I have designed a simple circuitry to resolve a problem. I want to
mass produce it as a product for sale. However, I do not want to
produce it on an unprotected PCB board for fear of being copied. I
would like to hear your opinion about what might be the solution.
Thanks!
If the circuitry is simple, there's no real protection possible.
Copyrights will only protect the exact layout, and a competitor could
easily implement the same circuit a bit differently. Incorporating
microcontrollers, PLDs and such like can slow a copier down,
especially if there are hidden algorithms, but if it's really simple
your best protection is selling a reliable product at a fair price and
gradually improving it over time.
I wouldn't advise potting, sanding off chip numbers, etc. in general,
as they just advertise that your profit margin is exceptionally high
and the product is easy to copy. Occasionally, we've removed the chip
number from one chip and hidden it so it isn't obvious when we've done
something special to reduce the cost, but that sort of thing only
slows down the garage copiers. Those are also the ones that would tend
to exactly copy your product, IME, the more capable ones will just
engineer something similar from scratch.
Actually, if you can raise the stakes on packaging you can increase
the barrier to entry signficantly- more than from the circuitry. It's
one thing to lay out a board and have a few hundred made up, quite
another to shell out for plastic injection mold tooling.
Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany