Los Angeles Times

Uber denies using rival’s trade secrets

Ride-hailing firm is sued by Waymo over technology used for driverless car project.

- By Russ Mitchell russ.mitchell@latimes.com Twitter: @russ1mitch­ell

SAN FRANCISCO — Uber told a federal judge Friday that it didn’t use stolen trade secrets for its driverless car project, and therefore the court shouldn’t force the company to stop that work.

Waymo, the driverless car arm of Google, sued Uber in February, accusing it of using trade secrets that had been smuggled by former Waymo employee Anthony Levandowsk­i. He is now in charge of developing self-driving cars at Uber.

Waymo had asked U.S. District Court Judge William Alsup to halt Uber’s driverless car project until the case is settled.

The secrets are related to lidar, a technology that uses laser beams to detect objects and send the images to the self-driving car’s computer for processing. It is a key element in autonomous car developmen­t.

Uber is playing defense on the trade-secrets lawsuit as it reels from scandals that have pounded its public image this year.

In January the company faced customer backlash after a tweet it sent on the heels of the Trump administra­tion’s controvers­ial travel ban made it seem as if the ride-hailing firm was trying to undermine a protest strike by taxi drivers.

In February, former Atty. Gen. Eric H. Holder Jr. was brought in to investigat­e accusation­s of systemic gender discrimina­tion and cover-ups at Uber.

Later that month, a viral video of Uber Chief Executive Travis Kalanick showed him denigratin­g an Uber driver who dared to question company policies. The 40year-old company founder later vowed to “grow up.”

Since its founding in 2009, Uber has been embroiled in controvers­y for its aggressive tactics and pugilistic attitude toward laws and regulation­s.

In a hearing Thursday, Alsup indicated that he’s predispose­d to believe Waymo’s allegation pending evidence to the contrary.

“Right now the record available to the court under oath is pretty convincing that Mr. Levandowsk­i downloaded 14,000 documents, wiped his computer clean, transferre­d those documents to a thumb drive and took that thumb drive with him when he went to start a new company,” the judge said.

Levandowsk­i has invoked the 5th Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion, according to his lawyer, who said Levandowsk­i could face criminal charges.

Last year, he quit Google to found a self-driving truck company, Otto, which was later bought by Uber.

Uber’s defense team suggested Friday that Google and Waymo are turning to the courts to slow down a competitor’s progress.

“Waymo’s injunction motion is a misfire,” Angela Padilla, associate general counsel at Uber, said in a statement.

“If Waymo genuinely thought that Uber was using its secrets, it would not have waited more than five months to seek an injunction. Waymo doesn’t meet the high bar for an injunction, which would stifle our independen­t innovation — probably Waymo’s goal in the first place.”

From the bench, Alsup has blasted Uber for insufficie­nt cooperatio­n with his order to search company and employee computers for copies of the documents.

The judge also said he’d allow experts chosen by Waymo to examine Uber’s technology to check for stolen design.

Waymo is especially protective of trade secrets on its lidar technology.

Major automakers purchase lidar systems from outside vendors for their autonomous systems they are developing.

Google believes that developing proprietar­y lidar will give it a technology advantage over competitor­s — including Tesla, which has said that its cameras and radars suffice and that it doesn’t need lidar.

 ?? Eric Risberg Associated Press ?? ANTHONY LEVANDOWSK­I, head of Uber’s self-driving car program, talks about the San Francisco company’s driverless cars in December. He is accused in a lawsuit of stealing trade secrets from Google’s Waymo.
Eric Risberg Associated Press ANTHONY LEVANDOWSK­I, head of Uber’s self-driving car program, talks about the San Francisco company’s driverless cars in December. He is accused in a lawsuit of stealing trade secrets from Google’s Waymo.

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