Ex-Google Engineer Convicted of Stealing AI Infrastructure Secrets for Chinese Ventures
.
Ding, 38, was found guilty on seven counts of economic espionage and seven counts of theft of trade secrets following an 11-day trial, the U.S. Attorney’s Office announced on Thursday. Prosecutors said the stolen information detailed how Google designs, builds, and operates the supercomputing data centers used to train and run large AI models.
“The theft and misuse of advanced artificial intelligence technology for the benefit of the People’s Republic of China threatens our technological edge and economic competitiveness,” FBI Special Agent in Charge Sanjay Virmani said in the Jan. 29 press release.
U.S. Attorney Craig H. Missakian said in the same news release that the verdict shows “the theft of this valuable technology will not go unpunished.”
Court filings show that Ding began secretly copying Google’s proprietary materials in May 2022 and continued through May 2023, uploading more than 1,000 unique files to a personal cloud storage account.
Ding “never informed Google about his affiliation with Rongshu,” the indictment said.
The following year, Ding founded Shanghai Zhisuan Technology Co. Ltd., a startup focused on developing software to accelerate machine-learning workloads, including the training of large AI models, according to the indictment.
Prosecutors said the stolen trade secrets included details about Google’s Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) chips and systems, its Graphics Processing Unit (GPU)-based computing systems, and the software that enables thousands of chips to communicate and operate as a single supercomputer. They also noted that the trade secrets involved information on Google’s custom SmartNIC, specialized networking hardware used to move data efficiently between machines in high-performance and cloud computing environments.
Prosecutors said the jury’s economic-espionage verdict reflects evidence that Ding’s actions were consistent with efforts to build and finance a China-based venture. The superseding indictment cites investor pitch materials and internal documents that claimed the team could recreate Google-scale computing capacity within China.
The Justice Department also said Ding applied to a China-based “talent program” and circulated materials that framed the work as helping the Chinese regime achieve global levels of computing power.
The Epoch Times reached out to Ding’s lawyer for comment but did not receive a response by publication time.
Ding is scheduled to appear at a status conference on Feb. 3, with no sentencing date set. Prosecutors said he faces up to 15 years in prison on each economic espionage count, and up to 10 years on each trade secret count.
The verdict comes at a time when AI infrastructure—specialized chips, high-speed networking equipment, and the software that binds them together—has become a core business asset and a national security concern.
Ding’s case follows a pattern prosecutors have described for years: insiders with legitimate access copying large volumes of sensitive files before switching jobs, launching rival ventures, or seeking funding overseas.


