Three individuals who worked for DRAM maker's Taiwan subsidiary stole Micron IP to benefit company controlled by China's government, US says in indictment.

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Like many other businesses, semiconductor manufacturer Micron Technology employs a range of physical, electronic, and policy measures to protect its trade secrets. Yet all it took for the company to allegedly lose intellectual property worth at least $400 million to a Chinese competitor was two employees with legitimate access to the data.

A federal indictment unsealed this week in the US District Court for the Northern District of California described Micron as the victim of economic espionage involving a Taiwanese semiconductor company, a state-owned company in China, and three individuals who previously worked for Micron.

The indictment alleges that Stephen Chen, former president of a Micron subsidiary in Taiwan called Micron Memory Taiwan (MMT), conspired with two other former employees to steal proprietary data on Micron's DRAM technology. The trio is then alleged to have used the stolen data to advance China's development of its own DRAM technology.

Chen resigned from Micron in 2015 and began working as a senior vice president at United Microelectronics Corp. (UMC), a Taiwanese semiconductor foundry with a technology-sharing agreement with Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit, a Chinese government-owned semiconductor plant.

In that role, Chen is alleged to have hired two former MMT process managers to UMC. Both of the engineers allegedly stole confidential and proprietary data before and after quitting the Micron subsidiary and used it to advance UMC and, in turn, Finjan Jinhua's own DRAM development work.

The stolen trade secrets included Micron's work on DRAM design and manufacturing, the entire manufacturing process for a specific 25 nm DRAM product, software used to track the product through the fabrication process, and a design rules document. Also allegedly misappropriated was Micron IP relating to a next-generation 1 xnm DRAM product. The indictment estimated the market value of the stolen information to UMC and Fujian Jinhua as ranging from $400 million to a staggering $8.75 billion.

Before leaving MMT, one of the indicted individuals, based in Taiwan at the time, allegedly downloaded over 900 confidential and proprietary files belonging to Micron from the company's US servers. The engineer stored the downloaded files on external USB drives and in a personal Google Drive account that he later accessed while working for UMC.

A lot of the stolen trade secrets were contained in PDF documents and multitabbed Excel spreadsheets. Several of the PDF documents contained hundreds of pages — the biggest one had 360 pages.

The indictment does not indicate what sort of access the Taiwan-based engineer had to these documents in the regular course of his work at MMT. It is also not clear how he managed to download the 900-plus files and put them on personally owned external USB drives and in a personal cloud storage account without being detected. However, in the weeks leading up to his resignation from the Micron subsidiary in Taiwan, the engineer systematically ran numerous deletion processes and the CCleaner utility program on his official laptop to hide evidence of the data misappropriation.

The indictment against the China government-affiliated actors is the latest manifestation of the US government's crackdown on what it says is widespread economic espionage by China. Only earlier this week, the US Department of Justice charged Chinese government intelligence agents with conducting a wide-ranging IP theft campaign targeting American and European aerospace firms.

While a lot of attention is being paid to the geopolitical implications of such actions, for enterprises the main takeaway is the need to better protect against insider threats. While organizations are spending millions of dollars shoring up against external attacks, data suggests they are not doing enough to protect against insiders with trusted access to enterprise networks and data.

Numerous surveys have shown that employees pose as much, if not an even greater, risk to enterprise data than external actors. Many breaches have resulted from negligence and mistakes, while others, such as the one at Micron, have resulted from malicious behavior. Security analysts have long noted the need for organizations to deploy monitoring controls for detecting suspicious or anomalous user behavior to manage the threat.

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About the Author(s)

Jai Vijayan, Contributing Writer

Jai Vijayan is a seasoned technology reporter with over 20 years of experience in IT trade journalism. He was most recently a Senior Editor at Computerworld, where he covered information security and data privacy issues for the publication. Over the course of his 20-year career at Computerworld, Jai also covered a variety of other technology topics, including big data, Hadoop, Internet of Things, e-voting, and data analytics. Prior to Computerworld, Jai covered technology issues for The Economic Times in Bangalore, India. Jai has a Master's degree in Statistics and lives in Naperville, Ill.

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