Commentary: EDA patent litigation threatens innovation, growth
Gabe Moretti
(03/28/2006 5:23 PM EST)
The ability of the electronics industry to continue to produce more powerful and cheaper products every two years or less, in accordance with Moore’s Law, depends on a strong and growing EDA sector. Many factors inhibit the growth of the EDA industry, including aggressive price cutting and lack of innovation. But in the last few years, the legal battles within EDA over intellectual property (IP) have also served to further cripple its growth. EDA customers are often confused by the litigation and use the EDA industry in-fighting in pricing negotiations.
While lawsuits that involve stolen code are necessary, many of the patent infringement lawsuits simply waste money that would be better spent on hiring more software engineers and developing innovative solutions that truly fill a need in the semiconductor industry. And in the fiercely competitive EDA industry, some companies use litigation to slow the progress of their competitors, which in the end slows the progress of their customers.
(03/28/2006 5:23 PM EST)
The ability of the electronics industry to continue to produce more powerful and cheaper products every two years or less, in accordance with Moore’s Law, depends on a strong and growing EDA sector. Many factors inhibit the growth of the EDA industry, including aggressive price cutting and lack of innovation. But in the last few years, the legal battles within EDA over intellectual property (IP) have also served to further cripple its growth. EDA customers are often confused by the litigation and use the EDA industry in-fighting in pricing negotiations.
While lawsuits that involve stolen code are necessary, many of the patent infringement lawsuits simply waste money that would be better spent on hiring more software engineers and developing innovative solutions that truly fill a need in the semiconductor industry. And in the fiercely competitive EDA industry, some companies use litigation to slow the progress of their competitors, which in the end slows the progress of their customers.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- 5G-NTN Modem IP for Satellite User Terminals
- AXI-S Protocol Layer for UCIe
- HBM4E Controller IP
- 14-bit 12.5MSPS SAR ADC - Tower 65nm
- 5G-Advanced Modem IP for Edge and IoT Applications
Related News
- Jury Awards Core Wireless $7.3 Million in Patent Litigation Against Apple
- Nokia expands patent litigation against Apple in Asia, Europe and the US
- OMNIVISION Announces Patent Litigation Victory Against ID Image Sensing LLC
- Igniting Innovation: Siemens EDA launches Cre8Ventures in support of the EU Chips Act
Latest News
- OpenTitan Ships in Chromebooks: First Production Deployment
- Breker Verification Systems Adds RISC‑V Industry Expert Larry Lapides to its Advisory Board
- Weebit Nano’s ReRAM Selected for Korean National Compute-in-Memory Program
- Marvell Extends ZR/ZR+ Leadership with Industry-first 1.6T ZR/ZR+ Pluggable and 2nm Coherent DSPs for Secure AI Scale-across Interconnects
- BrainChip Announces Neuromorphyx as Strategic Customer and Go-to-Market Partner for AKD1500 Neuromorphic Processor