一家中国自动驾驶汽车公司窃取了大量美国数据
A Chinese Self-Driving Car Company Stole A Massive Trove Of US Data

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/chinese-self-driving-car-company-stole-massive-trove-us-data

一家与中国有关联的自动驾驶卡车公司图森未来(TuSimple),据称违反了与美国政府达成的国家安全协议,将敏感的美国知识产权转移到了中国。图森未来由中国企业家创立,并得到中国资本的支持,在有关技术转让的担忧出现后签署了该协议。该协议要求图森未来将其美国业务与其中国实体分开。然而,在签署协议后不久,图森未来便将大量敏感数据转移到了北京所有的福田汽车。随后,美国外国投资委员会(CFIUS)的调查以违规行为为由对图森未来处以600万美元的罚款,尽管图森未来否认了过错。该公司随后关闭了其在美国的业务,从纳斯达克退市,并将投资资金转移到了中国。此事件促使特朗普政府重新思考其处理高风险、与外国有关联公司的做法,从缓和协议转向直接阻止中国支持的交易。商务部还发布了新的规定,限制向与中国有关联的实体销售联网汽车及其组件。


原文

Authored by José Niño via Headline USA,

The Trump administration is rethinking how it deals with Chinese-linked tech firms after a short-lived self-driving truck company was found to have stolen a vast trove of U.S. intellectual property. 

Founded in 2015 by Chinese entrepreneurs and backed by Chinese capital, TuSimple was once hailed as a leader in autonomous trucking, boasting a record-setting 80-mile driverless journey in Arizona and partnerships with major firms like UPS and Navistar.

But beneath its rapid rise, TuSimple’s dual presence in the U.S. and China created vulnerabilities. According to a Wall Street Journal report, February 2022, the company signed a national security agreement with the U.S. government after concerns emerged about its Chinese ties and potential for technology transfer. 

The agreement, enforced by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), required TuSimple to separate its U.S. operations and technology from China-based employees and partners, build firewalls, and prohibit the sharing of intellectual property. 

Yet, just a week after signing, TuSimple transferred a trove of sensitive data, which included test results and technical blueprints—to Beijing-owned Foton, a major Chinese truck manufacturer.

“They want a lot of details,” said TuSimple employee Xiaoling Han in a February 2022 chat.

“It is pretty time consuming.”

Internal correspondence shows the data sharing continued up to the six-month compliance deadline. 

WSJ reporter Heather Somerville noted thatTuSimple provided Chinese companies with what essentially constituted a complete autonomous driving system.

This included the source code that serves as the brain of an autonomous truck, in addition to various elements of the design, hardware, and integration of all these systems. 

A CFIUS investigation later found that while the data sharing did not technically violate the agreement, TuSimple was fined $6 million for other infractions. The company did not admit fault, and co-founder Xiaodi Hou insisted that no information prohibited by the company’s national security agreement “was ever shared with anyone.” 

The fallout was swift. TuSimple shut down U.S. operations, while being delisted from Nasdaq. These events prompted it to move investor funds to China

The episode compelled the Trump administration to rethink its reliance on mitigation agreements for high-risk, foreign-connected firms. According to new directives, the White House will “cease the use of overly bureaucratic, complex, and open-ended ‘mitigation’ agreements” and instead block more China-backed deals outright.

Earlier this year, Commerce Department has also issued new rules prohibiting the sale of internet-connected vehicles and components to entities connected to China, with further restrictions on commercial vehicles expected to be imposed soon.

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