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Tuesday 19 March 2019

Explain SCPA Semiconductor Chip Protection Act, in detail.



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Explain SCPA Semiconductor Chip Protection Act, in detail.
SOLUTION:
Semiconductor Chip Protection Act (SCPA):
  • The Semiconductor Chip Protection Act of 1984 was an innovative solution to this new problem of technology-based industry.
  • While some copyright principles underlie the law, as do some attributes of patent law, the Act was uniquely adapted to semiconductor mask works, in order to achieve appropriate protection for original designs while meeting the competitive needs of the industry and serving the public interest.

How SCPA Operates?
  • Although the U.S. SCPA is codified in title 17 (copyrights), the SCPA is not a copyright or patent law.
  • Rather, it is a law resembling a utility model law.
  • It has some aspects of copyright law, some aspects of patent law, and in some ways it is completely different from either.
  • In general, the chip topography laws of other nations are also utility model laws.
  • Nevertheless, copyright and patent case law illuminate many aspects of the SCPA and its interpretation.

1. Acquisition Of Protection By Registration:
  • Chip protection is acquired under the SCPA by filing with the U.S. Copyright Office an application for "mask work" registration under the SCPA, together with a filing fee.
  • The application must be accompanied by identifying material, such as pictorial representations of the IC layers—so that, in the event of infringement litigation, it can be determined what the registration covers.
  • Protection continues for ten years from the date of registration.

2. Mask Works:
  • The SCPA repeatedly refers to "mask works." This term is a remains of the original form of the bill that became the SCPA and was passed in the Senate as an amendment to the Copyright Act.
  • The term mask work is parallel to and consistent with the terminology of the 1976 Copyright Act, which introduced the concept of "literary works," "pictorial works," "audiovisual works," and the like—and which protected physical embodiments of such works, such as books, paintings, video game cassettes, and the like against unauthorized copying and distribution.
  • The term "mask work" is not limited to actual masks used in chip manufacture, but is defined broadly in the SCPA to include the topographic creation embodied in the masks and chips.
  • Moreover, the SCPA protects any physical embodiment of a mask work.

3. Enforcement:
  • The owner of mask work rights may pursue an alleged infringer ("chip pirate") by bringing an action for mask work infringement in federal district court.
  • The remedies available correspond generally to those of copyright law and patent law.

4. Functionality Unprotected:
  • The SCPA does not protect functional aspects of chip designs. That is reserved to patent law.
  • Although EPROM and other memory chips topographies are protectable under the SCPA, such protection does not extend to the information stored in chips, such as computer programs.
  • Such information is protected, if at all, only by copyright law.

5. Reverse Engineering Not Prohibited:
  • The SCPA permits competitive emulation of a chip by means of reverse engineering.
  • The ordinary test for illegal copying (Mask Work Infringement) is the "substantial similarity" test of copyright law, but when the defense of Reverse Engineering is involved and supported by probative evidence, then, the accused chip topography must be substantially identical rather than just substantially similar, for the defendant to be liable for infringement.
  • Most world chip topography protection laws provide for a Reverse Engineering Privilege.

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