Ex-Google Engineer Convicted of Stealing AI Secrets for China

A federal jury convicted former Google software engineer Linwei Ding of stealing sensitive AI trade secrets to benefit China. Ding stole thousands of confidential documents related to Google's advanced chip and supercomputer technology while secretly pursuing China-linked ventures. Prosecutors presented evidence that he founded his own AI company in China and applied for a Chinese government talent program. This marks the first-ever conviction on AI-related economic espionage charges, with Ding facing up to 15 years imprisonment per count.

Key Points: Google Engineer Convicted in AI Espionage Case for China

  • Stole 2000+ pages of AI tech secrets
  • Secretly founded AI firm in China
  • Sought Chinese government talent program
  • Targeted Google's chip and supercomputer tech
  • Faces decades in prison
3 min read

Former Google engineer convicted in AI espionage case

Former Google engineer Linwei Ding convicted of stealing AI trade secrets for China. First-ever AI economic espionage conviction carries up to 15 years per count.

"Ding abused his privileged access to steal AI trade secrets while pursuing PRC government-aligned ventures. - John A. Eisenberg"

Washington, Jan 31

A federal jury in San Francisco has convicted a former Google software engineer of stealing sensitive artificial intelligence trade secrets for the benefit of China, marking the first-ever conviction on AI-related economic espionage charges, US officials said.

Linwei Ding, also known as Leon Ding, 38, was found guilty on seven counts of economic espionage and seven counts of theft of trade secrets after an 11-day trial before US District Judge Vince Chhabria in the Northern District of California.

Prosecutors said Ding stole thousands of pages of confidential AI-related information from Google while secretly pursuing China-linked technology ventures.

"This conviction exposes a calculated breach of trust involving some of the most advanced AI technology in the world at a critical moment in AI development," said Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg. "Ding abused his privileged access to steal AI trade secrets while pursuing PRC government-aligned ventures."

According to evidence at trial, Ding stole more than 2,000 pages of confidential information from Google's internal systems between May 2022 and April 2023. Prosecutors said he uploaded the material to his personal Google Cloud account and later downloaded it to his personal computer shortly before resigning from the company.

While still employed at Google, Ding secretly aligned himself with two China-based technology companies, officials said. In mid-2022, he discussed becoming chief technology officer of an early-stage firm in China. By early 2023, he had founded his own artificial intelligence and machine learning company in China and was serving as its chief executive officer.

In investor presentations, Ding claimed he could build an AI supercomputer by copying and modifying Google's technology. The jury found that the stolen trade secrets related to hardware and software that allow Google's data centers to train and operate large AI models.

The material included detailed information about Google's custom Tensor Processing Unit chips, graphics processing unit systems, and the software that enables the chips to communicate and work together. It also covered software used to orchestrate thousands of chips into AI supercomputers and details of Google's SmartNIC technology used for high-speed networking.

Prosecutors also presented evidence that Ding sought support from the Chinese government. In late 2023, he applied for a Shanghai-based government-sponsored talent program, stating that he planned to "help China to have computing power infrastructure capabilities that are on par with the international level."

FBI San Francisco Special Agent in Charge Sanjay Virmani said the verdict underscored the government's commitment to protecting innovation. Ding was first indicted in March 2024. He is scheduled to appear next at a status conference on February 3, 2026, and faces up to 10 years in prison on each theft count and up to 15 years on each espionage count.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Very disappointing. As an engineer myself, I believe in ethical innovation. This kind of espionage gives all tech professionals a bad name. Hope the sentencing sends a strong message. India's tech industry thrives on merit and hard work, not theft. 🇮🇳
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Sanjay N
The geopolitical angle is concerning. It shows how AI has become a new frontier for national security. India must protect its own strategic tech assets and talent. Our IITs and startups are doing great work, but we need stronger IP safeguards.
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Michael C
Working from Bangalore, this hits close to home. Many Indian engineers work for global giants like Google. Our reputation for integrity is our biggest asset. This case is a reminder that with great access comes great responsibility. Let's focus on building, not stealing.
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Rohit P
While the crime is clear, one has to wonder about the pressure and allure behind such actions. The AI race is creating intense nationalistic pressures. Still, no excuse. Jai Hind to honest innovation!
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Kavya N
This is a wake-up call for all tech companies, including Indian ones. Internal security protocols need to be airtight. At the same time, we should create more opportunities within India so our brilliant minds don't feel the need to seek such risky shortcuts elsewhere.
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David E

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