When Chinese Industrial Espionage Goes Wrong

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  • čas přidán 28. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 2,6K

  • @business
    @business  Před rokem +31

    Interested in more stories of espionage? 🕵Watch 'Intrigue in Copenhagen': czcams.com/video/0xlq4WSpUH8/video.html

    • @BrettonFerguson
      @BrettonFerguson Před 8 měsíci

      @0:19 That is more than $4000 in the briefcase. This suitcase looks like it has around $500,000. if they are $100 bills. If they are $20 bills then it has around $50,000.

    • @kittysplode
      @kittysplode Před 8 měsíci +1

      do you not understand volume leveling

    • @fuckunitaezombiesofdoom
      @fuckunitaezombiesofdoom Před 6 měsíci

      YES PLS!!! XI JIN PING SUXX

    • @JJONNYREPP
      @JJONNYREPP Před 6 měsíci

      When Chinese Industrial Espionage Goes Wrong. 14.2.24. 4000dollars isn't a lot of money.....

    • @KatyYoder-cq1kc
      @KatyYoder-cq1kc Před 19 dny +1

      NOW on LIFE SUPPORT, please HELP. I have had non stop harassment, CHEMICAL POISONING, AND MALICIOUS USE OF AI, threats and physical and emotional abuse for over 3 years from secret societies, US, KOREA, CHINA, RUSSIA AND IRAN: WOKE CLERGY, ARMY, NEO NAZIS, terrorists and communists. GO AWAY. Stop malicious use of AI. Restraining Order Permanently

  • @kenmackenzie5766
    @kenmackenzie5766 Před rokem +2781

    I work for a German company and have sold many of our products into China. There are now so many copy cat units that sell for less than we can make them for. I confronted one such copy cat company at an exhibition. The attitude was that we should be proud that our products were copied and not our competitors! They even copied our marketing, model names and technical specifications. There really is no shame!

    • @samuelgold394
      @samuelgold394 Před rokem +34

      Out of curiosity, what industry do you work within?

    • @kenmackenzie5766
      @kenmackenzie5766 Před rokem +270

      @@samuelgold394 we make temperature control equipment that is used in the pharmaceutical and chemical industries among others

    • @geronimo5537
      @geronimo5537 Před rokem

      Just one of the thousands of companies learning this lesson. China steals all designs and turns it around for self profit. Yet companies keep pouring over expecting better.

    • @cvspvr
      @cvspvr Před rokem +28

      have they managed to replicate the famous german engineering though?

    • @couttsw
      @couttsw Před rokem +219

      The shame is that your company thought they could save a buck by manufacturing overseas instead of at home. No such thing as buy German anymore.

  • @ScottsSynthStuff
    @ScottsSynthStuff Před rokem +1863

    My company learned the hard way: if you hire a factory in China to produce your product, they will create the tooling and start manufacturing your product. However, they will also run night shifts with different staff, using the same tooling (and firmware, and intellectual property) that you paid for, but they use it to manufacture knock-offs of your product - at the same factory, using the same tooling! They will then sell those knock-off copies of your product at a much lower price, freely and brazenly using your stolen firmware and IP. Apparently this is an extremely common practice there.

    • @onlythebest3311
      @onlythebest3311 Před rokem +110

      Were your company heads born yesterday? This being going on since manufacturing moved to China 2 decades ago, everyone knows. It’s very easily mitigated, the brand names have strict control over the factories and they don’t care as the knockoffs will never be able to use their package or the same trademark and sell in US. The startups can have different parts built in different places and assembled by a third party, and/or have local supervision. Most of the brands all get their products from the same oem factory anyway and just slap their label on it.

    • @JumpingWatermelons
      @JumpingWatermelons Před rokem +85

      Dude that practice is well known, your company are fools. If they wanted to attempt to control the product, they need to control the factory themselves and have it staffed. And that's just to prevent the overproduction for sale and stealing of inventory.

    • @MusikCassette
      @MusikCassette Před rokem +14

      I would say: Trade secrets are the problem in the first place.

    • @nicoz4122
      @nicoz4122 Před rokem +64

      My last company in China did exactly the same ! They hired many OEM to produce their machinery. Needless to say that after roughly 2 years, the Chinese market was flooded with copycats of our machinery and 50 to 70% cheaper. Our market share dropped significatly and the subsidiary in China went bankrupt (and I lost my job)... The funny (?) thing is that when we found out that one of our Chinese technical director was stealing equipment, tools, consumables from us and we fired him, 2 weeks after it turned out that in parallel he had his own company and he was producing our same machinery.... Brilliant !

    • @geronimo5537
      @geronimo5537 Před rokem

      All companies see is profit in China. Yet ignore all the setbacks and what people tell them is happening. Then they get surprised when they get scammed or their copyright is violated that china doesnt care about. lol

  • @sunnindawg
    @sunnindawg Před rokem +1059

    I used to work for a small Japanese company. I asked the CEO why we don't have an office in China? He said they steal everything, even the office chairs disappear.

    • @animeweng
      @animeweng Před rokem

      Every one steals from everyone. Apple sued Samsung for stealing design of the iphone. A Korean company accused off stealing design from an American company. Steve Jobs stole from Xerox the GUI display of a computer.

    • @fgdfhdhjd7776
      @fgdfhdhjd7776 Před rokem

      He is so kind and cute, he did not even know nowadays Chinese people are talking about killing all Americans and Japanese!

    • @jeffjohnson5053
      @jeffjohnson5053 Před rokem

      Don't hire chinese from china. Problem solved!!

    • @anhvu4211
      @anhvu4211 Před 9 měsíci +30

      sounds true lol

    • @martinsreel
      @martinsreel Před 8 měsíci +34

      I can tell you what's worse, the company can lose everything just because government say so. Intellectual property is not a thing there.

  • @herseem
    @herseem Před rokem +2278

    The chinese did the same thing with a wave energy generator called Pelamis in Scotland, except they did it a bit more brutally. After a Chinese visit to the factory there was a break-in and a specific laptop was stolen that had all the technical details on. A few months later, a copy-cat wave energy device was shown in China. The irony though is that in the industry, everyone knew that the Pelamis model was a bust and were waiting for them to go bankrupt because it was so unreliable - which they did. So the Chinese stole the detailed plans of one of the worst wave energy devices at the time.

    • @jumpingjohnflash
      @jumpingjohnflash Před rokem +197

      There was a New Zealand academic who wrote a book revealing and strongly criticising the CCP's "United Front" and other "patriotic" organisations as being directly controlled catspaws for CCP interests (as are the so-called "Confucius Institutes"). Both her University of Canterbury office and her home were burgled and all her computers and hard drives were stolen.

    • @jtc1947
      @jtc1947 Před rokem +71

      Glad that the commie's got RIPPED on that deal! A case of MUCH EGG ON FACE!

    • @Martin-iw1ll
      @Martin-iw1ll Před rokem +38

      But it was probably because they were nearly bankrupted that they allowed a Chinese visit to the factory in order to get chinese interest in their project and then potentially get some funding from them

    • @herseem
      @herseem Před rokem +41

      @@Martin-iw1ll you could be right there, and the fact that they made a beeline for a specific laptop that happened to contain all the relevant details did cause me to raise am eyebrow at the time. It was almost as if the captain of the ship was trying to get something for himself, knowing the ship was about to sink

    • @deadboltzz5199
      @deadboltzz5199 Před rokem +22

      ​@@herseemHe sold china the defected life jacket lol

  • @dznrboy
    @dznrboy Před rokem +877

    This happened in Canada with Nortel Networks, the Chinese government stole their tech and used it to build Huawei into the business it is today. So many of the Nortel employees who were also invested in the company lost everything.

