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Houses With Tails 307

nnfiber writes "What if home owners could also own their Internet connection? Tim Wu, of New America Foundation and Derek Slater, Google's Policy Analyst, say this can be a new effective way to encourage broadband deployment — an important issue in 'America's economic growth.' In his post, Timothy B. Lee says: 'That might sound like a crazy idea at first blush, but Wu and Slater do a great job of explaining how it might work. The key idea is "condominium fiber," an arrangement in which a number of neighboring households pool their resources to install fiber to all the homes in their neighborhoods. Once constructed, each home would own its own fiber strand, while the shared costs of maintaining the "trunk" cable from the individual homes to a central switching location would be managed in the same way that condominium and homeowners' associations currently manage the shared areas of condos and gated communities.'"

Comment Re:So what prevents the IC "pirate" from stealing? (Score 1) 312

It appears the manufacturers only have access to the masks (which are physically used to etch the silicon).

I think the term blueprints are misleading, I don't believe the blueprints are available to the manufacturers.

The designers can just create the masks from the blueprints and then send them to the manufactures.

It's probably hard to reverse engineer the blueprints from the masks.

The article mentions that adding wires to a chip after production, while possible is very expensive at the 32 nm scale.

Good questions!

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