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5. Superseding Indictment Charges Chinese National In Relation To Alleged Plan To Steal Proprietary AI Technology
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Superseding Indictment Charges Chinese National in Relation to Alleged Plan to Steal Proprietary AI Technology
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Note: View the superseding indictment here.
A federal grand jury returned a superseding indictment today charging Linwei Ding, also understood as Leon Ding, 38, with 7 counts of economic espionage and 7 counts of theft of trade tricks in connection with an alleged strategy to steal from Google LLC (Google) exclusive details connected to AI technology.
Ding was initially arraigned in March 2024 on four counts of theft of trade tricks. The superseding indictment returned today explains seven classifications of trade tricks taken by Ding and charges Ding with 7 counts of financial espionage and timeoftheworld.date 7 counts of theft of trade secrets.

According to the superseding indictment, Google employed Ding as a software application engineer in 2019. Between around May 2022 and May 2023, Ding published more than 1,000 unique files containing Google personal details from Google's network to his individual Google Cloud account, consisting of the trade secrets alleged in the superseding indictment.
While Ding was employed by Google, users.atw.hu he secretly connected himself with two People's Republic of China (PRC)- based technology companies. Around June 2022, Ding remained in conversations to be the Chief Technology Officer for an early-stage technology company based in the PRC. By May 2023, Ding had established his own innovation company concentrated on AI and artificial intelligence in the PRC and was functioning as the business's CEO.
The superseding indictment declares that Ding intended to benefit the PRC government by taking trade tricks from Google. Ding apparently stole technology relating to the hardware infrastructure and software application platform that allows Google's supercomputing data center to train and serve large AI models. The trade tricks contain detailed details about the architecture and functionality of Google's Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) chips and systems and Google's Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) systems, the software that allows the chips to communicate and execute tasks, and the software application that manages countless chips into a supercomputer efficient in training and carrying out advanced AI workloads. The trade secrets also pertain to Google's custom-designed SmartNIC, a kind of network interface card utilized to boost Google's GPU, high efficiency, and cloud networking products.
As declared, Ding circulated a PowerPoint discussion to staff members of his technology company citing PRC nationwide policies motivating the advancement of the domestic AI industry. He likewise created a PowerPoint presentation containing an application to a PRC skill program based in Shanghai. The superseding indictment explains how PRC-sponsored talent programs incentivize individuals engaged in research and development outside the PRC to send that knowledge and research study to the PRC in exchange for wages, research funds, laboratory area, or other incentives. Ding's application for the talent program mentioned that his business's product "will assist China to have calculating power facilities abilities that are on par with the worldwide level."
If convicted, Ding deals with an optimum penalty of ten years in jail and approximately a $250,000 fine for each trade-secret count and 15 years in jail and $5,000,000 fine for each economic-espionage count. A federal district court judge will identify any sentence after thinking about the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and bytes-the-dust.com other statutory aspects.
The FBI is investigating the case.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Casey Boome and Molly K. Priedeman for the Northern District of California and Trial Attorneys Stephen Marzen and Yifei Zheng of the National Security Division's Counterintelligence and Export Control Section are prosecuting the case.

Today's action was coordinated through the Justice and Commerce Departments' Disruptive Technology Strike Force. The Disruptive Technology Strike Force is an interagency law enforcement strike force co-led by the Departments of Justice and Commerce created to target illegal stars, safeguard supply chains, and prevent vital innovation from being obtained by authoritarian regimes and hostile nation-states.
A superseding indictment is merely a claims. All accuseds are presumed innocent up until proven guilty beyond an affordable doubt in a court of law.