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TSMC Advanced-Node Materials Reportedly Found at Lo’s Residence Amid Controversial Intel Hire

Fred Chen

Moderator
TSMC senior vice president Wei-Jen Lo has moved to Intel, drawing industry attention over potential risks to sensitive advanced-process expertise, and new details are now emerging. According to Liberty Times, industry sources say investigators searched Lo’ s residence in late November, seized multiple boxes of materials, and found a substantial amount of confidential information related to TSMC’s advanced process technologies that are under development. The report says the materials were taken without authorization from TSMC, and there may be evidence of a violation of the National Security Act.

As the report notes, Lo holds U.S. citizenship and has settled in the country. It adds that if authorities later summon him for testimony and he fails to appear in accordance with the law, he could face compulsory detention and be placed on a wanted list. Meanwhile, the court has approved the seizure of Lo’s shares and real-estate assets, which industry estimates value at more than NT$20 billion.

In addition, sources cited by Taiwan Television Enterprise say TSMC has notified relevant supply-chain partners not to provide any confidential information to Lo and has comprehensively changed the project code names for its advanced-process programs to prevent him from gaining further access to internal advanced-process secrets.

TSMC Lawsuit and Intel’s Response

Lo retired from TSMC in late July this year and took on a vice president role at rival Intel by late October. According to Economic Daily News, TSMC confirmed that it filed a lawsuit with the Intellectual Property and Commercial Court on November 25, accusing Lo of breaching a non-compete agreement and misappropriating trade secrets by failing to disclose his move to the company.

As Liberty Times notes, TSMC states that for more than a year before his retirement, Lo had been reassigned to the role of senior vice president in the Corporate Strategy Development Division, where his responsibilities no longer required oversight or management of R&D operations. However, Lo continued to request meetings with R&D teams and sought access to materials to gain insight into advanced process technologies under development.

Amid the controversy, Intel has voiced its support for Lo. OregonLive reports that in late November, CEO Lip-Bu Tan reassured employees that the company acted responsibly in hiring Lo, said he “continues to have our full support,” and dismissed the allegations as “lacking merit,” pushing back against the new lawsuit from the Taiwanese foundry giant.

 
Is Taiwan an "innocent until proven guilty" kind of judicial system or is it more assuming of guilt, such as is the case in Japan?
so either Lo is both guilty and dumb and didn't take the notes with him or they are just calling the wrong thing the evidence.
It should be innocent until proven guilty, so they may have considered the materials in the boxes to be proof. Wei-Jen should have gotten a lawyer by now.
 
There is no new information here. These are the same boxes with Wei-Jen notes that we knew he took with him. The fact the boxes are still in his home and not in Oregon may play in his favor :unsure:

This was reported in the Liberty Times with nothing new to add:


TrendFork just tossed the salad a bit and added some dressing.

Complete waste of space.
 
There is no new information here. These are the same boxes with Wei-Jen notes that we knew he took with him. The fact the boxes are still in his home and not in Oregon may play in his favor :unsure:
This was reported in the Liberty Times with nothing new to add:


TrendFork just tossed the salad a bit and added some dressing.

Complete waste of space.
I think the key new development here is that they have confirmed that the boxes of confidential materials were taken; before it seemed to be hearsay. So this begs the question of how TSMC could have let him take them. Presumably, it was under the agreement that he would not be joining Intel or another competitor company.

They're also bringing up the possibilty of having him appear in court. Perhaps then we can get the full story.

Finally, TSMC is instructing (reminding?) third parties like suppliers not to give any confidential information, and has changed project codes as well.
 
I think the key new development here is that they have confirmed that the boxes of confidential materials were taken; before it seemed to be hearsay. So this begs the question of how TSMC could have let him take them. Presumably, it was under the agreement that he would not be joining Intel or another competitor company.

They're also bringing up the possibilty of having him appear in court. Perhaps then we can get the full story.

Finally, TSMC is instructing (reminding?) third parties like suppliers not to give any confidential information, and has changed project codes as well.

Was he going to use the notes to make firelighters?

If they are his property then whats the issue , if they are not then why does he have them?
 
I think the key new development here is that they have confirmed that the boxes of confidential materials were taken; before it seemed to be hearsay. So this begs the question of how TSMC could have let him take them. Presumably, it was under the agreement that he would not be joining Intel or another competitor company.

They're also bringing up the possibilty of having him appear in court. Perhaps then we can get the full story.

Finally, TSMC is instructing (reminding?) third parties like suppliers not to give any confidential information, and has changed project codes as well.

According to sources........... Ah fork me. I read a story about a women who is suing a person who posted a Tik-Tok that resulted in death threats, her being cancelled, etc... even though she did nothing wrong. I hope she wins.

Same thing for Wei-Jen Lo. If there are no boxes with TSMC IP I hope he gets retribution from the media and their unnamed sources.
 
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