Tag: china
DOJ Charges Former Apple Engineer With Theft of Autonomous Car Tech for China
Wang has been charged with six separate counts involving the theft or attempted theft of Apple’s “entire autonomy source code,” tracking systems, behavior planning for autonomous systems, and descriptions of the hardware that was behind the systems. A year into his employment, four months before he quit his job at Apple, Wang accepted a job at the U.S.-based subsidiary of an unnamed Chinese company that was developing autonomous driving technology and he began to siphon “large amounts” of sensitive commercial technology and source code, the indictment alleges.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Another Former Apple Employee Charged With Stealing Car Secrets for China
Wang was on the Annotation Team during his time at Apple, working on algorithms to accelerate the process of annotating real-world objects. Because of his role, he was granted “broad access” to databases that included information for the project. The information that he had access to was limited to just a few thousand of Apple’s more than 135,000 full time employees.
Wang signed confidentiality and Intellectual Property Agreements before being granted access to Apple’s databases, plus he attended secrecy training that covered the consequences of stealing data. Nevertheless, in 2016, he downloaded Apple’s “entire autonomy source code,” and stole additional autonomous systems and hardware information shortly before resigning from his position at Apple in 2018.
When he resigned, Wang did not tell Apple where he planned to go, but it turned out he had accepted a position at the U.S. subsidiary of a Chinese company developing autonomous driving technology. Apple in May 2018 reviewed data access logs and found that Wang accessed sensitive details right before he left, which is when the company involved the Department of Justice.
In June, the DoJ searched Wang’s residence, at which point he purchased a one-way plane ticket from San Francisco, California to Guangzhou, China. After he made it to China, the extent of the theft was uncovered. There is a warrant for Wang’s arrest, and if extradited and convicted, he will face up to 60 years in prison.
Wang is one of three Apple employees accused of attempting to steal Apple Car information for China. Last year, former Apple employee Xiaolang Zhang pled guilty to theft of trade secrets as part of a plea bargain. Zhang also attempted to flee the country, but he was caught. A third accused employee, Jizhong Chen, has pled not guilty.
This article, “Another Former Apple Employee Charged With Stealing Car Secrets for China” first appeared on MacRumors.com
Discuss this article in our forums
Tory row over China after report claims UK aid to Beijing is ‘being used to fund forced abortions’
Tesla recalls over 1.1 million cars in China over braking flaw
Tesla’s latest large-scale recall effectively covers its entire output for one nation. China’s market regulator has ordered a recall of over 1.1 million Tesla cars, or nearly all the vehicles it has sold in the country, over a reported flaw in the regenerative braking system. As drivers can’t set the intensity of regenerative braking or receive alerts with a sustained press of the accelerator, officials believe there’s a risk owners might misuse the pedals (as they can’t hear a revving engine) and crash.
The EV maker will fix the issue through a software update that both tweaks the default regenerative braking level and lets users customize the system’s strength. Tesla will also notify drivers who press the accelerator for a long time. The recall covers Model 3 and Model Y cars made in China between January 2019 and April this year, as well as some imported Model 3, Model S and Model X examples.
Tesla has disbanded its PR team and hasn’t commented on the recall. Bloombergpoints out that Chinese drivers have complained multiple times about acceleration and braking issues. One driver used the 2021 Shanghai auto show to highlight a serious crash where her father nearly died after the brakes failed. Tesla apologized, but didn’t acknowledge a glitch and noted the high speed before the collision.
As with most Tesla recalls, the software update won’t significantly disrupt the company’s business in the short term. However, it’s not a good look for a brand that has had numerous recalls in recent years, including 80,000 in China last fall for software and seat belt problems. Tesla depends heavily on China for revenue — it’s home to the giant Gigafactory Shanghai, which currently produces more than half of the firm’s cars each year. Tesla can’t afford to alienate either customers or officials.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/tesla-recalls-over-11-million-cars-in-china-over-braking-flaw-161526258.html?src=rss
Taiwan wouldn’t tolerate US attempts to bomb TSMC in event of China takeover
The ‘Great Firewall’ Of China: LinkedIn Cuts Jobs And Closes Country’s App
In the last six months, several major tech companies have announced significant layoffs in their staff. Now, LinkedIn has joined…
The post The ‘Great Firewall’ Of China: LinkedIn Cuts Jobs And Closes Country’s App appeared first on TechRound.