Former Intel engineer charged with stealing trade secrets
By Sharon Gaudin
,
Computerworld
, 09/13/2008
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A former Intel Corp. design engineer has been charged with theft of trade secrets from the chipmaker while secretly working for rival Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.
Biswamohan Pani was charged in U.S. District Court in Boston in late August.
According to an affidavit filed with the courts, Pani began working at the Hudson, Mass. Facility, where Intel does research
and product development, in 2003. One of the projects Pani worked on was the design of the Itanium processor.
According to the affidavit, investigators found no reason to believe that AMD was involved in the alleged theft of trade secrets.
"At this point, there has been no evidence that AMD knew that Pani had downloaded Intel's files, had encouraged Pani to do
so or that it received those files at all," wrote FBI Special Agent Timothy Russell in the affidavit. "It appears at this
point that Pani obtained Intel's trade secrets to benefit himself in his work at AMD without AMD's knowledge."
Michael Silverman, a spokesman for AMD, said in an email to Computerworld that the company is cooperating fully in the investigation.
AMD no longer employs Pani.
Intel spokeswoman Claudine Mangano said the company cannot comment on an ongoing investigation. "We're aware of the charges,"
she added. "Upon learning of the potential issues involving this individual, Intel asked the Department of Justice and the FBI to investigate. We will continue to cooperate."
Pani resigned from Intel in late May, saying that he was going to work at a hedge fund and take accrued vacation time until
his last official day on June 11, according to the affidavit. However, Pani began working for AMD on June 2, during that vacation
period when he was still employed by Intel, according to the affidavit.
Between June 8 and June 10, while working for both chipmakers, Pani allegedly remotely accessed and downloaded 13 top secret
documents from an encrypted system at Intel. Some of the downloaded documents allegedly include design details on Intel's
newest chips.
The FBI allegedly found eight Intel documents totaling more than 100 pages, and 19 computer-aided design drawings - all classified
as confidential, secret or top secret -- during a search of his house on July 1, according to the affidavit.
"It is critical for Intel's success that the designs and manufacturing methods for its future products remain secret," wrote
Russell, who works with the Cyber Crimes squad in the FBI's Boston Office. "Intel's competitors could benefit greatly from this secret knowledge by knowing what benchmark
they will need to compete against and by possibly using Intel's secret methods and designs themselves without incurring the
research and development costs that Intel has expended
The affidavit noted that during an interview with the FBI, Pani admitted to downloading the files but said he wanted the information
to help his wife, who an Intel employee being transferred from California to the Hudson, Mass. facility. Russell said in the
affidavit that Pani's wife was assigned to a project at Intel that had no connection with the files.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.
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Comments (8)
monopoly policy of MNCBy satprem on September 15, 2008, 1:46 amRESTRICTING ONE FROM WORKING ELSEWHERE SHOULD BE WELL COMPENSATED WITH HIGHER RESPONSIBILITIES AND PACKAGES BUT SHOWING DICTATORSHIP DOESN'T SOLVE
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Pot calling the kettle blackBy Mike.D. on September 15, 2008, 9:07 amAs I recall, Intel stole trade secrets from Digital Equipment Corp's Alpha chip. This allowed them to make great strides when the Pentium chips first came out. Bob...
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Missed the pointBy Anonymous on September 15, 2008, 9:11 amI think you missed the point, this has nothing to do with being forbidden to work at AMD, it has to do with THEFT from Intel, and from taking pay for 2 employers...
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Missed the pointBy Anonymous on September 15, 2008, 1:09 pmI think you missed the point, this has nothing to do with being forbidden to work at AMD, it has to do with THEFT from Intel, and from taking pay for 2 employers...
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showing highhandedness By Anonymous on September 16, 2008, 2:08 pmwhen not being able to keep the talented youth big boss decided to destroy him by any means. when nothing happened like profit out of transfer of data or any mischif...
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Foul play is a possibilityBy Anonymous on November 8, 2008, 10:56 pmA foul play from envious co-workers (or managers or even vps; Heard Enron?) cannot be ruled out. It really stinks out there in the corporate world.
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