Former Samsung exec accused of stealing data to build copycat chip plant in China
A former executive of Samsung Electronics allegedly stole the memory chip juggernaut’s confidential semiconductor data to build a copycat chip facility in China, South Korean prosecutors said on Monday.
The 65-year-old defendant, who also previously worked for Korean chipmaker SK Hynix, has been arrested and accused of violating industrial technology protection laws and stealing trade secrets from 2018 to 2019 to establish a copy of Samsung’s semiconductor plant, just 1.5 kilometers away from Samsung chip factory in Xi’an, China.
However, the ex-Samsung exec’s attempt to build the copycat chip plant allegedly fell through after his backer, purportedly an undisclosed Taiwanese company, canceled more than a $6 billion (approximately 8 trillion won) investment in the project, prosecutors said. Instead, he received capital from investors in China and Taiwan to produce trial chip products based on Samsung’s technology.
The indictment comes as tension between the U.S. and China rises over semiconductors.
The suspect, who has been working in the semiconductor industry for more than 25 years, founded two chip facilities in China and Singapore and hired over 200 semiconductor professionals from Samsung and SK Hynix in South Korea. Prosecutors said the stolen data from Samsung could take its toll of at least $233 million (300 billion won) on Samsung.
This is not just a leak of semiconductor technology, as the company tried to replicate a whole semiconductor factory, according to prosecutors. “It is a serious crime that could deal a heavy blow to the foundation of the domestic semiconductor industry at a time of cut-throat competition for chip production,” the prosecutor’s office said.
Prosecutors indicted six other people who alleged the ex-Samsung official’s accomplices.
Samsung did not immediately respond to a TechCrunch request for comment.
Former Samsung exec accused of stealing data to build copycat chip plant in China by Kate Park originally published on TechCrunch