    • @bernl178
      @bernl178 Před rokem

      And, of course, with our government blessing because our governments in love with China and investment money. But at the end of the day china loves to take the worlds technology, and I do mean take it. Yes, Chinese espionage

    • @nesseihtgnay9419
      @nesseihtgnay9419 Před rokem

      I heard about that, too. The chinese always steal

    • @agenthex
      @agenthex Před rokem

      This is a commonly held lie in Canada and west in general. What Huawei actually did was hire Nortel Fellow Wen Tong & some colleagues, who were basically responsible for developing much of new Nortel tech (all Nortel was worth at its sale were his patents), by promising him oversight over his own research lab to develop 4g & 5g for Huawei instead. Of course that's not an appealing PR story, so the lowest denom here will continue to parrot the lie about "stealing tech".

    • @ticler
      @ticler Před rokem +154

      Worst thing is it was known for a long time but Canada is too cuck to kick them out.

    • @eaglestar2962
      @eaglestar2962 Před rokem

      Nortel networks officials were known for lavish partying and corrupt.

  • @gilramsey3518
    @gilramsey3518 Před rokem +983

    I used to work for Nortel Networks and long after I left but as I understand it - the Chinese stole all of the designs and specifications for how they made telephone switching equipment then made knock offs that put Nortel out of business. Nortel had a lot of other problems - accounting irregularities and so forth but getting knocked off by the Chinese didn't help.

    • @jlm1567
      @jlm1567 Před rokem +59

      Huawei?

    • @m.e.345
      @m.e.345 Před rokem

      Kind of like hiring a foreign national to work at the National Microbiology Lab in Winnipeg.. and sending samples back to China.

    • @tonycd2709
      @tonycd2709 Před rokem +56

      They did the same thing to Cisco.

    • @gotfan7743
      @gotfan7743 Před rokem +77

      @@jlm1567 Yes, Huawei. But Nortel Networks were very negligent when it came to cyber security. If I am right when they came to know Chinese were hacking into their servers/network, it has been said they only changed their passwords.

    • @DennistheMenace2011
      @DennistheMenace2011 Před rokem +67

      @@gotfan7743 Yup, stole a bunch of stuff and copied everything right down to the design error on the circuit board!

  • @w3vjp568
    @w3vjp568 Před rokem +855

    The theft taking place from our university system is staggering, too.

    • @maddog2314
      @maddog2314 Před rokem +83

      Yeah seriously. Like the head of the Harvard chemistry department who got busted around 2019 for thousand talents stuff.

    • @varunemani
      @varunemani Před rokem +15

      What ever it takes for her to make the 'CCP Dream' retirment plan a reality!

    • @boulderbash19700209
      @boulderbash19700209 Před rokem

      Most of the west technologies nowadays are in the private companies proprietary.

    • @trent11ify
      @trent11ify Před rokem +1

      Assume every single Chinese student is a spy who will steal tech and go back as they'll be rewarded with tons of money back home by CCP.

    • @ChinaVirus0604
      @ChinaVirus0604 Před rokem +3

      yes,chinese thief

  • @roberthaines4221
    @roberthaines4221 Před rokem +406

    SO glad to see an example of someone like her, actually getting caught and prosecuted. Too many have evaded detection.

    • @blazedyoda8608
      @blazedyoda8608 Před rokem +5

      Its on the us/ the west to find and catch people like her.. if we fail then kudos to them as we have failed/ been out smarted.

    • @furtim1
      @furtim1 Před 8 měsíci +2

      yeah, like 99.9999% of them get away with it

    • @surters
      @surters Před 8 měsíci +4

      But there are no consequences for her sponsors, state or company.

    • @abcdefbcdefg8352
      @abcdefbcdefg8352 Před 8 měsíci +1

      thats what Coke money gets you

    • @michinwaygook3684
      @michinwaygook3684 Před 8 měsíci

      She got caught because she is obviously an idiot. Why she would agree to be interrogated is beyond me. She should have asserted her rights, remained silent and asked for a lawyer, but instead she implicated herself. Unfortunately I doubt most criminals in that line of work are as dumb as she was.

  • @brandonyadon5506
    @brandonyadon5506 Před rokem +702

    A briefcase with $4,000? Was it in $1 bills?

    • @julioduan7130
      @julioduan7130 Před rokem +51

      4000 USD in cash is not a big amount for Asians.

    • @clydecmcelroy4638
      @clydecmcelroy4638 Před rokem +77

      ​@@julioduan7130$4,000 in cash isn't a lot for a briefcase either.

    • @mysb13
      @mysb13 Před rokem +42

      I thought it’s 4 million 😂

    • @julioduan7130
      @julioduan7130 Před rokem +37

      @G JM They just wanted to prove she was spying using any “evidence” available.

    • @wawaMusicRadio
      @wawaMusicRadio Před rokem +37

      0:17 “A briefcase containing $4000” isn’t the same as “a briefcase full of bills worth $4000”
      She probably had other documents and personal belongings in there, $4K is only 40 bills which could easily fit inside an envelope

  • @buzzyvideo
    @buzzyvideo Před rokem +1075

    I work in tech and unfortunately this is happening far too often from my observation. Often Chinese are willing to take jobs at lower pay, and making them attractive to US employers. Chinese investors then dangle large amounts of cash to attract them. There should be better regulations against this.

    • @frenchcat2910
      @frenchcat2910 Před rokem +75

      You can't blame Chinese employees for taking better opportunities elsewhere. The US is hostile to immigrants and is falling behind on developing talent. You cant regulate the consequences of not being competitive.

    • @MaxMustermann-yj1wz
      @MaxMustermann-yj1wz Před rokem +16

      What now.
      Nuke em?

    • @lettucesalad3560
      @lettucesalad3560 Před rokem

      You don't even know what you're talking about. The US accepts more immigrants than most other countries combined. China only has about 70,000 foreigners living there, and it's nearly impossible to get Chinese citizenship. Plus China kicks out foreigners for no reason at all, there's no legal protections.

    • @franssantos9417
      @franssantos9417 Před rokem +70

      @@MaxMustermann-yj1wz Better yet dont drink coke. Kidding aside, US and other countries should slowly bring their manufacturing out of China and to more US friendly countries.

    • @bmer92k86
      @bmer92k86 Před rokem +45

      ​@@frenchcat2910 the US should be hostile to immigrants. When a job used to pay 10$ an hour but someone from Mexico or China comes in and offers to do it for 5$ it drives the wages down and that becomes the new market rate. It's not competition it's desperation.

  • @jetaddicted
    @jetaddicted Před rokem +247

    My father worked in a French nuclear research reactor site, in the seventies, and they caught a Chinese « student » that had special shoe soles, made of a matter that would stick to, and sort of absorb, anything on the ground; dusts, nails, bits and pieces.
    This being France in the seventies, the guy went to hospital first, to treat two broken femurs, before visiting our jails.

    • @JumpingWatermelons
      @JumpingWatermelons Před rokem +8

      What would be the purpose of him stealing dust from the floor?

    • @PMA65537
      @PMA65537 Před rokem +97

      @@JumpingWatermelons Reveal what materials were present at the site - if this included fuel manufacture it might indicate levels of enrichment being used.

    • @mikemiller659
      @mikemiller659 Před rokem +18

      @@JumpingWatermelons Janitor effency

    • @JamesOversteer
      @JamesOversteer Před rokem +22

      That’s what should be done now. I assure you they’d stop signing up to ‘talent’ programs then.

    • @kangbule
      @kangbule Před rokem +7

      last time i heard this story it was about a researcher in japan

  • @rawwwrrr4024
    @rawwwrrr4024 Před rokem +168

    I have a friend who has a patent on a piece of tech who knows there have been multiple attempts by Chinese rivals to duplicate it. They haven't figured it out completely, yet, but they keep getting closer. He knows it's only a matter of time before they figure it all out. He supports his own product through RMAs, refurb, general repair, and he's seen counterfeits being returned to him for repair work. The units don't work quite as well and the customers want them fixed. He just ships them back, after some R&D of course, and explains that he isn't servicing them since the units aren't his. Crazy stuff.

