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TSMC fires several employees over the suspicion of stealing 2 nm process tech secrets, with Taiwan authorities investigating the matter due to national security fears
TSMC fires several employees over the suspicion of stealing 2 nm process tech secrets, with Taiwan authorities investigating the matter due to national security fears

Yahoo

time09-08-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

TSMC fires several employees over the suspicion of stealing 2 nm process tech secrets, with Taiwan authorities investigating the matter due to national security fears

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. A single company firing staff over the suspicion of theft doesn't always make for headline news, but when the business in question is TSMC and its cutting-edge fabrication technology, it's not hard to see why Taiwan's Supreme Prosecutors Office has got involved in the matter. Details of the case were reported by Central News Agency, Taipei (via Dan Nystedt on X), stating that one former employee and one current (though now ex) employee of TSMC have been arrested by Taiwanese authorities; three other employees have also been detained. It all came about after TSMC discovered that one person had 'unusual' access to files. After an internal investigation, the chip-making giant came to the conclusion that there was sufficient evidence to suspect that 'core national trade secrets' were being illegally obtained, and so filed a lawsuit against the employees in question. That prompted the Intellectual Property Division of Taiwan's Supreme Prosecutors Office (SPO) to have the people in question arrested under the National Security Act. The maximum penalty for this type of crime is apparently 12 years in prison and a fine of $3.3 million. At face value, this might seem like an extreme reaction, but TSMC is estimated to account for 8% of Taiwan's GDP and 12% of all its exports. It also holds almost 70% of the global foundry market, though if one analyses this per process node or industrial sector, the figure can be significantly higher. So, given that the theft pertains to TSMC's forthcoming N2 process node, it's perhaps not surprising that Taiwan's SPO reacted in such a way. In the world of semiconductors, IP theft has the potential to be extremely lucrative, given that even minor details about a cutting-edge process node could accelerate research and gain ground over competitors in being first-to-market. Employees who steal such information may be state-sponsored or simply looking to sell documents and data to the highest bidder. TSMC's N2 process node is expected to offer a decent improvement over N3 in terms of power efficiency and SRAM density (which is used for cache in CPUs and GPUs), though overall transistor density is only modestly better. AMD and Nvidia will be keen to use N2 because they're both currently shipping chips fabricated on variations of TSMC's N5 node, with Apple using N3 for its A18 and A18 Pro chips and Intel for its Lunar Lake processors. To meet customers' expectations of improved capabilities and performance with successive generations of processors, AMD et al rely on process nodes keeping pace with architectural changes. Adding more logic units and cache, via increased transistor counts, normally just results in a larger chip, but if they can all be made smaller, the die sizes can stay small but still offer more performance. Thus, the fortunes of all the tech giants and TSMC are tied together, and in the case of the latter, Taiwan as well. This report of alleged IP theft isn't the first such case (though Taiwan's SPO say it is the first one of "illegally obtaining the country's core key technology trade secrets"), and it almost certainly won't be the last. TSMC may have discovered the activity through routine inspections, but how many more have transpired undetected? Sign in to access your portfolio

In the 1980s, South Korea was a meth exporter. Now, its drug labs are back
In the 1980s, South Korea was a meth exporter. Now, its drug labs are back

South China Morning Post

time16-06-2025

  • South China Morning Post

In the 1980s, South Korea was a meth exporter. Now, its drug labs are back

Drug manufacturing crimes, which had largely disappeared in South Korea since the government's war on drugs in the 1990s, are making a troubling return. As authorities ramp up efforts to block drug smuggling across borders, criminals are increasingly turning to producing narcotics domestically using imported chemical precursors. In 2023, 23,022 people were caught for drug-related offences in South Korea, the Supreme Prosecutors' Office said on Sunday. While this was a 16.6 per cent decrease from the record high of 27,611 in 2022, the figure still represented a nearly 20-fold jump from the 1,190 cases reported in 1985, when drug crime statistics were first recorded. The number of drug manufacturing offences, excluding cannabis-related cases, is also on the rise. From zero in 2005, the figure climbed to four in 2010, nine in 2020, and six in 2023, reaching 19 in 2024, the highest since type-specific statistics began in 2000. In the 1980s, South Korea faced international embarrassment as a methamphetamine-exporting country. But tougher crackdowns eventually dismantled domestic labs. South Korean police officers cross a road in Seoul earlier this month. Photo: EPA-EFE Now, with border seizures intensifying – over 1,170kg (2,579lbs) of drugs were confiscated last year – there is a growing trend of smuggling in precursor chemicals to produce narcotics within South Korea.

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