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China Businesses Technology

ASML Says Ex-China Employee Stole Chip Data (cnbc.com) 52

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNBC: ASML, one of the world's most critical semiconductor firms, said Wednesday that it recently discovered that a former employee in China had misappropriated data related to its proprietary technology. The Dutch firm said that it does not believe the alleged misappropriation is material to its business. "We have experienced unauthorized misappropriation of data relating to proprietary technology by a (now) former employee in China," ASML said in its annual report. "However, as a result of the security incident, certain export control regulations may have been violated. ASML has therefore reported the incident to relevant authorities." The data that was misappropriated involved documents. ASML did not expand on the details.

The security incident comes at a sensitive time for ASML and the government of the Netherlands which has been caught in the middle of a battle for tech supremacy between the U.S. and China. Semiconductors are very much part of that rivalry. ASML holds a unique position in the chip supply chain. The company makes a tool called an extreme ultraviolet lithography machine that is required to make the most advanced semiconductors, such as those manufactured by TSMC. ASML is the only company in the world that produces this piece of kit. The U.S. is worried that if ASML ships the machines to China, chipmakers in the country could begin to manufacture the most advanced semiconductors in the world, which have extensive military and advanced artificial intelligence applications.
"With ASML's unique position and the growing geopolitical tensions in the semiconductor industry, we see increasing security risk trends, ranging from ransomware and phishing attacks to attempts to acquire intellectual property or disrupt business continuity," a spokesperson for the company said.
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ASML Says Ex-China Employee Stole Chip Data

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  • by saloomy ( 2817221 ) on Wednesday February 15, 2023 @06:48PM (#63296731)
    But seriously, if you were a business; would you risk it? They will steal and clone your tech with no recourse. Please mod me down. I feel like an asshole for even pointing it out.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yes. Maybe we should get rid of Chinese scientists just like the McCarthy era. Maybe it will be like the case of Qian Xuesen. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      I'm sure China would love for many currently working in the West ethnically Chinese scientists to return back to China.

      • I wonder what the total contribution vs the total theft bodies of IP look like? Which do you think is more? Chinese American scientists have made more progress for America, or Chinese scientists posing as Americans stole more IP for China? Say in the last decade.
        • I wonder what the total contribution vs the total theft bodies of IP look like? Which do you think is more? Chinese American scientists have made more progress for America, or Chinese scientists posing as Americans stole more IP for China? Say in the last decade.

          Good question. However, the associated important question is what ratio would be the "break-even" point. If the progress were 10x the stolen IP, would that be enough to compensate for the theft? Since the tradeoff would likely be between non-military progress and stolen military secrets, the ratio would likely be much higher.

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <[ten.frow] [ta] [todhsals]> on Thursday February 16, 2023 @10:19AM (#63298075)

          I wonder what the total contribution vs the total theft bodies of IP look like? Which do you think is more? Chinese American scientists have made more progress for America, or Chinese scientists posing as Americans stole more IP for China? Say in the last decade.

          The problem is that Chinese is not "Chinese". It's like saying all Americans are MAGA loving white supremacists who believe in conspiracy theories.

          There are plenty of Chinese people who are American and believe in the American way - and probably distribute themselves pretty evenly on both sides of the political spectrum. There are plenty of Chinese people who completely disagree with China and the CCP, and pretty much don't want anything to do with China at all.

          Just like there are plenty of Chinese people who love China and the CCP and Beijing can do no wrong. If you attempt to point out any wrongs, it turns into a whataboutism. (And yes, these people are exhausting to deal with, as I suspect anyone from the other side of the political spectrum would be at Thanksgiving).

          • This is EXACTLY why I was very spefiic with my choice of words and said "Chinese Americans", vs "Chinese posing as Americans".
    • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Wednesday February 15, 2023 @07:06PM (#63296773) Homepage

      What do anti-discrimination laws have to do with criticizing China? It's well known that China has little respect for international IP laws and they make knock-offs of damn near everything. Some of the stuff is hilariously bad (such as fake flash drives [passmark.com] and snake oil power saving devices [youtube.com]), others can actually be a decent value if you're willing to tinker with them a bit, such as the Eberspächer diesel heater clones [google.com].