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 Před 8 měsíci +7

      If he has a patent, then why doesn't he take legal action against the importers(s)? That's want patents are for.

    • @scaper12123
      @scaper12123 Před 8 měsíci +42

      @@keithammleter3824as if China will punish its patent thieves

    • @keithammleter3824
      @keithammleter3824 Před 8 měsíci +11

      @@scaper12123 ; Oh, I doubt it would ever be allowed to go to court in China. And if it did, they would at most punish some poor scapegoat and allocate someone else to do the cloning. That's why I suggested he just go after the importer(s) in his own country. The market within China is a lost market and nothing can be done about that.
      It is interesting that China even has patents in its own country. One of the basic teachings on communism by Karl Marx is that since each gets his own needs, each contributes as he can, there is no such thing as intellectual property.
      it is very cheeky that China does a lot of business cloning other country's products, yet is becoming the biggest applicant for US and European patents, so we can't clone their stuff.
      Governments such as the US should stand up to China and say ''play the game son, or we will pass a law saying we cannot assign patents to Chinese residents. But they can't upset China, they have borrowed much money from China, and allowed China to get big and powerful. As former Secretary of State Condaleza Rice said, ''how can we hurt our banker?""

    • @NoxUmbrae
      @NoxUmbrae Před 8 měsíci

      @@keithammleter3824 The saying is "if you can cheat, cheat"

    • @Alsry1
      @Alsry1 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Question: did they register a patent in china?
      They have their own patent laws and offices.

  • @salemengineer2130
    @salemengineer2130 Před 8 měsíci +35

    I worked for a US company that made engineering software in the mid-80's. We tried to market our software in China. We worked with two large Chinese organizations. Both had been government ministries but both were morphing into large state-owned companies. We had no problems with one of the organizations but the other one ended up copying our software and selling it inside China in competition with us. We found out because some of their Chinese customers contacted us to ask for technical support.

    • @jean-pierresteenberg
      @jean-pierresteenberg Před 7 měsíci

      THESE ring wrongs lings dongs are insufferable in real life too

    • @devinrr
      @devinrr Před 6 měsíci

      @@jean-pierresteenberg bruh what

    • @phil20_20
      @phil20_20 Před 2 měsíci

      Well, the customers probably knew it too. They just figured you were that gullible for letting your secrets be stolen in the first place. There are plenty of people in my home town here, who think the same way. Thieves are thieves the world over, and autocracies are ruled by thieves.

  • @bonalj222
    @bonalj222 Před rokem +453

    Kudos to the skilled FBI interrogators. If you get caught in a lie, the futher you writhe, the more the web of deceit binds you.

    • @LarsLarsen77
      @LarsLarsen77 Před rokem +3

      They didn't catch them in a lie, they just came out and admitted to taking the information home with them. That's the crime.

    • @JumpingWatermelons
      @JumpingWatermelons Před rokem +25

      FBI has an extremely high conviction rate. They get everything they need before they arrest someone. Once you're arrested by them, it's basically over. An old friend of mine was a defense attorney for federal drug cases. I think all he did for those was negotiate plea deals because that the only reasonable option for his clients.

    • @lllllMlllll
      @lllllMlllll Před rokem +3

      Where is the skill in this? He had every evidence he needed!!!

    • @bigboat8329
      @bigboat8329 Před rokem +5

      I don't think she knew her rights in the United States. She should have just refused to answer questions, invoke her rights, and remain silent.

    • @johndoe-el5ic
      @johndoe-el5ic Před rokem

      i heard Chinese jets are making the airforce sweat like cougar in the beginning of top gun

  • @Lost4llen
    @Lost4llen Před rokem +250

    I used to work in one of the largest management consultancy company worldwide (the largest of the 3..) and during the pandemic, as everybody was working from home, they would staff Chinese consultants on EU projects where we had access to confidential documents from the largest banks worldwide. I cannot imagine all the secrets that got stolen this way. This is ridiculous.

    • @eligebrown8998
      @eligebrown8998 Před rokem +4

      Thats nuts. Had to be stressfull for sure

    • @--Skip--
      @--Skip-- Před rokem +8

      Penny-wise, POUND-FOOLISH! 🤦

    • @torpedohippo8493
      @torpedohippo8493 Před 8 měsíci +5

      I can't imagine a bigger waste of company money than hiring a consultancy company

    • @AP-do6sv
      @AP-do6sv Před 8 měsíci +4

      I am a consultant as well, for the last 3 years 50% of my cases are about helping clients reduce dependency on china. For manufacturing everyone is going to vietnam, indonesia, mexico and so on. For services its India, Mexico and Malaysia

    • @nassernathan
      @nassernathan Před 7 měsíci

      Deloitte

  • @ninja1antelope
    @ninja1antelope Před rokem +41

    In my industry you won’t find a single Chinese national above middle management. In fact at several interviews the first question one was asked was if I was a Chinese national. It’s bad.

    • @Joe60459
      @Joe60459 Před rokem +2

      What industry?

    • @ninja1antelope
      @ninja1antelope Před rokem +5

      @@Joe60459 research based.

    • @ryanthompson3737
      @ryanthompson3737 Před rokem

      And I guarentee people in the EU ask if you've got any connections to any US based companies or government entities and are sure not to promote you to high level positions knowing exactly how much YOU guys like to steal from us. Get into that same field in an allied country and you'll feel like the Chinese people your company is so afraid of.

    • @donturner3239
      @donturner3239 Před rokem +17

      The chinese put this on themselves.

  • @youbigtubership
    @youbigtubership Před rokem +567

    Overly strict parents make their children learn to be either sneaky or cunning liars. Authoritarian governments make their citizens become the same.

    • @4thought___
      @4thought___ Před rokem +2

      Personal responsibility, as an adult?!

    • @boris001000
      @boris001000 Před rokem +21

      Proof that cultures are scalable! I've seen a correlation about how family culture impacts government rule.

    • @youbigtubership
      @youbigtubership Před rokem +14

      @@boris001000 It's one natural human response to imbalanced power relations. If you're afraid to do sonething while still dependent or not yet disaffected, you'll try to find a way around it without confrontation.

    • @JohnDoe-vy5hh
      @JohnDoe-vy5hh Před rokem +6

      Why do American corporations keep hiring these people?

    • @Drew-do9wx
      @Drew-do9wx Před rokem +1

      Yes!!!

  • @cratecruncher6687
    @cratecruncher6687 Před rokem +236

    Kind of chilling when one thinks about how difficult it would be to catch someone a little smarter.

    • @glaze_tpf9791
      @glaze_tpf9791 Před rokem

      fortunately, Chinese/commies are not very bright

    • @bvbxiong5791
      @bvbxiong5791 Před rokem

      plenty of secrets have already escaped the US. and the #1 reason China wants to take over Taiwan is because Taiwan is the #1 chip maker and China wants that technology.

    • @ForburyLion
      @ForburyLion Před rokem +9

      Someone a little smarter probably wouldn't do it.

    • @00kt86
      @00kt86 Před rokem +5

      I'm impressed with the FBI catching her.

    • @IMBlakeley
      @IMBlakeley Před rokem +33

      Someone a little smarter would have clammed up until they had a lawyer in the room.

  • @noahway13
    @noahway13 Před rokem +14

    Vice did a report in China. The business people frankly bragged about stealing on camera. They said "You call it stealing, we call it business."

