+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

Another Apple employee from China has been charged with stealing self-driving car secrets

Jan 31, 2019, 15:59 IST

Apple CEO Tim Cook and Didi Chuxing's Jean Liu take a car in China.Apple

Advertisement
  • An Apple employee has been charged with stealing trade secrets from Apple's self-driving car division, Project Titan.
  • According to a recently unsealed FBI charge document, Chinese national Jizhong Chen took more than 2,000 files containing Apple proprietary material.
  • Chen is the second Chinese Apple employee in six months to be charged with trying to steal trade secrets from the company.
  • The arrests come against the backdrop of the ongoing trade war between the US and China.

An Apple employee has been charged by the FBI with stealing self-driving car secrets from the company's secretive Project Titan division, according to a charge document seen by NBC's Bay Area affiliate.

Project Titan has been the centre of a lot of speculation since it launched in 2014. Initially it was believed to be working on an electric car, but executives hires in 2016 pointed towards autonomous driving. Recently, Titan has undergone some major reshuffling, as Apple laid off 200 employees tied to the project earlier this month.

Jizhong Chen, a Chinese national, was hired by Apple as a hardware developer engineer for its self-driving car project in June 2018, according to the unsealed FBI charge sheet.

He aroused suspicion when fellow employees saw him taking photos. After that, Apple asked to look at his personal devices and found "over two thousand files containing confidential and proprietary Apple material, including manuals, schematics and diagrams," backed up onto a personal hard-drive. The was in violation of Apple's policies.

Advertisement

Chen claimed the images were an "insurance policy" because he was making job applications after being placed on a performance improvement plan in December 2018. However, Apple found he had collected information before being put on the improvement plan, the FBI document said.

Read more: Apple's secret car project is much bigger than people think. Of course it had to cut 200 jobs.

Chen told Apple that he was applying for positions inside the company, but it then learned that he'd applied to two jobs outside the company - one of which was with a direct Chinese autonomous driving competitor. Apple suspended Chen without pay on January 11.

He was arrested one day before he was due to fly to China, allegedly to visit his sick father. Chen's attorney Daniel Olmos declined to comment when contacted by The Wall Street Journal.

Chen is the second Chinese national Apple employee to be charged with stealing trade secrets in six months.

Advertisement

In July, federal agents stopped ex-Apple employee Xiaolang Zhang at San Jose airport after he bought a last-minute ticket to China. The FBI indictment said he was in possession of a confidential 25-page document containing schematic drawings of a circuit board for autonomous Apple vehicles.

Xiaolang is also being represented by Olmos, who said he has pleaded not guilty to theft of trade secrets.

The arrests come against the backdrop of the ongoing trade war between the US and China. On Tuesday, America formally requested the extradition of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou, after charging Huawei with breaking US trade sanctions and stealing trade secrets from T-Mobile.

Apple was not immediately available for comment when contacted by Business Insider.

NOW WATCH: Netflix copycats are changing the streaming game and making viewers pay the price

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article