硬盘扔垃圾箱、机场追逐、未婚妻作证各种狗血情节。 In one case, a researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles studying artificial intelligence is accused by federal prosecutors of destroying evidence sought by the FBI in an investigation into potential technology theft. The researcher, Guan Lei, threw a damaged computer hard drive in a dumpster days after he was stopped from leaving the U.S. at Los Angeles International Airport, prosecutors allege. In another, a scientist researching fluid dynamics at the University of Virginia is charged with stealing proprietary software code under development for two decades by his adviser, who received U.S. Navy funding. The adviser told investigators that Hu Haizhou, whom U.S. authorities prevented from boarding a flight in Chicago last month, hadn’t informed him he planned to return to China, prosecutors allege in filings in his case.
旧闻,又炒作一番而已 Hurt wrote that Guan had access at UCLA to a “graphics processing unit,” a piece of technology with potential military applications, but the professor told agents “he was not alarmed by Guan’s activities and could not think of military or proprietary applications Guan might have unlawfully accessed at UCLA.”
Guan conducted research at UCLA since 2018, working with a professor — unnamed in court documents — to develop “an optimization algorithm” and apply it to machine learning, the affidavit said. where he studied machine-learning algorithms in the school’s mathematics department
In one case, a researcher at the University of California, Los Angeles studying artificial intelligence is accused by federal prosecutors of destroying evidence sought by the FBI in an investigation into potential technology theft. The researcher, Guan Lei, threw a damaged computer hard drive in a dumpster days after he was stopped from leaving the U.S. at Los Angeles International Airport, prosecutors allege. In another, a scientist researching fluid dynamics at the University of Virginia is charged with stealing proprietary software code under development for two decades by his adviser, who received U.S. Navy funding. The adviser told investigators that Hu Haizhou, whom U.S. authorities prevented from boarding a flight in Chicago last month, hadn’t informed him he planned to return to China, prosecutors allege in filings in his case.
Hurt wrote that Guan had access at UCLA to a “graphics processing unit,” a piece of technology with potential military applications, but the professor told agents “he was not alarmed by Guan’s activities and could not think of military or proprietary applications Guan might have unlawfully accessed at UCLA.”
Guan conducted research at UCLA since 2018, working with a professor — unnamed in court documents — to develop “an optimization algorithm” and apply it to machine learning, the affidavit said.
where he studied machine-learning algorithms in the school’s mathematics department