  • @somewhatblankpaper1423
    @somewhatblankpaper1423 Před 8 měsíci +20

    Within Chinese culture, it mentions that one should not share his/her skills so that they have something unique to live off. It's obvious because if one discloses the skills, others can replicate and the person will lose his/her values which can threaten his/her survivability. That mentality has persisted, and it truly hinders technological advancement as no one wants to make libraries or share information, even those who are interested in the sciences. The emperors also oppose technological innovations and wouldn't reward anyone for innovating in any field besides finding creative ways of maintaining a stable society.
    Obviously, this goes against the ancient Greek culture which was to promote sharing of information and discussions rather than hiding them.

    • @sankadines
      @sankadines Před 8 měsíci +4

      Same thing in India. If I share the knowledge, tomorrow some one from team might be pitted against me. I am in Europe now. I am not afraid to share, but in India I would not share a bit

    • @tyes77
      @tyes77 Před 6 měsíci +1

      Greek culture promotes sharing of info yet somehow no one knows the recipe they used to make greek fire. Hmm.....

  • @MithunOnTheNet
    @MithunOnTheNet Před rokem +268

    She at least got caught, like the Chinese thieves at SMIC trying to steal TSMC's manufacturing processes. Poor Nortel couldn't and is now dead.

    • @Mauser1965
      @Mauser1965 Před rokem +9

      But that's ok. The required "tool" is made in the Netherlands. 🤣

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Před rokem +15

      to be fair its the chinese gov own fault the factory is even in taiwan the guy who started TSMC is a man who grew up in hong kong and he was not even that fussy where it was built it was offered to the best bidder

    • @the_retag
      @the_retag Před rokem +6

      @@Mauser1965 with german optics

    • @ntabile
      @ntabile Před rokem +4

      ​@@the_retag and majority are American investors

  • @zurielsss
    @zurielsss Před rokem +50

    You cannot have Chinese born nationals in any important role with access to sensitive information. Period

  • @loganking1957
    @loganking1957 Před rokem +49

    Flee the country with $4000? That’s like attempting a shopping spree at the dollar store with a nickel

    • @mattk8810
      @mattk8810 Před rokem +6

      4000 is enough to pay for what you need to get away

    • @varunemani
      @varunemani Před rokem +2

      What ever it takes for her to make the 'CCP Dream' retirment plan a reality!

    • @frankryan2505
      @frankryan2505 Před rokem

      ​@@mattk8810yeah,4K of travelling money is nothing to be sniffed at.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před rokem

      You can take up to $10,000 without having to report it. She must not have had more than $4000.

  • @shubashuba9209
    @shubashuba9209 Před rokem +420

    The lesson here is, don't hire foreign nationals from hostile countries in high level positions where sensitive information is stored.

    • @pianobench6319
      @pianobench6319 Před rokem +24

      For a coke can liner?

    • @saivamsikrishnaposani7157
      @saivamsikrishnaposani7157 Před rokem

      @PianoBench In the future, it can be anything. You should be afraid man because in the future you may invent something and hire a Chinese and then they steal the information and start their own company in China with the help of Chinese government using the stolen information.

    • @nobodyspecial4702
      @nobodyspecial4702 Před rokem

      @@pianobench6319 Which China was willing to pay to steal the ability to make.

    • @pianobench6319
      @pianobench6319 Před rokem +24

      @@grapesurgeon somehow I still find it really hard to even worry for the giant soda conglomerate that is coca cola.
      A plastic coke can liner won't make me suddenly switch over to a Chinese brand soda?

    • @MithunOnTheNet
      @MithunOnTheNet Před rokem +56

      @@pianobench6319 If it was that easy, why couldn't the Chinese figure it out then?

  • @georgep9447
    @georgep9447 Před rokem +566

    "Stop the chemicals in soda from eroding the cans they are in." Almost as disturbing as the crime.

    • @rushja
      @rushja Před rokem +11

      Almost?

    • @georger5558
      @georger5558 Před rokem +123

      Sure it sounds scary but water does the same thing to these cans

    • @daveselbow9128
      @daveselbow9128 Před rokem +25

      @@georger5558 exactly. the coke degradation will be at a micro-level over time

    • @MadMrMatter
      @MadMrMatter Před rokem +1

      You're what weaponized ignorance looks like. You don't know what you're talking about but think you've got it figured out.

    • @thebaker8637
      @thebaker8637 Před rokem +91

      Erosion is not corrosion. Water and other liquids tend to *erode* , i.e. mechanically wear off or dissolve, material they slush through, that's how shorelines/river paths change over time and why water gets mineralized/hardened as it seeps through various rocks. It's nothing to do with the acidity/chemical composition of the drink, no new chemicals are created here. The important thing is that when it does happen, you don't really want metal bits floating in your drink, nor do you want the water or coke in this instance to start tasting of aluminum. Incidentally, the exact same thing happens in plastic bottled water, which is one of the many reasons they're meant to be single-use only.
      Now, Coke is also acidic and therefore corrosive to the can, and the same layer helps protect the can from reacting with it. However, completely natural liquids like tomato puree or fruit juice also need the same kind of barrier on a metal can as well if you want the contents to have a long shelf life, Coke being highly processed, way more acidic, and generally bad for your health has nothing to do with it.

  • @Acill
    @Acill Před 8 měsíci +7

    Why do all these companies insists on doing business with China, hiring Chinese engineers and others time and time again? I have seen first hand in my industry loses from this, and its been devastating.

  • @Allin7days
    @Allin7days Před rokem +70

    There are tens of thousands of Shannon You working all over the world right now!

    • @Heart2HeartBooks
      @Heart2HeartBooks Před rokem

      Did you know that the day Biden was sworn in he had the FBI cease all investigations into Chinese spy's in companies and colleges? Look it up!

    • @ericle7299
      @ericle7299 Před rokem

      Hundreds thousands in the West. Even DARPA have several mainland China born Directors thanks to Clinton, Obama, and Biden's bullsh*t "diversity and equality in hiring".

    • @ryanthompson3737
      @ryanthompson3737 Před rokem +4

      And some of them are named Adam and are born in Kansas to 2 very white and Christian parents.

    • @ericle7299
      @ericle7299 Před rokem

      @@ryanthompson3737
      Diane Feinstein, Eric Swalwell, Hunter Biden, and Mitch Mc Connell.
      The CCP actively recruits those who have access to vital R & D info at those large defense contractors like Northrop, Lockheed, Boeing, Raytheon, and BA

    • @triparadox.c
      @triparadox.c Před rokem +4

      fr. why do you think over 1 mil intl. students are from mainland china in US alone?

  • @northamericanintercontinen3207

    If anyone is caught and proven guilty doing this their academic credentials should be revoked and they deported and permanently barred to their countries

  • @williamhannas9342
    @williamhannas9342 Před rokem +78

    TTP is one of several dozen Chinese "talent" programs, and one of many venues and practices China uses to extract foreign technology without compensation to its owners. Read our Chinese Industrial Espionage (2013) and China's Quest for Foreign Technology (2021) for the full scope. This has been going on for a long time, is hard to detect, and even harder to prosecute, given China's ability to mobilize its fifth column United Front assets in defense of the actors and their practices. But don't demonize Chinese-Americans, who are overwhelmingly solid citizens and embarrassed by Beijing's predatory behavior. The challenge is to work against the problem while keeping one's values and decency.

    • @cv990a4
      @cv990a4 Před rokem +3

      Well said.

    • @verti3213
      @verti3213 Před rokem +7

      What about Chinese students straight from China? According to common sense Chinese citizens needs to be kept away from important workplaces in order to lower corporate espionage.

    • @jukio02
      @jukio02 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@verti3213 US does the same thing with China. They go to Chinese nationalists that are working outside of mainland China, bribe them with money and citizenship, in return they want Chinese secrets. China has already captured many spies in their country. They have sentenced them death for treason.

