Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) isn't messing around when it comes to protecting its secrets. The world's leading contract chipmaker has dragged its former Senior Vice President Wei-Jen Lo to Taiwan's Intellectual Property and Commercial Court after he recently jumped ship to rival Intel Corp. (INTC).
In an emailed statement to Reuters, the Taiwanese chipmaking giant said it's basing the lawsuit on Lo's employment contract, his signed non-compete agreement, and legal frameworks including Taiwan's Trade Secrets Act. Translation: they're throwing the book at him.
The concern? Taiwan Semiconductor argues that Lo poses "a high probability" of using, leaking, disclosing, or transferring confidential information and trade secrets to Intel. Given what Lo knows, that's not a trivial worry.
Taiwan's economy ministry says it respects the legal move and will monitor any potential fallout for the semiconductor industry. Officials are also working to determine whether the case involves core technology theft or violations of the National Security Act. When chip technology is involved, these things get serious fast.
Intel Pushes Back on Trade Secret Claims
Last week, Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan rejected claims that Lo brought Taiwan Semiconductor trade secrets with him, calling the reports rumors and speculation. He emphasized Intel's respect for intellectual property, essentially saying: nothing to see here, folks.
But Taiwanese authorities weren't convinced. They launched an investigation last week following reports that Lo may have taken advanced TSMC technology data to Intel.
Here's what makes this complicated: Lo joined Intel in October after spending 21 years at Taiwan Semiconductor, where he played a crucial role in ramping mass production of cutting-edge 5-nanometer, 3-nanometer, and 2-nanometer chips. That's essentially the crown jewels of modern semiconductor manufacturing. Reports suggest Lo now reports directly to Tan.
The plot thickens when you consider Lo's history. Before his two-decade stint at Taiwan Semiconductor, he actually worked at Intel for 18 years, including roles in technology development and as a factory manager at the company's Santa Clara, California, development facility. He joined TSMC in 2004. So in a sense, Lo is heading back home.
The timing matters here. This investigation comes as Tan drives Intel's turnaround strategy by tightening engineering focus, ramping AI efforts, and rebuilding its foundry business. The goal? Close the gap with Taiwan Semiconductor, which continues to dominate advanced chip manufacturing for customers like Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) and Apple Inc. (AAPL).
Intel needs to catch up, and hiring someone with Lo's expertise in cutting-edge chip production makes strategic sense. But if Taiwan Semiconductor is right about the risk of trade secret leakage, that shortcut could come with serious legal consequences.
Price Actions: TSM stock was trading lower by 1.80% to $279.60 at last check Tuesday. INTC was down 0.11%.