Huawei in Santa Clara infiltrated summit at Facebook, sent trade secrets to China: lawsuit
A Bay Area subsidiary of a Chinese firm seen as a national security threat by U.S. officials infiltrated a meeting during a telecommunications summit at Facebooks Menlo Park headquarters and sent information to its offices in China, a new lawsuit claims.
Jesse Hong says in the lawsuit that he was a software architect for Chinese smartphone giant Huaweis subsidiary Futurewei Technologies in Santa Clara from 2014 until he was fired in March of this year. He alleges that in 2016, Huawei directed two Futurewei employees to deceive their way into an annual TIP Summit for telecommunications companies most of them startups competing against Huawei that was held at Facebooks headquarters in Menlo Park.
The alleged infiltration occurred after Facebook had denied Huaweis request to attend the social networking firms closed-door meeting with U.S. companies, according to the suit. Huawei told Hong and two other Futurewei employees to register for the meeting using fake U.S.-company names, Hong claims in the suit, which was filed late last month in Santa Clara County Superior Court.
Hong refused to take part, he claims in the suit. So Huawei told Futurewei manager Sean Chen and another employee to use a front U.S. company name to register and infiltrate into the meeting that Facebook had banned it from attending, according to the suit. Hong believed that theft of trade secrets and/or transfer of such secrets to Huawei in China was illegal, the suit said.
Read more: https://www.mercurynews.com/2018/07/10/huawei-in-santa-clara-infiltrated-summit-at-facebook-sent-trade-secrets-to-china-lawsuit/