Khaleej Times

Uber fires self-driving car executive

- Alexandria Sage

san francisco — Uber Technologi­es said on Tuesday it fired the technology whiz it had hired to lead its self-driving unit, Anthony Levandowsk­i, after he failed to comply with a court order to hand over documents at the centre of a legal dispute between Uber and Alphabet’s Waymo unit.

Uber had hoped Levandowsk­i, one of the most respected self-driving engineers in Silicon Valley, would help the ride services company catch up with rivals including Waymo, in the race for self-driving technology. Instead the hiring led to a court fight and the threat of criminal charges. Uber replaced him as the head of its self-driving car unit in April before finally making the decision to fire him.

Levandowsk­i formerly worked for Alphabet’s Waymo self-driving division, which says he stole trade secrets by downloadin­g more than 14,000 documents before he left. Levandowsk­i is not a defendant, but his actions are at the heart of Alphabet’s lawsuit against Uber.

Uber said in a letter to Levandowsk­i filed in federal court on Tuesday that it was firing him because he had not complied with a court order to hand over the documents.

He has declined to cooperate, citing his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminat­e himself.

Uber and Alphabet are battling over technology expected to revolution­ise the way people use cars. Waymo

uber has provided significan­t evidence to court to demonstrat­e that our self-driving technology has been built independen­tly Angela Padilla, Uber’s associate general counsel for employment and litigation

claims its trade secrets made their way into Uber’s Lidar technology, which bounces light pulses off objects so self-driving cars can “see” the road. Uber denies these claims.

Levandowsk­i has 20 days to comply with the court orders, according to the Uber letter.

Last month, Uber named Eric Meyhofer to replace Levandowsk­i as head of its Advanced Technologi­es Group. Meyhofer will continue to lead the team, an Uber spokeswoma­n said via e-mail. The New York Times reported Levandowsk­i’s exit earlier on Tuesday, citing an internal e-mail sent to employees.

“Over the last few months, Uber has provided significan­t evidence to the court to demonstrat­e that our self-driving technology has been built independen­tly,” Angela Padilla, Uber’s associate general counsel for employment and litigation, wrote in an e-mail to employees, cited by the Times. An Uber spokeswoma­n confirmed the letter’s authentici­ty and said the company has urged Levandowsk­i to “fully cooperate.”

Waymo has said Levandowsk­i received stock worth more than $250 million for joining Uber, along with his portion of the $680 million that Uber paid last year for Otto, the self-driving truck company he formed after leaving Google. That amount assumes certain targets would be met, and it was not clear how his firing would affect those payments.

A source familiar with the matter said Levandowsk­i had not yet vested his Uber shares.

Levandowsk­i, a top engineer on self-driving technology, has turned into a liability for Uber in court. The company has acknowledg­ed that his refusal to testify has hurt its defence efforts. Uber has never denied that he took the Waymo documents.

Asked last month why Uber did not threaten to fire Levandowsk­i to pressure him into turning over the documents, Uber attorney Arturo Gonzalez told Reuters: “We can fire him but we still don’t get the documents.”

Uber had argued that it was acceptable to sideline Levandowsk­i by preventing him from working on Lidar technology, but not firing him. But US District Court Judge William Alsup criticised the company, telling lawyers: “You keep on your payroll someone who took 14,000 documents and is liable to use them.”

 ?? — AP ?? Anthony Levandowsk­i formerly worked for Alphabet’s Waymo self-driving division, which says he stole trade secrets.
— AP Anthony Levandowsk­i formerly worked for Alphabet’s Waymo self-driving division, which says he stole trade secrets.

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