World Conflicts
Yesterday
689
Israeli precision-guided munition likely killed group of children playing foosball in Gaza, weapons experts say
World Conflicts
Yesterday
595
Is "From the River to the Sea" So Wrong?
Personal Finance
Yesterday
1467
Thank you AAPL and NVDA
Tech Industry
Yesterday
1981
Do people underestimate E6 role at meta?
World Conflicts
Yesterday
521
Why I Find Free Palestine Inspiring
https://www.fierceelectronics.com/electronics/u-s-charges-chinese-professor-tied-to-huawei-criminal-theft-ip?mkt_tok=eyJpIjoiT0dZell6UmxZVEJtTnpCbCIsInQiOiJZVE8yXC9TNlE5SWtlYmp3UmRiWGRBN09iMWJucG5Jc0haWlN2Zm9TaUQ2MURRV28xUStUczJYeTNEZjJjUXpjbHlUckdYbUJUaEZCRUlnWDh0d3pTcjBneUQyYkNRWEhTOE9zN29WNmo1UVlOMnhWbXRjWk9SeUI3VndDU2huVEEifQ%3D%3D&mrkid=35796892 At the center of a complicated U.S. criminal case involving China’s giant telecom firm Huawei is a Chinese professor in Texas named Bo Mao. The case is significant because Huawei has repeatedly been accused of stealing intellectual property from U.S. companies, which Huawei denies. More broadly, President Trump has repeatedly accused China in recent months for reaping billions of dollars in IP theft from U.S. companies over the past two decades. A criminal complaint accuses Mao of wire fraud in the theft of intellectual property of the architecture for Solid State Drive (SSD) controllers for semiconductor storage that was created by startup CNEX Labs in San Jose, California. The case (1:19-cr-00392-AMD1) was recently transferred from a Texas district court to the eastern district federal court in New York. The maximum penalty for a federal wire fraud conviction is 20 years in prison and up to $250,000 in fines.
The link you posted has a tracker in it. It is pretty easy to tell where the real link ends. People posting on blind should try to remove these trackers for everyone's privacy.
Fuck that guy