Oman Daily Observer

Waymo, Uber end trade secrets theft trial with $244 million settlement

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SAN FRANCISCO: Waymo and Uber announced an agreement on Friday in the blockbuste­r federal lawsuit over allegedly stolen trade secrets from the former Google self-driving car project.

The surprise agreement ends a trial between the two Silicon Valley rivals competing in a race to develop autonomous cars, after four days of testimony before a federal judge in San Francisco.

A source familiar with the confidenti­al deal said Uber agreed to a financial settlement giving the Alphabet unit 0.34 per cent of Uber shares — which would be some $244 million based on Uber’s valuation of $72 billion.

Uber also agreed not to use any of Waymo’s technology for autonomous driving as part of the settlement, which was approved by Judge William Alsup as he dismissed the case.

Waymo said in a statement: “We have reached an agreement with Uber that we believe will protect Waymo’s intellectu­al property now and into the future.

We are committed to working with Uber to make sure that each company develops its own technology.”

Uber Chief Executive Dara Khosrowsha­hi said in a separate statement that “while we do not believe that any trade secrets made their way from Waymo to Uber we are taking steps with Waymo to ensure our Lidar and software represents just our good work.”

While the technical details of Waymo’s case were not revealed, it was widely believed to focus on Lidar, a laser-based system which is critical to enabling autonomous cars to get a three-dimensiona­l picture of its surroundin­gs.

The trial so far included testimony from former Uber chief executive Travis Kalanick, who denied a conspiracy to steal trade secrets in a tense two-day court appearance.

Alphabet’s Waymo division was seeking at least $1 billion over the theft of secrets from its self-driving car program in the trial before federal judge William Alsup.

If the case had gone to the jury and Waymo had prevailed, it would have dealt a severe blow to Uber’s efforts to widely deploy self-driving vehicles as part of its ridesharin­g operations — a field that also includes Waymo and other rivals.

Waymo had alleged Uber conspired with former Google engineer Anthony Levandowsk­i, who had been accused of downloadin­g thousands of proprietar­y documents before leaving the company and ending up at Uber.

Levandowsk­i, who was on the list as a possible witness, left Google for his own startup called Otto, which was later acquired by Uber.

The case hinged on Waymo’s ability to show not only that Levandowsk­i had taken Google’s private source code, but that Uber had used it improperly to catch up with rivals.

The jury saw evidence which was embarrassi­ng for Uber, however, including notes from Kalanick about “cheat codes” and a text message in which he told Levandowsk­i to “burn the village.” Kalanick said, “I don’t know, I don’t remember.”

The jury was also shown a clip — sent from Levandowsk­i to Kalanick — from the 1987 film “Wall Street” in which the Michael Douglas lead character proclaims “greed is good.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Former Uber chief executive officer Travis Kalanick (R) leaves the San Francisco federal court during a Waymo-Uber autonomous car secrets trial in San Francisco, California.
— Reuters Former Uber chief executive officer Travis Kalanick (R) leaves the San Francisco federal court during a Waymo-Uber autonomous car secrets trial in San Francisco, California.

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