Will China bury its bad IP past?
Junko Yoshida, EETimes
9/28/2012 6:51 PM EDT
BEIJING – China is big. China is not homogeneous. It has a poor record of protecting intellectual property. But it also has plenty of government funding at the central, provincial and municipal levels to go along with a massive domestic market for new technologies and products.
Add up the pluses and minuses and the Chinese market is a mixed bag.
So far, only a few Western companies and universities have managed to navigate China’s IP minefield to form successful partnerships and grab market share. “China is complicated,” Dongmin Chen, dean in Peking University’s (PKU) School of Innovation and Entrepreneurship, noted during a recent interview with EE Times.
That’s where Chen enters the picture.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- Simulation VIP for Ethernet UEC
- Bluetooth® Low Energy 6.2 PHY IP with Channel Sounding
- Simulation VIP for UALink
- General use, integer-N 4GHz Hybrid Phase Locked Loop on TSMC 28HPC
- JPEG XL Encoder
Related News
- Will More-than-Moore Take Off in China?
- Huang "Confident" Nvidia-Arm Deal Will Get Past Regulators
- Qualitas Semiconductor Appoints HSRP as its Distributor for the China Markets
- 2025 Will See AI PCs become the New Normal, but ARM-Based PCs Will Not Grow Out of Its Minority Segment
Latest News
- Mixel MIPI IP Integrated into Automotive Radar Processors Supporting Safety-critical Applications
- GlobalFoundries and Navitas Semiconductor Partner to Accelerate U.S. GaN Technology and Manufacturing for AI Datacenters and Critical Power Applications
- VLSI EXPERT selects Innatera Spiking Neural Processors to build industry-led neuromorphic talent pool
- SkyWater Technology and Silicon Quantum Computing Team to Advance Hybrid Quantum-Classical Computing
- Dnotitia Revolutionizes AI Storage at SC25: New VDPU Accelerator Delivers Up to 9x Performance Boost