  • @nealrutgerskid
    @nealrutgerskid Před 8 měsíci +2

    LoL.. this is how the Chinese phone market grew to the current status.

  • @steviestone3968
    @steviestone3968 Před rokem +331

    We've all heard the stories, read the tales and from friends, colleagues or coworkers. They'll copy or steal the tech and make it themselves and undercut your business. It's expected, the real question is why people continue doing business with chinese companies when there are no legal avenues or ramifications once they are caught.

    • @westrim
      @westrim Před rokem +51

      ten reasons:
      $$$$$$$$$$

    • @gomarlins
      @gomarlins Před rokem

      Cheap pigs😂

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Před rokem +5

      i got 2 billion from the TTP program i sold them the KFC secret recipe

    • @SayAhh
      @SayAhh Před rokem

      Two wrongs don't make a right, but how many Wall Street execs have gone to jail stealing from American taxpayers in the last 100 years? And dis anybody at Nestle go to jail for stealing water after their license expired or the limit has passed?

    • @michaelmcclown5593
      @michaelmcclown5593 Před rokem +9

      @@antonyjh1234 No not much but they will be sued so they are at least controlled to an extent.

  • @suidowong7222
    @suidowong7222 Před rokem +37

    If not millions, there are thousands of Chinese like her abroad.

    • @larkhill2119
      @larkhill2119 Před rokem +1

      If she is one in a million there are 1400 just like her in fact.

  • @mikasaarela6217
    @mikasaarela6217 Před rokem +35

    This happened to the industry I'm working in, to the company I'm working as well. Patenting anything today is a risk because of the Chinese. They have destroyed this great system.

    • @exelenxius5832
      @exelenxius5832 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Tech espionage happened all the time, 40 years ago people are worried about Japanese tech espionage, 150 years ago people are worried about US tech espionage. As long as technological gap exist tech espionage is just the logical conclusion.

    • @noname-gr9yn
      @noname-gr9yn Před 7 měsíci

      @@exelenxius5832 truth that why zhina will prevail

  • @optimize.
    @optimize. Před rokem +49

    This has been going on for decades. Excellent that action is being taken. Better late than never.

    • @pramodmali4569
      @pramodmali4569 Před rokem

      But 14years for a drink secret is crazy isn't it?

    • @BingusDingusLingus
      @BingusDingusLingus Před 8 měsíci

      The funny part is that something only happened after the big companies in America were affected. Before that they didn’t care, it doesn’t even matter any more apparently

  • @UNgineering
    @UNgineering Před rokem +13

    "found a briefcase containing $4000" proceeds to show a briefcase containing about half a million 😆

  • @scroungasworkshop4663
    @scroungasworkshop4663 Před rokem +11

    It would make me think twice about hiring anyone that is Chinese which is unfair, but then nothing is fair with the CCP.

    • @Heart2HeartBooks
      @Heart2HeartBooks Před rokem

      I don't hire Chinese or blacks anymore. Had too many problems.

    • @موسى_7
      @موسى_7 Před rokem

      ​@@Heart2HeartBooks What is your business?

    • @Alblaka
      @Alblaka Před rokem

      Ye, that's the crux of it. The thin line between geopolitical discrimination and ethnical discrimination: It's not them being Chinese that gets them discriminated again. It's the fact that there exists a government known to act in bad faith utilizing Chinese ethnicity. It's not fair towards the individual, but it can be reasoned that the fault lies with the Chinese government making their own ethnic group that untrustworthy through their practices.

  • @martinXY
    @martinXY Před 8 měsíci +2

    Well, what I have learned from this is I should buy Coke in glass bottles.

  • @renomont
    @renomont Před rokem +8

    I once worked for a consulting company in the early 90s. They wanted to do joint ventures in China. We opened several offices over there and trained their people. They sent many consultants to work in our offices over here. At the end of the day, we trained them, and they ran us off. In retrospect, their quality was lacking.

  • @vik2nes
    @vik2nes Před rokem +63

    This is one of the reason why I avoid buying PRC products.

    • @justicedemocrat9357
      @justicedemocrat9357 Před rokem +9

      Can you also avoid posting messages on youtube?

    • @goognamgoognw6637
      @goognamgoognw6637 Před rokem

      @@justicedemocrat9357 you 50 cent ccp army troll

    • @Phunny
      @Phunny Před rokem +4

      @@User-qv4lg One of CZcams's founders is ethnically Chinese.

    • @tenz9785
      @tenz9785 Před rokem +4

      😂 more than 50% of your possession should be made in China. Did you check the tags?

    • @vik2nes
      @vik2nes Před rokem +2

      @@justicedemocrat9357 Do you know that Chinese is also an American? Most importantly he is from Taiwan not from PRC.

  • @xjclk
    @xjclk Před rokem +53

    Time to disengage and disconnect. That is the only way to de-risk

  • @koctf3846
    @koctf3846 Před rokem +7

    4000 dollars in her briefcase;
    depicted with a case full of 100$ banknotes in the video.
    Great job Bloomberg.

  • @lach0125
    @lach0125 Před 9 měsíci +2

    I understand why everyone is complaining about about China, but look at it this way. 1. People have been stealing copyright and patented material for centuries. 2. The majority of their population still lives below our poverty line. If you were in their shoes you would probably do the same. 3. We are our own worst enemy. We bring our production and know how over to their country and expect them not to learn and reproduce at their own local rate (by any means). 4. Our own laws have such lenient penalties against IP theft that it’s worth the risk.

  • @twd9798
    @twd9798 Před rokem +155

    I am loving these videos, thanks for the great content Bloomberg!

    • @___beyondhorizon4664
      @___beyondhorizon4664 Před rokem +3

      DW English produced high quality documentary on various topics, including the recent report on how social media collecting our data. The title of the documentary is THE BUSINESS OF OUR DATA.

    • @shimeymerih
      @shimeymerih Před rokem +4

      Especially the dramatic depiction of $4000 in briefcase 💼.
      They made it look and sound like 4 million. 😂😂

    • @DriQ-qo7tp
      @DriQ-qo7tp Před rokem

      Me too!

  • @Leosarebetter
    @Leosarebetter Před rokem +251

    She is doing exactly what those types of people do.... when they get caught they plead "I did not do anything" "I dont know" - they play dumb when things dont go their way or if they have ripped you off in a contract.

    • @nicolas2970
      @nicolas2970 Před rokem +20

      Like Trump

    • @Slay_No_More
      @Slay_No_More Před rokem +23

      ​@@nicolas2970 no

    • @nicolas2970
      @nicolas2970 Před rokem +8

      @@Slay_No_More YES

    • @bluevasquez8504
      @bluevasquez8504 Před rokem +4

      @@nicolas2970 Sniffing Joe couldn't even tell what his name is

    • @Alblaka
      @Alblaka Před rokem +20

      @@bluevasquez8504 The very fact that you think the most suitable defense for Trump's overt criminality is pointing out that his opposing candidate is potentially senile, kinda underlines just how indefensible Trump is.

  • @KyrieRuwachHosanna
    @KyrieRuwachHosanna Před rokem +26

    I read in the news about a childcare centre who spent millions preparing to enter into the China market. They invested time and money and resources into getting the place, marketing, and training a team of teachers. The turning point was Day 1 when none of the teachers came to work. It turned out that they had opened a competing centre just across the road and were simply copying all the techniques / knowledge that were shared.

  • @SaltyChip
    @SaltyChip Před rokem +15

    if only she took some time to learn about the american judicial system and kept her mouth shut when she had obligation to speak to the fbi.

    • @SimonBrisbane
      @SimonBrisbane Před rokem +4

      They had the evidence that proved her guilt. There would be no story in that information alone.

