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Businesses The Courts Apple

Ex-Apple Worker Charged With Stealing Self-Driving Car Trade Secrets (reuters.com) 54

U.S. authorities on Monday charged a former Apple employee with theft of trade secrets, alleging that the person downloaded a secret blueprint related to a self-driving car to a personal laptop and later trying to flee the country, according to a criminal complaint filed in federal court. From a report: The complaint said that the former employee, Xiaolang Zhang, disclosed intentions to work for a Chinese self-driving car startup and booked a last-minute flight to China after downloading the plan for a circuit board for the self-driving car. Authorities arrested Zhang on July 7 at the San Jose airport after he passed through a security checkpoint. "Apple takes confidentiality and the protection of our intellectual property very seriously," Apple said in a statement. "We're working with authorities on this matter and will do everything possible to make sure this individual and any other individuals involved are held accountable for their actions."
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Ex-Apple Worker Charged With Stealing Self-Driving Car Trade Secrets

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    He was just trying to be that great artist jobs was always talking about. Stealing and copying is the apple motto.

  • by Prien715 ( 251944 ) <agnosticpope@@@gmail...com> on Tuesday July 10, 2018 @08:06PM (#56925810) Journal

    He was just trying to pull a Levandowski [wikipedia.org]. All he has to do now is found a new self-driving car company. [arstechnica.com] in China.
    Or maybe this act was done on Levandowski's behalf....

  • Stealing technologies and pretend it's theirs.

    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      I thought that was straight up, normal default US business practice. If it is profitable enough, they will claim national security interests and some three letter agency disappears the people who actually came up with it.

      Of course routinely allowing corruption, extremely public corruption, to slide on through, is really spreading white collar crime.

      Corporation espionage is really getting out of hand but that's to be expected and it is going to get worse. Corruption will feed the corporate wars and espion

      • Corporation espionage is really getting out of hand but that's to be expected and it is going to get worse.

        I haven't heard of an outright assault on an R&D facility with automatic weapons, but that supposedly happened at Seagate back in the day.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Wondering what the legal justification is of arresting someone at an airport based on statements from an employer. Doesn't seem to meet the grounds for felony IP infringement as that requires distribution (which wasn't mentioned or proved-- besides if he distributed it electronically he wouldn't need the laptop).

    He copied something illegally. Courts seemingly are required to prove it's a felony.

    Must be nice to be so rich and powerful in a city you can just call the cops to do what you want.

    • If he distributed it electronically he might not get paid. After all, he is a thief, why would the new venture want him around? Better to steal from the thief and be done with him. Also no paper trail, or blockchain trail, of payment to him so there is some plausible deniability that the new venture was behind it, just a rouge working speculatively on his own..
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • I thought they gave up on the self-driving-car stuff. Any IP they have would be third tier at best.

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