Alphabet's Waymo Asks Judge To Block Uber From Using Self-Driving Car Secrets (theverge.com)
Waymo, Alphabet's self-driving spinoff from Google, is formally asking a judge to block Uber from operating its autonomous vehicles, according to new documents filed in Waymo's lawsuit against Uber. From a report on The Verge: The lawsuit, which was filed last month, alleges that Uber stole key elements of its self-driving car technology from Google. Uber has called the accusations "baseless." Today in federal court, Waymo filed the sworn testimony of Gary Brown, a forensic security engineer with Google since 2013. Citing logs from Google's secure network, Brown claims that Anthony Levandowski, a former Google engineer who now runs Uber's self-driving car program, downloaded 14,000 files from a Google repository that contain design files, schematics, and other confidential information pertaining to its self-driving car project. Levandowski used his personal laptop to download the files, a fact that Brown says made it easy to track.
“We're gonna be getting rid of these people here... First, Mr. Samir Naga... Naga... Naga... Not gonna work here anymore, anyway.”
As Uber continues to brush its teeth, Google scrambles to put the toothpaste back in the tube. I'm not sure a judge can order Uber to selectively forget the stolen designs. Is the idea a permanent block on Uber running self-driving cars? TFA's unclear.
He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
Uber really is a despicable company
This company is goosestepping along for the ride.
Uber may or may not have been guilty, but:
downloaded 14,000 files from a Google repository
I have a really hard time feeling sorry for a company whose entire business is to harvest as much data about every human being as they possibly can, in every domain they possibly can, even if you take serious measures to keep any info out of their hands.
A patent. Trade secrets can bite you in the ass, and this is why.
There is no secret for autonomous driving. There is work, but there is no secret.
Google/Alphabet can try to block the 'simultaneous' invention, but it will fail. All you need is some basic neural networks and computational muscle. If Google is not careful then China will overdrive this 'invention'.
From what I've been able to piece together online, it looks like Uber might be in serious trouble. Google apparently really started to suspect something was wrong when one of the LiDAR component providers noticed both companies were sourcing the same parts with Uber apparently using virtually identical circuit board layouts. The timing looks bad as well with the the small startup company being immediately bought up by Uber and sudden development of Self-Driving technology. Plus you're talking about a company who knowingly tested their Self-Driving cars on the street without bothering to purchase a licence to do so. Even if Uber gets off scott free there's this entire question of Patents too which Google probably entirely holds...
What's great about this method it the way these intellectual property lawsuits go, Alphabet/google gets intimate discovery of everything there is to know about Uber's self-driving car.
A classic case of one company suing another to take their IP and, along the way, restrain competition.
There can be legitimate reasons for downloading files. One might want to be certain that patents are not about to be violated and make certain that different approaches to various items are taken. I saw this occur with an expensive electronic device. The patent holder did not understand the limit of the scope of his patent and sued. He ended up apologizing and paying both sides legal fees. One needs proof in hand before making a complaint or it can get quite expensive.
A waymo employee downloads thousands of files, which they may or may not have permission to do, but there's no legal problem, yet.
But if that waymo employee is doing that to check their "personal designs" don't infringe.. nonsense. Nobody at this guy's level in the company would think that it's ok to work on a personal project so close to what they are being paid to do by Waymo.
Who's doing jail time for this?