  • @advancetotabletop5328
    @advancetotabletop5328 Před rokem +11

    Coke has better security than most tech companies. :D

  • @doctoroctos
    @doctoroctos Před 8 měsíci +16

    A lot of people at my company were lured to work for a chinese tech company with salaries at 2x+ their US salary. They were also promised senior level positions at the new chinese company. The new company milked these employees for all the technology secrets and then let them go soon after. The people that left came back to the US company with a bit of shame. The chinese company is seeing rapid growth over the last few years due to the heavy government investment and also from stealing trade secrets.

  • @GSD-
    @GSD- Před rokem +43

    Wow, FBI agents who are actually prosecuting real crimes 👏🏼

  • @ClickLikeAndSubscribe
    @ClickLikeAndSubscribe Před rokem +734

    Surprised that PRC even needs to do this given how many foreign companies rushed to bring technology, fabrication know how, and crucially trainings to local personnel in China. It's like delivery on a golden platter.

    • @CYCLONE4499
      @CYCLONE4499 Před rokem +102

      Not so much as you would think. The most vital and technologically important patents and designs are kept secret even from the Chinese themselves. All they do is assemble the products. All the chip making and important technology is pre built.

    • @D59hawk
      @D59hawk Před rokem

      The west should be discouraging investment and purchasing from China using much higher duties.

    • @DynamicHaze
      @DynamicHaze Před rokem +32

      ​@@CYCLONE4499 this right here. A lot of companies rushed in knowing what they were getting into, they figured the benefits outweighed the potential risks.

    • @fleischwolf82
      @fleischwolf82 Před rokem +23

      ​@@CYCLONE4499 Maybe the case with big companies (but I doubt when I see eg how many pharma companies have research labs in Shanghai and outsource global manufacturing to WuXi). SMEs have no chance protecting their IP when they operate in China.

    • @polarbearfelly
      @polarbearfelly Před rokem

      ​ gv byyhhuv up by iiii rzbi

  • @lawrencez.6902
    @lawrencez.6902 Před rokem +86

    It's disgusting to see individuals like this representing the entire Chinese-American community. Way to lose face for those of us are honest and try to genuinely contribute to society.

    • @blackcorp0001
      @blackcorp0001 Před rokem +10

      Please ...share some more of your crocodile tears

    • @tawnybrawn
      @tawnybrawn Před rokem +26

      @@blackcorp0001 Let people pick a side don’t pick it for them

    • @blackcorp0001
      @blackcorp0001 Před rokem +3

      @@tawnybrawn tell the CCP your story and see how far you get

    • @raj_podcast-io3wo
      @raj_podcast-io3wo Před rokem

      F**k off technology stealers

    • @lenovo7999
      @lenovo7999 Před rokem +3

      @@tawnybrawn the sides have been picked, freedom is in republic of china

  • @AnonymousUser27
    @AnonymousUser27 Před rokem +9

    "I never shared this with anyone"
    Thats so dumb for someone who stole something

  • @ruthc8407
    @ruthc8407 Před rokem +3

    Our new multi-cultural nation is going to be so great.

    • @anotherdude6197
      @anotherdude6197 Před rokem

      Well time to delete your CZcams account since it was co-founded by Steve Chen who is an American-born Chinese. Don’t want a multicultural nation? Your first step would be to delete your very CZcams account if you don’t want to be “multicultural”

  • @sirsillybilly
    @sirsillybilly Před rokem +1

    Picking foreign flowers to make Chinese Honey ~ is the ever poetic Chinese phrase for the TTP.

  • @SmoothNobody
    @SmoothNobody Před rokem +158

    the best part of this story is coke needs a special chemical cocktail to prevent it's product from eating away the cans that hold it.

    • @adstix
      @adstix Před rokem +24

      Yup but no one seems to be concerned about that corrosive aspect!
      I wonder if the consumer is thereby exposed to any risk of internal injury 🤔

    • @lil----lil
      @lil----lil Před rokem +11

      Right? As if the sugar saturated drink isn't doing enough damage to your body already. Yikes! Reminds me to NEVER touch this stuff again!

    • @Entertainment-
      @Entertainment- Před rokem +6

      They also have acid inside that allows the liquid to dissolve more sugar than what would typically be possible with just water.

    • @ClyDIley
      @ClyDIley Před rokem +49

      Tell me your completely ignorant about chem 101 acid-base chemistry without saying it

    • @farticlesofconflatulation
      @farticlesofconflatulation Před rokem +42

      If you stored any acidic fruit juice inside an aluminum can, you’d also need coke’s secret formula for that too.

  • @johnnywadd7960
    @johnnywadd7960 Před rokem +13

    Chinese again....

  • @philliphartman2381
    @philliphartman2381 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Remember when people called Trump a racist for confronting Chinese espionage?

  • @mohammedm2362
    @mohammedm2362 Před rokem +23

    I was told by a chinese teacher that the best form of innovation is taking an existing invention and improving it as opposed to inventing something from scratch. That says a lot about their culture.

    • @karenbondechek
      @karenbondechek Před rokem

      As it was done to them historically. Gunpowder was invented in China, but it was the westerners who used it to make ammunition 😂

    • @j.f.christ8421
      @j.f.christ8421 Před rokem +1

      Yeah it does. Maybe their way (make a better version) is better than the West, where patents stifle innovation for years. Look at 3D printers, nothing happened until the patents expired, and now it's everywhere.

    • @J-ltb
      @J-ltb Před 10 měsíci

      Not everybody, like myself.

    • @somewhatblankpaper1423
      @somewhatblankpaper1423 Před 8 měsíci

      What the West did with gunpowder, except, maybe not for the better of the world.

    • @hx5525
      @hx5525 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Not wrong. Dont reinvent the wheel and all.

  • @robertp8152
    @robertp8152 Před rokem +25

    This has been happening for decades now. 😢 please take action and uncover these breaches before they happen. The amount of new discoveries from universities too please safeguard our technologies before it's too late.

  • @sarahjenkins7064
    @sarahjenkins7064 Před rokem +3

    The lives of all working Asian Americans just got a little harder.

  • @artfulandtricky
    @artfulandtricky Před rokem +1

    Thanks Bloomberg. Please do the right thing and continue to shed light

  • @thomgorman
    @thomgorman Před 8 měsíci +2

    At least some parts of the FBI are protecting America and not a rogue political party.

  • @ashleymarie7452
    @ashleymarie7452 Před rokem +32

    Somehow the Chinese seem to have a teensy problem understanding and respecting intellectual rights. It must lose something in the translation. Sort of like, "It's your fault that you left your car parked in your driveway with the keys in it. All I did was drive it away.."

    • @jonathanbuzzard1376
      @jonathanbuzzard1376 Před rokem

      Somehow 200 years ago the Americans had *EXACTLY* the same problem understanding and respecting intellectual rights. They were doing it on an industrial scale to Europeans. So meh I find it hilarious that the USA is bitching about it now they are on the receiving end.

    • @nicoz4122
      @nicoz4122 Před rokem

      It's a little bit different... Actually, in Chinese markets, IP theft between Chinese companies is something very usual. So, in the local market, the competition is so tense that the Chinese have this thinking that maybe it goes the same everywhere. Add to that since 2016/2017, XJP decided that China will become more reliable on itself and more assertive. This is not an issue in iteself, but the problem lies in the philosophy that: it's ok to steal, to cheat, it's all for the sake of improving motherland...

    • @ashleymarie7452
      @ashleymarie7452 Před rokem +2

      @@nicoz4122 Sort of like thinking it's ok to rob banks because it's improving my net worth... Convenient total lapse of ethics.

    • @JamesOversteer
      @JamesOversteer Před rokem +2

      They have a problem ‘respecting’ in general, from economically and politically to even culturally.

