Los Angeles Times

Uber fires self-driving car engineer

Exec is at the heart of a legal battle between the ride-hailing firm and Waymo.

- By Russ Mitchell

Uber has fired Anthony Levandowsk­i, the star engineer at the center of the company’s fight with self-driving rival Waymo.

Levandowsk­i — a former Waymo employee who until recently was leading Uber’s effort to replace human drivers with robot cars — has refused to hand over documents requested by Waymo and a federal court judge in a high-profile legal battle between two Silicon Valley giants. Waymo is part of Alphabet Inc., the parent company of Google.

Uber is being accused of stealing Waymo’s self-driving technology. The San Francisco company has denied the allegation­s.

An Uber spokeswoma­n said Tuesday that the company’s driverless car program will continue to be run by Eric Meyhofer, who took over from Levandowsk­i in April. Those who reported directly to Levandowsk­i will now report to Meyhofer.

“We have been pressing Anthony to comply and assist with our internal investigat­ion for months,” the spokeswoma­n said. “We set a deadline that he did not meet, and we will not wait for this issue to make its way through the courts.”

The firing represents a milestone of sorts for Uber, which has a reputation for protecting executives who reflect badly on the company.

“This is a clear indication that [Uber Chief Executive] Travis Kalanick has grown up,” driverless industry consultant Grayson Brulte said. “He is evolving into a leader who is owning his mistakes.”

Waymo sued Uber in February, alleging Uber made illegal use of 14,000 documents it says Levandowsk­i stole from Waymo while he was a Waymo employee.

The stakes in the emerging market for semi-autonomous and completely driverless cars are huge. Market forecaster­s say it will become an annual market worth tens to hundreds of billions of dollars over the next decade.

Technology companies, traditiona­l automakers and others are fighting for a foothold. Companies that gain

proprietar­y technologi­cal advantage will benefit the most.

Waymo, under the Google name, was first out of the gate with a major driverless car project in 2009. Other companies are hoping to catch up with Waymo and then bypass it.

After Levandowsk­i left Waymo, he started his own company: driverless-truck start-up Otto. Uber soon bought Otto, reportedly for $680 million, and put Levandowsk­i in charge of Uber’s driverless project.

Uber has insisted that it developed its driverless technology independen­tly and that it does not possess and has not made use of any stolen material.

Levandowsk­i has refused to turn over the documents or his computer to anyone, citing a 5th Amendment right against self-incriminat­ion. That led the federal judge in the case, William Alsup, to pressure Uber to take action against Levandowsk­i.

“Uber has no excuse under the 5th Amendment to pull any punches as to Levandowsk­i,” the judge said in a written order this month.

Uber then threatened to fire Levandowsk­i if he didn’t comply. On Tuesday, Uber announced his terminatio­n.

Meanwhile, Uber continues to resist Waymo’s court request to release the term sheets Uber and Levandowsk­i signed when Uber bought Otto last summer.

The Waymo-Uber battle is over a technology called lidar. Considered by most experts as an essential element for driverless cars, lidar uses light beams to identify objects including traffic signs, motor vehicles, bicyclists and pedestrian­s.

Lidar is not a new technology, but engineers are racing to adapt it for automotive use, trying to shrink its size and lower its cost while improving its performanc­e.

Levandowsk­i is widely considered a top figure in driverless vehicle research. Whatever his personal attributes, his knowledge and experience will be hard to replace. Uber announced this month that it will expand its driverless car research program to Toronto, under Raquel Urtasun. Some of the most important breakthrou­ghs in artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning in have emerged from the University of Toronto.

russ.mitchell@latimes.com

 ?? Angelo Merendino Getty Images ?? FORMER Uber exec Anthony Levandowsk­i ran the ride-hailing firm’s driverless project.
Angelo Merendino Getty Images FORMER Uber exec Anthony Levandowsk­i ran the ride-hailing firm’s driverless project.

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