      China is also pretty low on the totem poll of human rights, so that alone should be reason enough for companies to reconsider sending their manufacturing there.

      • I suppose it depends on if one blames "China" or "Chinese."

        • There are some ethnically Chinese Americans who are outstanding scientists and have contributed immeasurably to the advancement of American technology and ingenuity. Then, there are Chinese people who pose as Americans and eventually commit IP theft for their homeland, and return to China, enriched by the CCP and beyond the reach of American Patent enforcement or courts. There is a difference. My question was, if you can not guarantee knowing that difference, is it worthwhile to gamble that you made the rig
    • ASML is in the Netherlands. They likely have different laws than the US.

      • Indeed. Apparently the process for requesting permission to fire somebody is initiated by completing the "verzoek tot ontbinding van de arbeidsovereenkomst" and submitting it to the local sub-district court for consideration...

        https://business.gov.nl/regula... [business.gov.nl]

    • I came to basically say the same thing. If you're in technology and you hire Chinese citizens, you know what's coming.
  • If there were more fabs. Why does everybody have to use TSMC? Why can Apple snatch away capacity from other chip makers and keep silicon price in the skies?

    • by nhtshot ( 198470 ) on Wednesday February 15, 2023 @07:02PM (#63296763)

      Because a fab is an enormous capital investment and for the last several decades, the Wall St. mantra has been "service revenue above all! We don't like capital intensive business. Oh, and we want every dollar we can get today, we don't care about next quarter, let alone next year."

      At the start of a chip shortage, Intel announced they were building a bunch of contract fabs and getting into that business in a big way. Their stock got creamed because they spent their cash on facilities instead of paying it out to shareholders.

      But, they're staying the course. A couple years from now, this won't be a problem anymore.

    • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Wednesday February 15, 2023 @07:25PM (#63296821)

      Why does everybody have to use TSMC?

      Because they are the leading edge and they have demonstrated they can make chips in sufficient numbers? Samsung is a close second; Intel was the leading edge for years but they have been stuck at 10nm for 5 years with low yields.

      Why can Apple snatch away capacity from other chip makers and keep silicon price in the skies?

      1) Apple funded TSMC's plant expansions with loans in exchange for the right to be first in line.
      2) Apple has little say in what TSMC charges for silicon prices. That is well beyond Apple.

  • not unexpected (Score:4, Insightful)

    by aldousd666 ( 640240 ) on Wednesday February 15, 2023 @06:58PM (#63296755) Journal
    Trying to contain technology via trade policy is a fools errand, because it only has to leak one time to be compromised forever. Security by obscurity, really. Someday, the secret will be out and then regardless of your legal bluster China will have the tech, and then you've got bad blood too.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      This is correct. Ideas want to be free and unfettered. Or at least that's how old slashdot thinkers used to think. But now everyone is becoming nationalistic, more fascist and now have it's US versus THEM type mentality.

  • supply and demand and all that are trying to prevent demand from being supplied using all sorts of bullshit fear tactics.

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Wednesday February 15, 2023 @07:53PM (#63296899)
    Russia. Very few Russian spies were Russians working overseas. The USSR recruited people who were disgruntled or having money trouble.

    Whereas China is weaponizing its expat community. In the long run, this is a BAD idea. I was alive during the end of the Cold War. It was largely understood that a Russian in the United State was almost certainly NOT a spy, and that they probably felt the same about communism as most Americans. There’s something really compelling about seeing a grocery store that doesn’t have entirely empty shelves most of the time.

    If China keeps this up, their expat community will find themselves under serious suspicion. That’ll hurt their job prospects. Not just for government jobs, but any company that might have info that China might want (ie. All of them)
  • by zephvark ( 1812804 ) on Wednesday February 15, 2023 @08:38PM (#63297025)

    She used to be the teapot in Beauty and the Beast.

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