  • @FindTheFun
    @FindTheFun Před rokem +2

    Every time they say "Ms. Yo" I get a chuckle. "Yo, miss, it's not just talking!"

  • @JIEON.C
    @JIEON.C Před 9 měsíci +4

    This happens with korean semiconductor engineers too. Some Samsung engineers been caught with moving their positions to Chinese company with company secrets

  • @H4nmiin
    @H4nmiin Před rokem +9

    This has been happening for quite a while, yet so many industries are doing NOTHING.

    • @dingowingo7977
      @dingowingo7977 Před rokem

      Well you saw what happened when people pointed out that a certain virus came from China, now think what the reaction would be when you tell those same people that all of Chinese "success/innovation" was actually stolen and not earned?

  • @sajaawatdecor8286
    @sajaawatdecor8286 Před rokem +44

    The way he laughs when he says it prevents the coke from erroding the can within.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Před rokem +1

      all cans have a coating inside including all soap cans and anything else. any food in a metal can directly will get a metallic taste.
      and it's almost always based on Bis A resin which is epoxy.

    • @tomcuthbert-sayers1451
      @tomcuthbert-sayers1451 Před rokem +1

      @@ronblack7870 @ron black "any food in a metal can directly will get a metallic taste". I get your point, but by this logic its to protect the food from the can -from getting a metallic taste. What the dude said was the very opposite -to protect the can from the sweet delicious COCA~COLA readily available at cheap cheap prices anywhere you get your sustinence.

    • @geronimo5537
      @geronimo5537 Před rokem

      Coke has such high acid that it would eat through the metal. Which is why it needs the coating. Yet perfectly fine for people to consume. No wonder there are such dental issues...

  • @triadwarfare
    @triadwarfare Před rokem +74

    There was an experiment on the Action Lab where he eroded the aluminum of the coke can and all that was left of the eroded portion of the can was a thin layer of plastic that kept the soda from spilling over. I guess that was what they wanted to steal.

    • @vasopel
      @vasopel Před rokem +3

      yeah it was probably that.

    • @JonMartinYXD
      @JonMartinYXD Před rokem +10

      Yes. That plastic coating is needed for any metal can containing anything acidic, eg. tomato paste.

    • @azeria1
      @azeria1 Před rokem +7

      Bruh that's kind of funny could of just done some experiments themselves and figured it out didn't have to steal anything

    • @wat4036
      @wat4036 Před rokem

      @@azeria1 it’s China, R&D doesn’t exist to them.

    • @riproar11
      @riproar11 Před rokem

      @@azeria1 *could have genius. Oh, so the people who OK'd $100 million on chemical research are idiots too?

  • @robertmayfield8746
    @robertmayfield8746 Před rokem +2

    'How to prevent chemicals in the coke from eroding the can' - sounds like safe to drink 😂

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 Před rokem +4

      It's metal. Most metals corrode simply from the humidity in the air. Aluminium is a bit more resistant than iron and copper, but it still won't last for years exposed to carbonic acid.
      Except for gold, you will never find shiny metal just lying around in nature. It's always as oxides because they really don't want to exist as pure metals.

    • @robertmayfield8746
      @robertmayfield8746 Před rokem

      @@Yora21 The way you use certain facts is very selective. So, part true is still bs. Thank you for precious lecture. I don't know what we'd all do without your words of wisdom 🤣🤣

    • @calvin659
      @calvin659 Před 8 měsíci

      @@robertmayfield8746 There was nothing selective about his facts. You sound like an uneducated imbecile.

  • @panama-canada
    @panama-canada Před 5 měsíci

    A briefcase of $4000 that’s not even a full stack of bills lol

  • @Janus-fn2uz
    @Janus-fn2uz Před rokem +30

    The correct international known term is 'theft' not the ambiguous 'heist' .

  • @formxshape
    @formxshape Před rokem +4

    The most concerning point is the the coke cans are chemically lined. Yuk.

  • @asdsad17
    @asdsad17 Před 8 měsíci

    "They prevent the chemicals in soda from eroding the can that they're in." "laughs".
    don't drink soda kids.

  • @richardhack9830
    @richardhack9830 Před rokem +9

    I have a Braun KF47/1 coffee maker - made in China. My Philippine wife bought exactly the same coffee maker - made in China, without any brandname on it. She paid less than 1/3 the price I had paid for it in the Netherlands. I guess during daytime these Chinese produce Braun coffee makers and during nighttime they may produce brandless coffee makers, selling these for their own profit...
    The same goes for tools, motorcycle parts etc. etc. Most of it is sold on Internet either brandless or with a Chinese fantasy name.

    • @nicoz4122
      @nicoz4122 Před rokem +2

      I lived in China for a decade. I like football shirts. Do you know that on Taobao, their Amazon-like, you can find the real Tshirt, and also the copycat from the same factory which would be much cheaper. Only difference is that it won't have the right clothing label. And it's for all brands: Adidas, Nike, Puma ....

    • @richardhack9830
      @richardhack9830 Před rokem +2

      @@nicoz4122 Yep. Buying Chinese brandless products does not automatically imply poor quality. Stanley (hand tools) knows all about it. Tao-Bao is basically intended for the internal Chinese market, outside China a buyer better calls for an intermedeair to get the help he needs.
      Many years ago, Europeans could buy Gillette razor blades in China for a nice price. Procter&Gamble didn't like it - so nowadays according to your IP-identification the prices are adapted to your country. Maybe VPN might help, but I'm not certain about that...

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon Před rokem +22

    I wonder if companies will be less willing to hire Chinese workers?
    I know that if I ran a company that had trade secrets, I would think twice before hiring a Chinese national, or even a naturalized American citizen of Chinese origin.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 Před rokem

      This has been going on for 20 years. There's nothing new about any of it.

    • @healthyhabits3374
      @healthyhabits3374 Před 10 měsíci

      In that case the Chinese will say he/she is Asian.

  • @yashaswisingh8596
    @yashaswisingh8596 Před rokem +12

    West is really getting played by the Chinese

    • @skp8748
      @skp8748 Před rokem +1

      India is getting played by itself😂

  • @williamnessanbaum7464
    @williamnessanbaum7464 Před 8 měsíci +1

    I don't understand why this woman started talking. The first and only thing she should have said is "Put me back in the holding cell. I refuse to talk without a lawyer."

  • @qwerty6574
    @qwerty6574 Před rokem +1

    Next time you're at an American university, go check out the chemistry dept... ALLLLLL Chinese students😂

  • @glennmorris25
    @glennmorris25 Před rokem +10

    this story is about incentives, but the world HAS seen it for the last 50 years. China has incentivized our parents and grandparents to make stuff in China, and they traded short term profits for our long term success as a nation. This is one example, but we are 50 years too late.

    • @jamesavilez9504
      @jamesavilez9504 Před rokem +4

      Between US corporate greed and indifference, the tremendous efforts made by prior generations have been squandered for CEO's quarterly bonuses.

  • @jasong3972
    @jasong3972 Před rokem +26

    Companies with controlled technologies and universities should be legally obligated to conduct screenings of candidates from countries that pose an espionage threat.

    • @marrrtin
      @marrrtin Před rokem +3

      The UK just recently drastically reduced the number of Chinese academics allowed on University research programs for this precise reason.

    • @Heart2HeartBooks
      @Heart2HeartBooks Před rokem +1

      Go woke and Go Broke!

    • @Ilovecruise
      @Ilovecruise Před rokem

      ISO27001 did require a valid screening before hiring, but oh well it’s not like the HR has the ability to look through a person’s thought and political stand.

  • @jeffcahill5722
    @jeffcahill5722 Před 7 měsíci

    "Found a briefcase with $4000", LOL, You mean a tiny envelope? Proceeds to show a briefcase full of cash.

