Common use of Hardware Implementation Clause in Contracts

Hardware Implementation. Any portion of a Licensed Product that implements any of the content protection requirements of the HDCP Specification and the Compliance Rules in Hardware shall include all of the characteristics set forth in Sections 1 and 2 of these Robustness Rules. Such implementations shall: 3.3.1 comply with Section 1.2 of these Robustness Rules by a reasonable method, including but not limited to: embedding Device Keys in silicon circuitry or firmware that cannot reasonably be read, or the techniques described above for Software; and 3.3.2 be designed such that attempts to remove, insert, replace or reprogram Hardware elements of a Presentation Device or Repeater in a way that would compromise the content protection requirements of the HDCP Specification and the Compliance Rules would pose a serious risk of rendering the Licensed Product unable to receive, decrypt or decode HDCP Content. By way of example, a component that is soldered rather than socketed may be appropriate for this means.

Appears in 2 contracts

Sources: HDCP License Agreement, HDCP License Agreement

Hardware Implementation. Any portion of a Licensed Product that implements any of the content protection requirements of the HDCP Specification and the Compliance Rules in Hardware shall include all of the characteristics set forth in Sections 1 and 2 of these Robustness Rules. Such implementations shall: 3.3.1 comply with Section 1.2 of these Robustness Rules by a reasonable method, including but not limited to: embedding Device Keys in silicon circuitry or firmware that cannot reasonably be read, or the techniques described above for Software; and 3.3.2 be designed such that attempts to remove, insert, replace or reprogram Hardware elements of a Presentation Device or Repeater in a way that would compromise the content protection requirements of the HDCP Specification and the Compliance Rules would pose a serious risk of rendering the Licensed Product unable to receive, decrypt or decode HDCP Content. By way of example, a component that is soldered rather than socketed may be appropriate for this means.. For review only -

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: HDCP License Agreement

Hardware Implementation. Any portion of a Licensed Product that implements any of the content protection requirements of the HDCP Specification and the Compliance Rules in Hardware shall include all of the characteristics set forth in Sections 1 and 2 of these Robustness Rules. Such implementations shall: 3.3.1 comply with Section 1.2 of these Robustness Rules by a any reasonable method, including but not limited to: embedding Device Keys in silicon circuitry or firmware that cannot reasonably be read, or the techniques described above for Software; and 3.3.2 be designed such that attempts to remove, insert, replace or reprogram Hardware elements of a Presentation Display Device or Repeater in a way that would compromise the content protection requirements of the HDCP Specification and the Compliance Rules would pose a serious risk of rendering the Licensed Product unable to receive, decrypt or decode HDCP Content. By way of example, a component that is soldered rather than socketed may be appropriate for this means.

Appears in 1 contract

Sources: HDCP License Agreement