Silicon Valley giants seem to be Lisa Ann - Sexual Intrigue (2008)stepping on each other's toes in the race to bring self-driving cars to the road.
Waymo, the autonomous car arm of Alphabet (which owns Google), filed a lawsuit against Uber on Thursday accusing the ride-hailing company of stealing its trade secrets.
In a lengthy Medium post announcing the suit, the company's spokespeople alleged that a former project manager, Anthony Levandowski, stole thousands of proprietary files before leaving to start his own self-driving car startup, Otto.
SEE ALSO: Inside Uber: Women either 'drink the Kool-aid' or sufferOtto, which Uber bought last fall, then used that technology to build a system for detecting vehicle surroundings nearly identical to Waymo's, the company claims.
Waymo said it discovered the resemblance when a supplier inadvertently emailed a blueprint of the circuit board for Uber's laser sensor system.
In a departure from the usual bland corporate PR-speak, the company described its frustration with the ordeal at length. At one point, it even likened the alleged theft to a heist of Coca-Cola's famously well-guarded secret formula.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"Misappropriating this technology is akin to stealing a secret recipe from a beverage company," the company's spokespeople wrote.
"Hundreds of Waymo engineers have spent thousands of hours, and our company has invested millions of dollars to design a highly specialized and unique LiDAR system."
In a brief statement Thursday evening, an Uber spokesperson said the company would look into the allegations.
"We take the allegations made against Otto and Uber employees seriously and we will review this matter carefully," a spokesperson said.
The spat presents a bit of an awkward situation for the two companies because Google Ventures, another Alphabet wing, is a major Uber investor.
The relationship between the two companies had already strained in recent months as overlapping business interests put them at odds in the market. An Alphabet exec relinquished his seat on Uber's board last August after the other members reportedly shut him and the head of Google Ventures out of multiple meetings.
The suit also comes at a bad time for Uber, which is still reeling from the fallout of a bombshell report of systemic sexual harassment and a massive boycott.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The move follows a similar lawsuit Tesla filed against a former self-driving car head who allegedly poached employees for a competing venture with the former head of Google's unit.
As businesses elbow one another to snatch up the nascent market for driverless vehicles, it seems competition is getting ugly.
The suit was filed in San Francisco federal court on Thursday.
Updated Thursday, Feb. 23, 7 p.m. EST to include Uber's response.
Topics Google Uber
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Reality Distortion Field: 10 Things Apple Won't Directly Say But We'll Infer About the iPhone X
Student asks boyfriend to buy her some new leggings, things escalate quickly
Aly Raisman sues U.S. Olympic Committee and USA Gymnastics for how they dealt with Nassar abuse
This is what a red alert for snowfall actually looks like at an airport
Operation Rock Wallaby rains food down on wildlife hurt by bushfires
This 'Wrinkle in Time' poster is too girly for boys, apparently
Waltonchain token crashes following sketchy tweet
Xbox Live is experiencing outages
Best soundbar deal: Save $300 on the Sonos Arc
Sony PULSE Elite PS5 headset open
This year's Best Picture nominees deserve to be seen as classic comic strips
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。