Comments by "Thetequilashooter1" (@Thetequilashooter1) on "" video.
-
3
-
2
-
2
-
2
-
1
-
1
-
@breadnewbie6326 I know a thing or two about IP and licensing. I can’t tell you how often my office wouldn’t file a patent application. The scientists of course think they’ve invented the next best thing to sliced bread, but in reality a large number of them aren’t worth the patent costs to protect them. I used to be a licensing agent at a Tier One University, and more often than not we wouldn’t even file an application. Some Principal Investigators would file with their own money, and in these cases the University would release the IP to them.
Our bread and butter was licensing University IP to the PI’s start-up company.
Before boasting about the numbers of patents, you need to look into their value. It’s well known in the IP community that China files many worthless invention disclosures. Google Bloomberg, China Claims More Patents Than Any Country—Most Are Worthless.
If you don’t have a subscription with Bloomberg, Google CIGI, Innovation/Intellectual Property, and you’ll find:
It’s not necessarily the high numbers of patent filings, however, that turned China into a global patent powerhouse. The rapid increase of patent filings, including the PCT applications, was to a large extent a result of a great leap of patent applications boosted by subsidies of governments at all levels and spurred by the central government’s quantity-first and subsidy-driven instructions to improve China’s patent level. Instead of being innovation-driven, most of China’s patent applications are driven by other motives, such as seeking government subsidy or job promotion, reputation building for individuals or universities and institutions, or acquiring certification as national high-tech enterprises.
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
@breadnewbie6326 There are many cases of Chinese spies going to jail for theft of U.S. secrets.
-Xu Yanjun was accused of a lead role in a five-year Chinese state-backed scheme to steal commercial secrets from GE Aviation.
- a former Rockwell and Boeing engineer from Orange County, Calif., was remanded into custody this morning after a federal judge convicted him of charges of economic espionage and acting as an agent of the People’s Republic of China, for whom he stole restricted technology and Boeing trade secrets, including information related to the Space Shuttle program and Delta IV rocket.
-Two years after his arrest in Canada, Su Bin, a Chinese citizen you ran Lode-Technology, has pled guilty in a California federal court to carrying out a series of cyber espionage thefts of U.S. military secrets that included the C-17 Globemaster, and Lockheed F-35 and F-22 stealth fighters.
-Peter Lee a physicist born in China who worked at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and later for TRW Inc., pleaded guilty to lying on security-clearance forms and passing classified national-defense information to Chinese scientists on business trips to Beijing.[34] He compromised classified weapons information, microwave submarine-detection technology and other national-defense data,[28] and the Department of Energy later concluded that his disclosure of classified information "was of significant material assistance to the PRC in their nuclear weapons development program .
-Chi Mack copied and sent sensitive documents on U.S. Navy ships, submarines and weapons to China by courier. In 2008, he was sentenced to a 24+1⁄2-year prison term for espionage.
There are many many more examples.
1
-
@breadnewbie6326 Here are more examples:
-Ko-Suen "Bill" Moo pleaded guilty to being a covert agent of China. Moo attempted to purchase United States military equipment to send to China when he was arrested by undercover United States agents. Some of the equipment included an F-16 fighter jet engine, an AGM-129A cruise missile, UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter engines and AIM-120 air-to-air missiles.
- Fei Ye, and Ming Zhong stole trade secrets in designing a computer microprocessor to benefit China, although prosecutors did not allege that the Chinese government knew of their activities. In December 2002, they were charged with a total of ten counts, including conspiracy; economic espionage; possession of stolen trade secrets; and foreign transportation of stolen property. In 2006 (five years after their arrest), they pleaded guilty to two counts each of economic espionage.
- Anne Lockwood, Michael Haehnel, and Fuping Liu In February 2009, three former employees of Metaldyne Corporation were sentenced to prison terms in federal court in connection with a conspiracy to steal confidential information in order to assist a Chinese competitor, the Chongqing Huafu Industry Company ("Huafu"), of Chongqing, China to compete against Metaldyne in the field of powdered metal parts.
- Kevin Patrick Mallory was arrested and charged under the Espionage Act on charges of performing espionage on behalf of the Chinese government.[61][62] Mallory was given special communications devices for communicating documents to Chinese intelligence agents, including documents classified as top secret.
-Xu Jiaqiang pleaded guilty to charges of economic espionage, theft, and possession and distribution of trade secrets, after having been accused of stealing the source code to IBM software.
The list goes on and on…
1
-
1
-
1
-
@breadnewbie6326 They’re not direct copies, bolt for bolt, screw for screw, etc., but they were heavily influenced from stolen documents. Like I said, just Google about all the Chinese who have been convicted of intellectual property theft. You name it, China has stolen it. From missiles, to sonars, submarine technology, aircraft, helicopters, even utility vehicles, China has stolen confidential information to help develop their own equipment. And you can see the influence from the information in the overall designs of the Chinese weaponry. China’s thievery is well known, and it’s why Russia wouldn’t sell the Su-33 to China. China wouldn’t assure Russia that it would not reverse engineer the technology. That’s IP theft. You can play all the word games you want, but China steals a lot of technology from others. Without this theft, the Chinese military wouldn’t be as advanced as it is today.
1
-
1
-
1
-
1
-
1