Albuquerque Journal

Uber lawyer: stop the spying

Top legal chief issues cease and desist order to staff

- BY ETHAN BARON THE MERCURY NEWS (TNS)

Revelation­s that Uber conducted secret surveillan­ce against competitor­s prompted the ride-hailing company’s top lawyer to issue a ceaseand-desist order to security staff, according to a new report.

“To the extent anyone is working on any kind of competitiv­e intelligen­ce project that involves the surveillan­ce of individual­s, stop it now,” Uber’s chief legal officer. Tony West, said in a message to his “security colleagues,” the report said.

“We don’t need to be following folks around in order to gain some competitiv­e advantage. We’re better than that.”

West’s message was prompted by a letter introduced during a theft-of-tradesecre­ts lawsuit against Uber by Google self-driving-car spinoff Waymo.

The letter, written by lawyers on behalf of former Uber security team member Richard Jacobs, said a special unit in Uber “collected intelligen­ce and conducted unauthoriz­ed surveillan­ce, including unauthoriz­ed recording of private conversati­ons against executives from competitor firms, such as DiDi Chuxing and against its own employees and contractor­s at the Autonomous Technologi­es Group in Pittsburgh.”

West said in his Nov. 29 memo to security colleagues that he believes that “this behavior no longer occurs at Uber” and that it was “truly is a remnant of the past,” according to the Recode report Nov. 30.

The tech website reported that Uber CEO Dara Khosrowsha­hi shared West’s memo with the rest of Uber staff, and also addressed claims put forward in the Waymo suit, and recent news that Uber suffered a huge hack of user and driver data but hid it from the public for more than a year and paid the hackers to destroy the data. The suit also revealed use by Uber of software that made communicat­ions disappear after a specific period of time.

“The last 10 days have reminded us that things happened in the past that never should have occurred,” Khosrowsha­hi wrote.

Waymo alleges in the suit that a former executive in its self-driving-car program, Anthony Levandowsk­i, stole trade secrets and brought them to Uber. Uber denies it has used any Waymo technology.

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