Reverse Engineering and Keeping an Eye on Competition
December 18, 2009 business No CommentsIn the reality of science, reverse engineering plays an invaluable role. It is a great procedure if documentation to an older device cannot be learned. One may need to know and understand the inner works of the device in order to develop maintenance instructions, create an improved paradigm or to replace incomplete or out-dated certification.
A person or firm may want to reverse engineer an object because of umpteen reasons: curiosity; learning purposes; for creation of unlicensed duplicates; military knowledge or espionage; product analysis; lost documentation; analysis of technical intelligence of a competitor or for simple learn from other people’s faults.
Reverse engineering was mainly used in the military in World War ll, when soldiers were assigned to find different arms and military gizmos from the enemy and return them to the intelligence headquarters. Then the weapons and devices were reverse engineered in order to see how they work, how the army could make it work for the American military and how to improve upon the enemy’s design.
These missions and techniques were held until strict top secrecy. Today, accompanies often hire similar intelligence teams to reverse engineer their competitors’ devices and gadgets. A company can create their own interpretation of the device, so long as they don’t duplicate any of the inner workings or software.
Computer bits or software are often reverse engineered to see how they work and how they are made for maintenance purposes. In the United States, so long as the product or device was obtained in a legal way, companies and individuals are free to reverse-engineer an artifact or summons in a lawful manner, even if they are protected by trade secrets.
However, patents demand a national disclosure of an invention, so engineers are free to try out the product, without taking it apart, for patent infringements or copyright infringements.