[OpenBIOS] Intel holding back information
David J. Coffin
dcoffin at shore.net
Sun Aug 8 21:02:20 CEST 1999
On Sun, Aug 08, 1999 at 05:35:25PM -0230, James Oakley wrote:
> "Timothy J. Massey" wrote:
>
> > Even if your BIOS bears no resemblance to the one you disassembled, because
> > you *did* disassemble it, the makers of the BIOS you disassembled can say to
> > you, "But you saw our code and did it yourself. That's illegal." And
> > they'd be right.
Reverse engineering is very legal in Sweden, although it
may soon be illegal in the USA. There wouldn't *be* any BIOS
industry today if Phoenix hadn't reverse-engineered IBM's code.
So Phoenix, which now owns Award, is going to prosecute
some college student in Sweden for doing exactly what they did.
Not likely.
> This is very true. A couple of years back, some guys who worked for
> Matrox quit and started their own video chipset company. Matrox
> successfully blocked their entry into the market because they saw
> proprietary Matrox engineering information.
Not the same thing. Those engineers had to sign stacks of
non-disclosure and non-competition agreements before they could
see Matrox's designs. They clearly violated those contracts.
Niklaus would be taking a bigger risk if he signed Intel's
NDA. Right now, he has no legal obligation to protect anyone's
secrets.
If a disgruntled chemist at Coca-Cola gave you their secret
formula, he would be in deep trouble. But no one could stop you
from selling cola drink (you couldn't *call* it "Coca-Cola", of
course), or posting the formula on the web.
Dave Coffin 8/8/99
-
To unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo at freiburg.linux.de
with 'unsubscribe openbios' in the body of the message
More information about the openbios
mailing list