This is my second company I worked in last 2 years that they do not enable CP at all and once I asked them about it the answer was if some is smart enough to break the code protection then should be able to make entire project from the scratch. Then I told them why do you lock your car doors? any way I have to go. Andre -----Original Message----- From: piclist-bounces@mit.edu [mailto:piclist-bounces@mit.edu]On Behalf Of David VanHorn Sent: Wednesday, November 15, 2006 9:59 AM To: Microcontroller discussion list - Public. Subject: Re: [PIC] Hobbyist method to break PIC code protection. For a long time now, dallas has had a secure micro. 8051 variant, the code in flash is "encrypted", and the die isn't probeable in any useful sense. But I suspect it is subject to what I've seen in SRAM cells, where leaving them in a given state for a few months gives them a semi-permanent "lean" twoard the data pattern that was there. We saw this storing encryption keys in SRAM and came up with a way to store the keys in ring buffers and move the contents every so often. It's pretty embarrasing when you pull the power to a module, and it's supposed to forget the encryption keys, but it dosen't. :) -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist