Supplier anti-counterfeit requirements March 2018
Prepared by:
Jo Vann
IEC TC107 WG3 ‘Counterfeit electronic parts; avoidance, detection, mitigation, and disposition in avionics applications’ convener , see
http://www.iec.ch/dyn/www/f?p=103:14:0::::FSP_ORG_ID,FSP_LANG_ID:5736,25
TC107 Technical Secretary
Member of :
SAE: G19A, G19AD, G19C, G19CI, AMPC
IEC TC107 WG3
IECQ WG6 WG4
UK CAWG
UK GEL/107
Counterfeit componentsCounterfeit wires (CALCE 2015): Counterfeit parts are on the rise, Paul
Romano, Fusion Trade Figure 1: A counterfeit device that has been coated with a compound that will not be detected by normal permanency testing, but can be chipped off to reveal the remarked device.
From Kozio blog
Vertical launches online component market to defeat counterfeit chip fraud , Dean Takahasi
External visual inspection cannot easily find counterfeits. Users need to know their supply chain to avoid counterfeits
Recycling is increasing
Uncontrolled processesKnow your supply chain
General Counterfeit statistics• The Europol 2017 Situation Report on counterfeiting in the EU, see
https://www.europol.europa.eu/publications-documents/2017-situation-report-counterfeiting-and-piracy-in-european-union
• IPR crimes are calculated to be $461Billion annually worldwide and taint all types of product in all geographical areas in 2013.
• IPR infringing products accounted for 5% of imports worth EUR 85 million into the EU in 2013 and is estimated to be 2.5% of all global trade as of 2013.
• Online marketplaces increasingly become key distribution channels for counterfeit goods.
➢ DO NOT USE EBAY, ALIBABA, HONG KONG DARK, AMAZON or ANY ON-LINE DISTRIBUOR FORUMS AS THEY WILL NOT HAVE THE NECESSARY TRACEABILITY
• Europol 2016-2017 Review report https://www.europol.europa.eu/activities-services/main-reports/europol-review-2016-2017 is now available:
• Launched EU IP Crime Coordinated Coalition (IPC3) with 46000 new cases initiated in 2016, 16% more that previous year.
• USA Homeland Security:
➢ 31,560 total number of IPR related seizures in 2016, up 9% from 2015 from U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Intellectual Property Rights Seizures Statistics, https://www.cbp.gov/document/report/fy-2016-intellectual-property-rights-seizure-statistics of value $1.35 Trillion.
What is the Avionics problem? • In 2010/2011 the USA DoD identified upwards of a million counterfeit components in their
Military supply chain, caused by poor supplier control and weak buying practices.
➢ Affected systems included thermal weapons sights, missile computers, helicopters, and aircraft. This resulted in the USA anti-counterfeit DFAR 252.247.7007 and 252.247.7008 invoked in USA military contracts with major Avionics OEMS and their suppliers for electronics.
• Researcher IHS analysed electronics industry data in 2016 concerning counterfeit parts:➢ Nearly 19% of counterfeit parts involve components still being produced by manufacturers.➢ More than 12 million counterfeit parts have been reported over the last five years to 2013➢ 66.9% of counterfeit parts are obsolete➢ Memories and microprocessors are the most counterfeited components
ISO 9001 for any industry segment is revised to now included:➢ ‘Risk Assessment’ in clause 6 but unfortunately the word ‘counterfeit’ is not listed
as a risk but it should be considered in clause 6.
AS/EN/JISQ 9100 revision D Quality Management Systems for Avionics industry ( Civil and Military) now includes:
➢ New section 8.1.4 specifically about anti-counterfeit risk management for electronics and materiel for compliance by September 2018 ➢ Requires all relevant staff have anti-counterfeit awareness training ➢ Strongly suggests that obsolescence is managed e.g. IEC 62402 or SAE
STD0016➢ Does not mandate any specific standards although the following can be used:
➢ SAE AS5553 and/or IEC 62668-1 for electronic components➢ SAE AS6174 for materiel ➢ IECQ OD 3702 Traceability audit of anything
➢ Supports DEF STAN 05-135 and DFARS 252.246-7007/7008➢ The following members of the AS 9100 series also include anti-counterfeit
measures➢ AS/EN/JISQ 9110 for repairs, ➢ AS/EN/JISQ 9102 for First Article Inspection and ➢ AS/EN/JISQ 9120 for distributors
What is the outcome?
SAE AS6174, Counterfeit Materiel; Assuring Acquisition of Authentic and Conforming MaterielThis standards attempts to :
a) maximize availability of authentic materiel (made from the proper materials using the proper processes with required testing,)
b) procure materiel from reliable sources, c) assure authenticity and conformance of procured materiel d) control materiel identified as counterfeit, and e) report counterfeit materiel to other potential users and government investigative
authorities.
➢ Use revision A which has better definitions on ‘trusted suppliers’➢ Materiels have fewer franchised distributors and many users buy from
general distributors (which might have a traceability problem) . ➢ It is difficult to test some materials e.g. organic materials to verify the
chemical composition e.g. encapsulants, glue, paint etc. so the only mitigation is to know your supply chain.
➢ SAE Committee is working on a slash sheet for fasteners. ➢ Slash sheets will be created eventually over the next 10 years for all types of
material➢ Contact Bill Tipton if you wish to join the committee (or ask Jo Vann)
What is the outcome?
For UK Military contracts, the UK MOD published:
• DEF STAN 05- 135 ‘Avoidance of Counterfeit materiel’ downloaded free of charge from the DStan web site by visiting http://dstan.uwh.diif.r.mil.uk for those with rli access or https://www.dstan.mod.uk
Message: anything that can be manufactured has the potential to be counterfeited
➢ Invoked in contracts and applies to electronics and all materiel including food, clothing, munitions, weapons, vehicles, tanks, ships, airplanes etc.
➢ Being revised to includes obsolescence management ➢ Requires that the Supplier has processes to mange anti-counterfeit management and
appoints a management representative ( typically the Quality manager with support from Engineering)
➢ Does not mandate compliance to specific standards but expects awareness and compliance to the most relevant standards
➢ Currently audited by MOD auditors – no Third Party certifications mandated yet. ➢ CAWG members have collaborated to produce the free anti-counterfeit awareness training
video see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YwFUGeuZspg➢ May eventually become a EN document in Europe for use by NATO countries
• Counterfeit Avoidance Maturity model version 2 ➢ Audit checklist for supplier to ‘self certify’ their ability to comply with DEF-STAN 05-135 or
for use by MOD auditors when they conduct audits.
What is the outcome?
ISO publications for all industries , see brochures and
http://www.iso.org?utm_source=publication&utm_medium=pdf&utm_campaign=counterfeit-brochure-en/
➢ ISO 12931, Performance criteria for authentication solutions used to combat counterfeiting of material goods
➢ ISO 16678, Guidelines for interoperable object identification and related authentication systems to deter counterfeiting and illicit trade
➢ ISO 28000, Specification for security management systems for the supply chain➢ ISO 22000, Food safety management systems – Requirements for any organization in the food
chain➢ ISO/TS 16791, Health informatics – Requirements for international machine-readable coding
of medicinal product package identifiers➢ ISO 17367, Supply chain applications of RFID — Product tagging➢ ISO/IEC 20243 (English only), Information Technology – Open Trusted Technology Provider,
TM Standard (O-TTPS) – Mitigating maliciously tainted and counterfeit products➢ ISO/IEC TR 24729-1, Information technology – Radio frequency identification for item
management – Implementation guidelines – Part 1 : RFID-enabled labels and packaging supporting ISO/IEC 18000-6C.
➢ ISO 22380 , Security and resilience – Authenticity, integrity and trust for products and documents – General principles for product fraud risk and countermeasures – in development
The Semiconductor Industries Association (SIA) states that special tracking schemes for electronics are not practical for their large volume industry and recommend instead that their components should always be purchased from franchised sources or direct from the manufacturer.
What is the outcome?
International anti-counterfeit standards for supply chains
SAE
IEC
TC107 WG3
G-14 AAQSC
IEC TS62668-2
G19A
IEC TS62668-1
for Avionics
OEMS
G19AD G19C
AS6171with 16 Test
Methods
AS6496Franchised distributor
AS6301AS6462
audit checklists
G19CI
AS5553electronic
component
G21
AS6174 for
materiels
IECQ
AS9100 rev D clause 8.1.4
OD3702traceability
audit for any
industry
IECQ WG6
ISO9000 clause 6 risk assessment
AS6081for non-
franchised buys for
Distributors
G19CI
IDEA STD 1010 visual
inspection
Trade Body e.g.
BEAMA
JESD243 for
manufacturers
ISO TC176
JEDEC
IEC TS62239-1
for Avionics
OEMs
TC107 WG5
ISO standards
New IECQ OD3702 Traceability audit now published
Free to download ,see http://www.iecq.org/publications/rules-procedures/
New IECQ OD3702 Traceability audit can be applied throughout any part of the supply chain
AVIONICS supply chains and contract flow-down:
USA Military
UK Military
DFARS in
contracts
DEF STAN 05-135
anti-counterfeit , electronics
and materials
DFAR 252.246.7007 electrical and SAE AS6171
OEM AS9100
rev D clause 8.1.4
SAE AS5553
flow-down to
suppliers
OEM suppliers:
AS9100 preferred
SAE AS6496Franchised distributors
ARP 6178, SAE AS6081
non-franchised distributor
SAE AS6174 Materials
General USA
Avionics Customer
Anti-C flowdown
AS5553
General EU or Far
East Avionics
customer
Anti-C flow-down IEC
TS62668-1 and IEC TS 62668-2
ARP 6328 or IEC/TS
62668-2 risk assessment
orSAE AS6171
ARP 6328 or IECTS 62668-
2 risk assessment
and orSAE AS6171
NEW DFAR252.246.7008
Trusted suppliers
NATODirective referring to
external standards
IECQ New OD 3702
traceability audit for any
industry
SAE AS6174 Materials
Essential elements of all external standards• Key requirement is to have a descending order priority where at least 80% or
more parts and materials are purchased:
➢ Directly from the original manufacturer
➢ Or from their franchised or authorised distributors preferably AS9120 with SAE AS6494 compliance
Then purchase the balance
➢ From SAE AS6081 certified non-franchised electronic distributors with traceability in the supply chain
• Invoke standard PO notes stating you will not accept counterfeit or fraudulent recycled components
• Publish your anti-counterfeit plan to protect your business
• Request that your subcontract assemblers and custom suppliers publish their anti-counterfeit plans for your review/approval
• Minimise your untraceable Broker Buys and include special anti-counterfeit mitigation testing ( per IEC TS 62668-2 or SAE AS6171 for electronics) on those orders
• Report as necessary
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Third party anti-counterfeit certifications as of 2017
SAE PRI:
• SAE AS5553: 1 Avionics OEM
NQA:
• SAE AS6081: 8 or more non-franchised distributors
IECQ:
• IEC TS 62239-1 ECMP: 23 certificates where one of the requirements is that the OEM manages an anti-counterfeit management plan to an external standard, e.g. SAE AS5553, IEC TS 62668-1 etc.
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New IECQ Avionics User Forum (AUF)• IECQ is establishing this new AUF which will have Technical Forums:
➢ TF06 for obsolescence and anti-counterfeit management
➢ Convenor : Graham Goring
• These TFs will discuss user technical issues only, for example:
• conduct anonymous surveys for benchmarking activities
• critique external standards, looking for gaps etc
• invite tool providers and supply chain providers to present etc.
• discuss major issues effecting all users etc.
• Membership is restricted to:
• Avionics OEMs,
• Technical experts from air-framers,
• STACK members,
• IEC TC107 members,
• SAE APMC members etc.
➢ Contact Jo Vann or Graham Goring if you wish to participate
➢ Meeting April 16th at BSi London , WEBEX will be provided
Reference Material
See following slides which are included for reference purposes.
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Avionics Supply chain
AS/EN/JISQ9100
Avionics OEM
AS/EN/JISQ9110
OEM stock sent out to suppliers ,
should have AS/EN/JISQ 9120
IEC/TS 62239-1 ECMP with anti-counterfeit plan
compliant to DFAR , DEF STAN, SAE AS5553A and
IEC/TS 62668-1
SAE AS5553 and AS6462 audit
checklist
IEC/TS 62668-1
Avionics subcontractor
AS/EN/JISQ9100
IEC/TS 62239-1 ECMP with SAE AS5553A plan
PCB assembly subcontractor
ISO9001 and/or AS/EN/JISQ
9100
Franchised Distributor
ISO9001 and/or AS/EN/JISQ
9120
SAE AS6496
SAE AS6081 optional, more testing may be
needed
Non-franchised distributor
ISO9001
AS/EN/JISQ9120
ARP 6178
IEC/TS 62668-2 non-franchised component risk
assessment
Avionics OEM managed ECMP
and SAE AS5553A plan
Trusted supplier?
Yes
No
Broker
DFARS 252.246.7007
252.246.7008
DEF STAN 05-125
Is order traceable?
Request waiver to DFAR traceability
requirement
No
YES
IECQ OD7302 Traceability audit
Anti-counterfeit standards summaryStandard Market sector Description Comments
ISO9001 General industry General Quality management system
Clause 6 Risk Assessment and management requires all users to assess risks and mitigate. Although counterfeit is not mentioned, it is a major risk to a business and requires assessment and mitigation. Another risk is Obsolescence
JESD 243 Semiconductor original component manufacturer(OCM), Aftermarket suppliers, Hybrid microcircuit market
Counterfeit Electronic Parts:Non-Proliferation for Manufacturers
For OCMs to consider for ISO9001 clause 6 risk mitigation and management
IDEA-STD-1010
Any industry Visual inspection method for detecting counterfeit and fraudulent components
Excellent procedure whereby operators can be certified to the process. Based on photographs of good and bad parts. Fundamental to other SAE standards for visual inspection. See http://www.idofea.org/
IECQ OD3702 Any industry or market Traceability audit for materials, electronics, and mechanicalcomponents
Released. Can be used to support ISO9001 clause 6 for counterfeit mitigation and AS9100 clause 8.1.4. for any part of the supply chain
Anti-counterfeit standards summaryStandard Market
sectorDescription Comments
AS/EN/JISQ9100 Avionics OEMS General Quality Management System All Avionics OEMs are expected to operate to this standard which is currently at rev D which includes anti-counterfeit requirements for material, mechanical and electrical components on clause 8.1.4 . This is a ‘game changer’ for avionics industry
SAE AS5553 General industry for OEMS but mainly used by Avionics OEMs
Set of 11 mandatory detailed requirements for how to buy, manage, and dispose of electronic components with reporting mechanisms when counterfeits are found
Currently at revision B. Can be used to satisfy AS9100 rev D electrical component anti-counterfeit requirements. Another revision is planned, rev C to align it better with DFAR 252.246.7008. Mandated by most USA Prime Contractors.
SAE AS6174 General industry but mainly used by Avionics OEMs
For material and mechanical components. Similar to SAE AS5553 for the procurement, management and disposal of electronic components but modified
Can be used to satisfy AS9100 rev D anti-counterfeit requirements. Materials normally are not received with Certificates of Conformance or Packing slips so traceability has to be demonstrated by other means, e.g. source control drawings, testing etc.
USA DFAR 252.246.7007 and 252.246.7008 (new in 2016)
Military USsupply chain to large OEMs and their suppliers
Set of mandatory detailed requirements for how to buy, manage, and dispose of electronic components with reporting mechanisms when counterfeits are found for USA Military supply chains. Industry is asking for 252.246.7008 to be modified.
Used in US Military contracts. Can use SAE AS5553 and/or IEC/TS 62668-1 and IEC/TS 62668-2 to comply but there are additional measures: (1) No co-mingling of returned stock with fresh new stock etc. SAE AS5553 will be revised to add some of these extra requirements.
Anti-counterfeit standards summaryStandard Market
sectorDescription Comments
UK Defence Standard 05-135
UK Militarysupply chain OEMs
General overall anti-counterfeit requirements
Used in UK Military contracts. Part of the UK Counterfeit Avoidance Maturity model which is used to assess how ‘counterfeit aware’ suppliers are. Can use SAE AS5553 and/or IEC/TS 62668-1 and IEC/TS 62668-2 to comply or IECQ OD3702
IEC TS 62668-1 Avionics OEMs or any high reliability industry
Anti-counterfeit requirements for the purchase and management of electrical components, management of the products IP and control of spares and repairs
Allows the use of SAE AS5553 plans for components coming into a business. Considered to provide a more ‘holistic’ approach to Avionics anti-counterfeit as covers spares and repairs operations. Preferred by European Prime contractors and suppliers.
IEC TS 62668-2 Avionics OEMs or any high reliability industry
Risk assessment of electrical components purchased from non-franchised sources
Complements SAE AS5553 and IEC/TS 62668-1 and advises on typical test methods without being overly prescriptive. Refers to SAE AS6171 test methods
ARP 6328 General industry but mainly used by Avionics OEMs
Risk assessment to accompany SAE AS5553 when revision B is published.
