City
Epaper

Tesla engineer admits to saving autopilot code on iCloud

By IANS | Updated: July 11, 2019 14:10 IST

Adding to the ongoing tensions between the US and China, a former Tesla engineer admitted in a court filing that he did upload the company's autopilot code to his personal iCloud account last year before taking up a job in a Chinese automobile firm.

Open in App

Earlier this year, Tesla sued Guangzhi Cao for allegedly stealing trade secrets related to autopilot for Alibaba-backed Chinese electric vehicle (EV)-startup Xiaopeng Motors, also called Xmotors or XPeng.

While Guangzhi admitted to using his "personal iCloud account to create backup copies of certain Tesla information in 2018", he denied poaching any employees from the autopilot team, The Verge reported on Wednesday.

According to Guangzhi, XPeng extended a job offer to him on December 12, 2018. The former Tesla employee claimed he disconnected his personal iCloud account from his Tesla-issued computer "on or around December 26".

After quitting Tesla, he joined XPeng and currently serves as the company's 'Head of perception' where he is "developing and delivering autonomous driving technologies for production cars", according to his Linkedin profile.

Guangzhi was also a senior image scientist for Apple for two years before he joined Tesla.

To strengthen its case against the Alibaba-backed company, Tesla has also collected subpoenaed documents from Apple after one of the iPhone maker's former employee who worked in Apple's secretive autonomous car project was charged by the FBI for stealing trade secrets and later joining XPeng.

The former Apple employee allegedly Air dropped sensitive data to his wife's laptop and was also caught on CCTV camera leaving Apple's campus with a box of equipment. He had left his job at Apple to take a position at XPeng before being arrested.

Citing national security reasons, on May 15, US President Donald Trump effectively banned Chinese tech player Huawei in the US, following which major tech giants like Google, Microsoft, Intel and Qualcomm put restrictions on businesses with the Chinese firm.

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: teslaappleGuangzhiusDonald Trump
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessRanbir Kapoor's Prime Focus Shares Crash After Donald Trump Imposes 100% Tariffs on Movies Made Outside the US

NationalPM Narendra Modi Welcomes Donald Trump's Plans To End Gaza War, Says 'Pathway To Long-Term Peace'

InternationalEscalator, Teleprompter Malfunction at UN During Donald Trump’s Appearance; Videos Emerge

OpinionsLook In Your Own Backyard too, Sir!

InternationalDonald Trump Says London Mayor Sadiq Khan Among 'Worst' in World, Claims He Blocked Him from Royal Banquet

टेकमेनिया Realted Stories

Technology91 online govt services restored after data centre fire in S. Korea

TechnologyDedicated team within ICAR to conduct sugarcane research: Shivraj Singh Chouhan

TechnologyClimate variability reshaping Indian Sardine's dynamics: Study

TechnologyMumbai's real estate market witnesses robust 1.11 lakh registrations between Jan-Sep

TechnologyAtmanirbharata is about building supply chains that can withstand global shocks: Piyush Goyal