  • @alap1983
    @alap1983 Před rokem +1

    This just proves how Cheap is actually Expensive.

  • @kensmith8152
    @kensmith8152 Před rokem +51

    What’s just as shocking is the fact that coke need’s this formula in the first place! If that is what coke does to metal, what does it do to our bodies?!

    • @andrewallen9993
      @andrewallen9993 Před rokem +7

      Whilst coke dissolves uncoated aluminium slowly it dissolves teeth much faster!

    • @kensmith8152
      @kensmith8152 Před rokem +5

      @@andrewallen9993:For getting caught, I wouldn’t be surprised if the her Chinese handler’s have her soak in coke until she dissolved!

    • @sko1beer
      @sko1beer Před rokem +2

      @@kensmith8152 😂 use pepsi no one should be drinking that nasty stuff

    • @tayf85
      @tayf85 Před rokem +17

      It does the same thing to metal as anything acidic i.e. lemon juice or even tomato juice. Are you scared of tomato juice too?

    • @kensmith8152
      @kensmith8152 Před rokem +2

      @@tayf85: I know what’s in tomato and lemon juice, can’t say the same for coke

  • @SpaseGoast
    @SpaseGoast Před rokem +34

    A lot of these espionage cases could be prevented if companies and universities stop hiring Chinese citizens.

    • @bobjohnson6946
      @bobjohnson6946 Před rokem +1

      We should stop hiring Americans to become soldiers too, since they wanna leak Top Secret Documents online.

    • @advancetotabletop5328
      @advancetotabletop5328 Před rokem

      Or did more than change their passwords, like Nortel did!

    • @brotalnia
      @brotalnia Před rokem +5

      that's racist

    • @Sdbdbqjtop
      @Sdbdbqjtop Před rokem +5

      @@brotalnia you can be Chinese and not have a Chinese citizenship, xoxo

    • @aaronwu4280
      @aaronwu4280 Před rokem +2

      Actually she’s a naturalized usa citizen, unfortunately greed knows no national borders…and I think that’s what China is doing, appealing to people’s greed in order to advance their own industries

  • @Suburp212
    @Suburp212 Před rokem +5

    Chinese industrial espionage. WHO would have thought!

  • @vioseven3799
    @vioseven3799 Před rokem +4

    Everyone should know by now that you got to be cautious with any Chinese now days.

  • @KennethGreenCMP
    @KennethGreenCMP Před rokem +6

    Meanwhile in the US, we are worried and focused about a book in the library that no one reads. They are focused on building a smart army and we are still stuck on getting along.

  • @jamestk656
    @jamestk656 Před rokem +22

    $4000 for $120M in secret tech? That lady has no notion of risk reward lol.

    • @dannnsss8034
      @dannnsss8034 Před rokem

      That's a lot of money in China...

    • @jamestk656
      @jamestk656 Před rokem +2

      @@deesus1085 Ok, let's say I make you the same low-ball offer. I've already asked you to lie, cheat, and steal so you already know my character. Are you still going to trust me to keep my word after you give me the flash drive? Will you complain to the FBI once I renege on the deal? Maybe it all works out but you're a lot more trusting than me when you've already done something illegal.

    • @jamestk656
      @jamestk656 Před rokem

      @@dannnsss8034 Well she was interrogated by the FBI so she most likely was working for Coca-Cola in the U.S. where she's high enough to be in a position to steal secrets. She probably already made at least $4000 in one month. Not worth it.

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip Před rokem

      The $4000 was a down payment she wanted to commit to the plan, which also sealed the criminal case against her.

  • @julieeldridge8760
    @julieeldridge8760 Před 5 měsíci +1

    She was fleeing the country with $4k? You can hardly go to another state in the US with that kind of money 😂

  • @danalawton2986
    @danalawton2986 Před rokem +3

    Anyone who knows anything about China know Industrial Espionage is very common... and it is not just secrets of foreign companies, but secrets on any company. Going forward... we should start copying all of their innovations and throw it back in their face.

  • @bluerationality
    @bluerationality Před rokem +6

    There is also that GE case where it goes into detail on how Chinese spies work

  • @arunsar7893
    @arunsar7893 Před rokem +9

    Everything is fair in Love and War. And this is war.

    • @jamesavilez9504
      @jamesavilez9504 Před rokem +1

      It is war, and I wish the idiots in charge would act accordingly. Take that any way you want to.

    • @prateekdhingra292
      @prateekdhingra292 Před rokem +1

      Exactly. China is waging war against all democracies around world be it US or Europe or India or Japan or Australia

  • @kentstansberry9748
    @kentstansberry9748 Před rokem +2

    I'll never drink soda out of an aluminum can again.

    • @billedifier8584
      @billedifier8584 Před rokem

      Better not to drink it at all, it's just as corrosive whatever the container is!

  • @ltisenotem
    @ltisenotem Před rokem

    Sister accidentally ratted her in while trying to brag lol

  • @425domino
    @425domino Před rokem +5

    Well done FBI...

  • @AlwaysRight32
    @AlwaysRight32 Před 8 měsíci +2

    $4000 fills up a briefcase ??😅😅
    😂😂😂

  • @maxasaurus3008
    @maxasaurus3008 Před rokem +15

    The fact that Aluminum has to be protected from Coke by such a complicated molecule should tell people how horrible soda is.

    • @hewhohasnoidentity4377
      @hewhohasnoidentity4377 Před rokem

      When drinking water is packaged in aluminum cans there needs to be a coating to keep the water and metal separate. And, yes, canned water is a thing. Coca-cola, PepsiCo and InBev (Anheuser Busch Miller) all produce canned water for disaster relief.

    • @nature8178
      @nature8178 Před rokem

      Exactly

    • @dalesmth1
      @dalesmth1 Před rokem +6

      Phosphoric acid is a common preservative. 🙄

    • @fuckingpippaman
      @fuckingpippaman Před rokem +1

      @@dalesmth1 sure. your teeth enamel will be preserved no doubt

    • @CaseNumber00
      @CaseNumber00 Před rokem +2

      Aluminum is a somewhat reactant metal, it want to exchange electrons and form new compounds. You cant find solid aluminum out in nature. It doesnt want to stay solid aluminum.

  • @johnbarrett8723
    @johnbarrett8723 Před rokem +36

    From what I read about a Canadian that went to China to start a business venture there, there is no word in the Chinese language that is the equivalent to our word "ethical". For the Chinese, and in particular the CCP, success is the only objective. How you do it is irrelevant. Lie, cheat, or steal, as long as you get a leg up on your competition. Greed and domination are the prime motivators.

    • @SL420-
      @SL420- Před rokem +13

      Most of what you said is misleading, if not incorrect. The Chinese people understand ethics and morality, they're not racially or ethically or even linguistically incapable of understanding ethics, there's just a tremendous amount of nationalistic and population pressure on people to do the things you mentioned. Test any American under the same pressure and you'll see the same results. It's us and our companies to blame for china's growth. We knew what we were doing empowering them, we just didn't care about the results, but now we do.

    • @Ilovecruise
      @Ilovecruise Před rokem +9

      “Ethical” = “道德“ in Chinese, when you are starting a business and talk about CCP, it’s about time you should rethink about its truthfulness.

    • @DoubleZDogg
      @DoubleZDogg Před rokem

      Amazing that in the age of 10 second google translate searches, people still believe and spread racial propagandised bullsh*t. "伦理", "道德的", "合乎正道的" all mean ethical... as if one of the first nations to record the Golden Rule (Confucius 500 BCE: Do not impose on others what you do not wish for yourself) doesn't even have a word to describe something so basic.

  • @bogdanvlad9165
    @bogdanvlad9165 Před rokem

    The point is, stop drinking coke, aluminium needs protection from it LOL.