Contains updated SAE 5553A annexes for SAE AS5553B which will have no annexes
AIR 6273 Terms, Definitions, and Acronyms-Counterfeit Materiel or Electrical, Electronic and Electromechanical Parts
In ballot
Anti-counterfeit standards summaryStandard Market sector Description Comments
SAE AS6496 Franchised distributor for any industry but especially for high reliability, Aerospace and Defence market
Fraudulent/Counterfeit Electronics parts: Avoidance,Detection, Mitigation and Disposition-Authorised/Franchised Distribution
Released 2014. Useful for any industry
SAE AS6171 Avionic or high reliability Component Test Houseswho work with non-franchised distributors to supply untraceable components
16 Test Methods Standards; Counterfeit Electronic Parts and risk assessment process
Contains extensive risk mitigation process for those industries subject to legal liabilities. Very complicated and will be expensive to implement. Excellent deterrent. Ultimate testing regime with preselected testing methods and sample sizes Not known who will request this. Use of critical parts
AS6081 Non-franchised distributors for medium to high reliability market
Fraudulent/Counterfeit Electronics parts: Avoidance, Detection, Mitigation and Disposition- Distributors; Counterfeit Electronic Parts: Avoidance Protocol, Distributors
Parts are offered by non-franchised distributors with some basic testing which Avionics OEMs need to review in their application risk assessment process. For Avionics users, considered an input into SAE AS5553 or IEC/TS 62668-2 risk assessment
ARP 6178 For OEMs in any industry to remotely risk assess Non-franchised distributors
Fraudulent/Counterfeit Electronic Parts: Tool for Risk Assessment of Distributors
Very useful Excel spread-sheet with macro to remotely audit non-franchised distributors. Considered an input into SAE AS5553 or IEC/TS 62668-2 risk assessment. Could be tailored for any industry.
Anti-counterfeit standards summaryStandard Market
sectorDescription Comments
AS6462A Auditing bodies and OEMS for self assessment
AS5553A Counterfeit Electronic Parts: Avoidance, Detection, Mitigation and Disposition Verification Criteria
Audit checklist for SAE AS5553A for use by OEMs and Third party auditing bodies.
AS6301 Auditing bodies and OEMS for self assessment
AS6081 Fraudulent/Counterfeit Electronics parts: Avoidance, Detection, Mitigation and Disposition-Distributors Verification criteria
Audit checklist for AS 6081 Issued in 2014
NIGP 111 Any industry,used by distributors when shipping off the shelf components
Guidelines for the format of Packing Slips
ECIA best practices available free from: http://www.ecianow.org/standards-practices/general-best-practices-guidelines/Suitable for demonstrating supply chain traceability – request that all product shipped to you follows NIGP111.
IECQ anti-counterfeit audit programs Standard IECQ OD
documentDescription Comments
SAE AS5553 IECQ OD 706-1 Ed.1 IECQ Operational Document 706-1 - IECQ Counterfeit Avoidance Programme (IECQ CAP) Assessment, Evidence of Compliance Summary and Assessment Reporting Form (SAE AS 5553A)
For SAE AS5553 revision A for OEMs producing electronic assemblies Note that new clients should be assessed to SAE AS5553 revision B published 12th Sept 2016
IECQ OD 706-1 Ed.2 IECQ Operational Document 706-1 - IECQ Counterfeit Avoidance Programme (IECQ CAP) Assessment, Evidence of Compliance Summary and Assessment Reporting Form (SAE AS 5553B)
For SAE AS5553 revision B
SAE AS6081 IECQ OD 706-2 Ed.1 IECQ Operational Document 706-2 - IECQ Counterfeit Avoidance Programme (IECQ CAP) Assessment, Evidence of Compliance Summary and Assessment Reporting Form (SAE AS 6081)
For SAE AS6081 2012 for non-franchised distributors
IEC TS 62668-1 IECQ OD 706-3 Ed.1 IECQ Counterfeit Avoidance Programme (IECQ CAP) Assessment, Evidence of Compliance Summary and Assessment Reporting Form (IEC-TS 62668-1 Ed.3)
For IEC/TS 62682-1 edition 3 2016-04 for Avionics OEMs producing electronic assemblies
- OD3702 Traceability audit for any industry
Released
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Anti-counterfeit Third Party Auditing Bodies
IECQ
WG6SAE
PRI
AS5553electronic
