: 5
And we continue to pass the buck in a circle :)


RE: Their own fault.
By jadeskye on 3/6/2008 6:24:42 PM , Rating: 1
and to think we fight to defend capitalism...


RE: Their own fault.
By dever on 3/7/2008 2:41:27 PM , Rating: 2
Yes, it seems that people forget we are defending the intrinsic human economic freedom that is deeply intertwined with our political and civil freedoms.


RE: Their own fault.
By Oregonian2 on 3/6/2008 7:21:51 PM , Rating: 2
Shareholders need the short term money to pay for those products that weren't outsourced and therefore have higher prices!

P.S.- Actually purchased a consumer $25'ish gizmo at Costco about a week ago. I was flabbergasted! Said "Made in U.S.A." on it!


RE: Their own fault.
By fic2 on 3/6/2008 9:43:46 PM , Rating: 3
Did you take it back?


RE: Their own fault.
By Pneumothorax on 3/7/2008 12:38:40 AM , Rating: 2
Yeah I purchased 2 brooms from costco yesterday and I actually felt a sense of pride that they were still "Made in The USA" It's sad when we used to manufacture TV's and such and now all we make are broom handles :(


RE: Their own fault.
By 16nm on 3/7/2008 10:03:09 AM , Rating: 2
TV sets is a great example. Zenith and RCA used to be made in the USA, but consumers could not refuse the dramatically cheaper imports and forced RCA to go overseas. I think Zenith went out of business. The only one to blame is ourselves, the consumer. I'm all for it though. The only constant in life is change. Adapt or die. There are other ways to make money than trying to compete with a Chinese workforce that lives in tin shacks and have to force their children to earn income for the family. No thanks. That's not for me.

I don't know how the US carmakers are going to survive...


RE: Their own fault.
By mattclary on 3/7/2008 10:51:41 AM , Rating: 2
And to add to the "you can thank xxxx" meme...

You can thank unions for pricing our products right out of the market.


RE: Their own fault.
By dever on 3/7/2008 2:43:31 PM , Rating: 2
more importantly, you can thank government interference that gives Unions privileges that exceed those of individuals or the companies they build.


RE: Their own fault.
By geeg on 3/7/2008 3:57:48 PM , Rating: 2
hey, that's called capitalism which has only one rule of acquisition: "increase profit"


RE: Their own fault.
By NickF001 on 3/6/2008 7:43:40 PM , Rating: 5
WRONG

Most of these companies only care about one thing: profit. If they are going to outsource it has nothing to do with the consumer demanding lower prices, they will outsource in any case.


RE: Their own fault.
By 16nm on 3/7/2008 10:09:59 AM , Rating: 2
quote:
WRONG

Most of these companies only care about one thing: profit


The reason is due to competition, not profits. Actually, margins are slimmer and profits have deteriorated thanks to all these companies competing for our dollars. Electronics were a much more profitable business in the eighties than today. Just ask Sony.


RE: Their own fault.
By Houdani on 3/7/2008 10:50:07 AM , Rating: 5
RIGHT!

This is exactly what my company did. Guaranteed to save money by manufacturing in China, right? Until you realize that the China mfg plant needs to show a profit for themselves so they mark up the price of the product by 30% which effectively negates the savings we achieved by outsourcing it.

Moreover, we used to have a very lean inventory of finished goods. Most everything was built as the orders came in and shipped out the same day. Now, we have to stockpile product in the warehouse domestically in order to meet customer’s expectations of timely delivery, since shipping from China and clearing customs takes three weeks. (Product sitting on shelves is just money doing nothing.) We also have to pay for the warehouse for this extra inventory, which is just additional overhead cost. Not to mention frequently having to expedite (air) shipping when unexpected orders come in, or the manufacturing plant in China has hiccups and falls behind.

So yeah, the executives got their bonuses for moving product to a “low cost region,” but if they did a holistic accounting of the products, they would be rather disappointed in the results. Actually, they would just refuse to accept the numbers are true.


RE: Their own fault.
By dever on 3/7/2008 2:46:24 PM , Rating: 2
quote:
WRONG. Most of these companies only care about one thing: profit. If they are going to outsource it has nothing to do with the consumer demanding lower prices, they will outsource in any case.
This statement is self-contradictory.

If outsourcing will produce lower prices, attract consumers and, GOD FORBID, increase profits, these all go hand-in-hand.


RE: Their own fault.
By InsaneGain on 3/7/2008 1:53:38 PM , Rating: 1
quote:
Wrong. We can only blame ourselves for demanding the absolute lowest pricing on these products


Why would this statement be downgraded? From everything I learned in economics courses, in a free market economy, the consumer tendency to maximize self interest is one of the fundamental driving forces in corporate behavior. It determines the environment corporations work in. If a company does not make efforts to minimize costs, another company will do so and succeed in the market because the consumer will ultimately choose the lowest cost provider, holding all other factors (i.e. quality etc.) equal.


RE: Their own fault.
By inighthawki on 3/6/2008 6:54:43 PM , Rating: 3
Not so much. Outsourcing not only brings many jobs to the foreign country, but lowers the price of the product. This enables more people to afford and buy the product, and make the company grow at a faster, rate, increase its workforce, hire more and better engineers, and in the end everyone is happy.

Personally I don't care about the hardware pirating, obviously since it doesn't affect me, but I don't see it as a very big threat.

Then again, pirating only exists because there are people who can't afford the real thing, and the big businesses imo don't seem to understand. Sure there are plenty of products that can't afford to drop prices...but look at Microsoft or apple for example, both have highly inflated pricing.