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Microsoft sues as Google snags former exec to open China research center

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Tue Jul 19,11:45 PM ET

SAN FRANCISCO (AFP) - Microsoft is suing one of its former executives hired away by Internet rival Google to run a new research center in China, the US software giant announced.

Microsoft revealed the suit as online search giant Google touted plans to tap into the booming Chinese market by opening before October a research and development center to be headed by former Microsoft executive Lee Kai-Fu.

Lee agreed to discuss his new position at Google with AFP, but declined to answer questions about the lawsuit in which Microsoft accuses Lee of breaching employee confidentiality and non-competition agreements.

Lee worked as vice president of Microsoft's Natural Interactive Services Division before taking a job heading Google's proposed research center in China, Microsoft said in a statement.

"We are asking the Court to require Dr. Lee and Google to honor the confidentiality and non-competition agreements he signed when he began working for Microsoft," the company said.

"As a senior executive, Dr. Lee has direct knowledge of Microsofts trade secrets concerning search technologies and China business strategies."

Lee's position at Google is "focused on the same set of technologies and strategies for a direct competitor in egregious violation of his explicit contractual obligations," Microsoft charged.

Google wants to better connect with computer users in China's rapidly growing economy and to tap into the talents of Chinese students, scientists and engineers, the company's engineering president Alan Eustace told AFP.

"We've been looking at the China market for quite some time," said Eustace, who also declined to discuss the Microsoft suit. "We are very excited about the marketplace."

Google representatives met with government and university officials about establishing a research center.

"Obviously, we have to be able to do business in China and that involves working with local government to make that possible," Eustace said. "We are certainly working with the local government."

Google officials heralded the creation of the center as a sign of strong commitment to cultivating Chinese talent as well as its intent to form alliances with universities and institutes.

"China is a hotbed of innovation and technology right now," Eustace said. "I believe Google has a lot to gain by taking advantage of that."

The Google center in China is part of a company strategy to have research centers worldwide to learn how offerings can be better tailored to different cultures, he said.

It remains to be determined where the center will be located or how large it will be, said Lee. "We are going to have a lot of freedom and flexibility regarding what will be done," said Lee.

"It has always been my goal to make advanced technologies accessible and useful to every user, as well as to be part of the vibrant growth and innovation in China today."

Lee is a computer scientist known for pioneering work in the areas of speech recognition and artificial intelligence.

He took part in the founding of Microsoft Research China in the late 1990s and has also done stints working at computer pioneer Apple.

Some human rights and free-speech advocates have criticized Google, Yahoo and other US firms for purportedly accepting Beijing's efforts to censor Internet content.

Internet sites in China are strongly urged to abide by a code of conduct and self-censor any information that could be viewed by the government as politically sensitive, pornographic or illegal.

The Paris-based Reporters Without Borders last year said it "deplored" the conduct of Yahoo and Google for "bowing directly and indirectly to Chinese government demands for censorship."

Google is headquartered in Mountain View near San Francisco. Its list of global engineering offices includes facilities in Tokyo, Zurich, Bangalore, New York and elsewhere.
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
Great news and I agree with microsoft
 
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If that Chinese guy's contract with Microsoft has a non-compete clause good
for about 1 year or so after leaving and hasn't gone beyond it, he's in deep
trouble.
 
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So, if you sign a non-comptition agreement, you aren't allowed to move to another competitor after your job is up? Thats BS then, because what if you have skills in that, and you can't get another job? That is a load of bull! :(
I suppose he should not tell google anything about Microsoft, but apart from that, he (morally) should be ok. That contract is not right. :lol:
 
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PoorDoggie said:
So, if you sign a non-comptition agreement, you aren't allowed to move to another competitor after your job is up? Thats BS then, because what if you have skills in that, and you can't get another job? That is a load of bull! :(
I suppose he should not tell google anything about Microsoft, but apart from that, he (morally) should be ok. That contract is not right. :lol:

Like most if not everything else, that depends on what side of the fence you
happen to be on.

In my call center job, my contract had a non-compete clause where I can't
work in a similar job for 1 year after I leave. While I don't like that clause, the
employer has every right to impose that.

Of course, if you don't like it, don't work for them. Simple as that.
 
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Next thing you know - there's a GoogleMart on I-95 :$
 
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bad news on the google side :lol:
 
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Yeah he did sign a contract and you have to stick by it no matter what so I think Microsoft wins this won clear and cut unless Google has some strategy for this.
 
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Well I'd hate to apply the following to a situation like this, but there's this case of a pro wrestler who quit the WWE and signed a 5-year no-compete clause, and now he's suing WWE and it sounds like he might win the case and have the no-compete clause removed. So it's not like these clauses are completely unbreakable.
 
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if the guy is really necessary to google's plans then he will have their wallet backing him up
 
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jroy said:
if the guy is really necessary to google's plans then he will have their wallet backing him up
yea, but maybe even that won't help
 
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The Equivocate said:
Well I'd hate to apply the following to a situation like this, but there's this case of a pro wrestler who quit the WWE and signed a 5-year no-compete clause, and now he's suing WWE and it sounds like he might win the case and have the no-compete clause removed. So it's not like these clauses are completely unbreakable.

Actually, I don't think Brock actually filed. And if he did, he would have lost from my understanding. Currently, he is in negotiations to come back to the WWE, and I think his NC clause had something to do with him coming back (and his failed NFL career). Right now, I think he is eating some humble pie.

PoorDoggie said:
So, if you sign a non-comptition agreement, you aren't allowed to move to another competitor after your job is up? Thats BS then, because what if you have skills in that, and you can't get another job? That is a load of bull! :(
I suppose he should not tell google anything about Microsoft, but apart from that, he (morally) should be ok. That contract is not right. :lol:

I would venture and say you are relatively new to the business world. No-Compete clauses are everywhere and very common place in high paying jobs.

This is done to protect the company from someone gaining knowledge/training and then taking it somewhere else. It is protecting the companies investment into an employee (training/schooling)and to make sure thier trade secrets (new products/inventions/ideas) are not comprimised.
 
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