components for OEMs
AS6081for non-
franchised buys for
Distributors
IEC TS62668-1
for Avionics
OEMS
OD3702traceability
audit for any industry
➢ PRI, see http://p-r-i.org/other-programs/caap/ for the CAAP program ➢ NQA see https://www.nqa.com/en-us/certification/standards/as-6081
for their AS 6081 program➢ IECQ see http://www.iecq.org/workgroups/wg06/ where Certifying
Bodies around the globe are listed at webpage: http://www.iecq.org/members/certification/cb-list_location.htm which includes: BSi, DNV, VDE, CEPREI, NQA, SGS, TUV, LCIE
IEC TS62239-1
ECMP for OEMs
OEMs
DFAR in draft
NQA
Third Party auditingIECQ WG6 has developed Third Party audit schemes for ( see http://www.iecq.org/publications/rules-procedures/ )
➢ SAE AS5553A, OD 706-1 for any OEM in medium to high reliability industries
➢ SAE AS6081, OD706-2 for non-franchised distributors in medium to high reliability industries
➢ IEC TS 62668-1, OD706-3 for Avionics OEMs
➢ OD3702 Traceability audit for any type of electrical component or materiel for any industry targeted at ISO9001 Clause 6 risk mitigation and AS9100 clause 8.1.4
Benefit of IECQ audit schemes:
• On-line certificates viewable by any one
• Audits are available in your local language, please contact your IECQ CB, see http://www.iecq.org/members/bodies/mb-list.htm
• e.g. LCIE, DKE, DANSK, CNCA, JISC, BSI for BEC
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Standardsmap
IEC/TS
62668-1
OEM shall protect
their IP
OEM shall use
components which
have IP rights
OEM shall have
an anti-counterfeit
process
OEM shall have
AS/EN/JISQ 9100
process to audit
their suppliers
OEM AS/EN/JISQ
9100 purchase
processes based
on traceability
OEM AS/EN/JISQ
9100 process shall
avoid unapproved
Brokers
OEM purchase
process for
untraceable
components
OEM Repair and
Rework to AS/EN/
JISQ 9110
OEM to report
incidents of
counterfeit iaw
local law
(1) For
components
purchased coming
into their business
(2) For their
products and
spares going out
of their business
SAE AS
5553A Plans
SAE ARP6178
Tool to assess
Distributors
Suppliers to have
anti-counterfeit
plans reviewed by
OEM
Purchase from
OCM or their
Franchised
Distributors
Purchase US
Trusted foundry/
QSLD Supplier as
required
Purchase from
Franchised
Aftermarket
manufacturer
Purchase from
non Franchised
Distributors
IEC/TS
62688-2
IDEA-STD-1010
OEM shall
document search
for traceable
alternatives
If none found use
non conformance
for risk
assessment
IEC/TS 62239-1
search for
traceable
alternatives
OEM to apply for a
registered
trademark and
logo
OEM to apply for
patents etc. WIPO
Consider redesign
using traceable
components
SAE AS 6081
for non-
franchised
distributors
SAE AS 6171
component
test methods
JEDEC/IEC
Semiconductor
test methods
SAE AS 6174
for Mechanical
parts and
materials
OCM to apply for
registered
trademark and
logo
OCM to apply for
patents etc. SEMI T20, SEMI
T20.1, SEMI
T20.2
USA DMEA
AS/EN/JISQ
9120 for
Distributors
ECIA NIGP113,
NIGP109,
NIGP 107
IDEA-ICE-3000
OEM IP Design
control
FAA FAR 43, FAR
145, FAA 20-62D
EASA
requirements
Europe: OHIM and
Europa webpage
US Patent and
Trademark Office
China patent and
trademark office
Japan patent
Office
AS/EN/
JISQ9110
OEM shall audit all
suppliers
SAE AS6496
for Franchised
Distributor
SAE AS6462 for
SAE AS5553 audit
criteria
DLA Qualified
Supplier
Distributor List
(QSLD)
SAE AS6301
Audit criteria for
SAE AS6081
AS/EN/
JISQ9100 or
ISO9001 for
Suppliers
OEM to train for
anti-counterfeit
awareness
iNEMI calculators
for non-franchised
distributors
DFAR
252.246.7007
252.246.7008
USA Military
customers
USA Civil
customers
IECQ OD
3702
Traceability
audit
ECIA NIGP111
Packing slips
ISO/IEC 31010
Risk assessment
SAE AS 6171/1
optimised test
strategy
Access to referenced standards
• For the IEC see
➢ IEC webstore https://webstore.iec.ch/
• For IECQ and the assessment schemes and audit checklists
➢ http://www.iecq.org/index.htm
• SAE AS5553A for Electronic components
➢ See http://www.sae.org/
Anti-counterfeit summary 2017
Contact information:
Jo Vann, TC107 WG3 Anti-counterfeit convenor,
CEO- Component Technology ,
GE Aviation Systems Ltd.,
T +44 (0)1242 632927
F +44 (0)1242 661151
www.ge.com/aviation