News

NVIDIA Hit With Lawsuit For Stealing Trade Secrets, Engineer Caught Screen Sharing

NVIDIA has been hit with a lawsuit all thanks to a mistake from software developer Mohammad Moniruzzaman whilst screen sharing during a video call.

Engineer Caught Sharing Trade Secrets

As reported by Siliconvalley.com, Mohammad Moniruzzaman is a software developer who began working with NVIDIA in 2021 after leaving his former company, Valeo, a European company in the automotive industry. Both NVIDIA and Valeo had a contract with another automotive company to develop parking-assistance software which is the key focus of this lawsuit. Moniruzzaman was previously working on this software at Valeo however moved over to NVIDIA taking his experience and knowledge with him to produce the software, the problem is, that Moniruzzaman had simply copied the source code from Valeo to use at NVIDIA.

Moniruzzaman was on a video call doing a presentation to nine other people and made the mistake of minimising the presentation window. In doing so it allowed the other participants, who were part of Valeo, to notice source code that belonged to them. The evidence was screenshotted and a lawsuit was made against Moniruzzaman. An audit was conducted which discovered that he had copied “the entirety of Valeo’s parking and driving assistance source code from his Valeo computer to a personal computer,” and then transferred these files to his NVIDIA work computer. Two months ago he was convicted in Germany for unlawful acquisition, use and disclosure of Valeo’s trade secrets.

All of this leads to a full lawsuit against NVIDIA who Valeo claims “provided NVIDIA and its engineers a shortcut in the development of its first parking-assistance software, and saved NVIDIA millions, perhaps hundreds of millions, of dollars in development costs,”. NVIDIA has allegedly claimed that the actions of Moniruzzaman were entirely unknown to them and that he claimed the files were only stored on his laptop and not shared with other NVIDIA employees. NVIDIA also added that they had no interest in the stolen code or alleged trade secrets.

This is quite the blunder, just goes to show that with our growing use of video conferencing, we should be very careful with what we have on the screen.

Jakob Aylesbury

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Electronic Arts Titles Played for Over 11 Billion Hours in 2024

Electronic Arts (EA) announced today that its games were played for over 11 billion hours…

5 days ago

Just 15% of Steam Gaming Time in 2024 Was Spent on New Releases

Steam's annual end-of-year recap, Steam Replay, provides fascinating insights into gamer habits by comparing individual…

5 days ago

STALKER 2 Gets Massive 110GB Patch With 1800+ Fixes

GSC GameWorld released a major title update for STALKER 2 this seeking, bringing the game…

6 days ago

Intel Unveils Core 200H Processors Based on the Previous Raptor Lake Refresh

Without any formal announcement, Intel appears to have revealed its new Core 200H series processors…

6 days ago

Ubisoft Reportedly Developing a New Quadruple A Game

Ubisoft is not having the best of times, but despite recent flops, the company still…

6 days ago

STALKER 2: Heart of Chornobyl Update 1.1 Fixes 1,800 Issues and Revamps A-Life 2.0

If you haven’t started playing STALKER 2: Heart of Chornobyl yet, now might be the…

6 days ago