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Zhipu has raised more than 2.5 billion Chinese yuan ($341 million) this year, the company said in a statement. Sequoia and Hillhouse are among the high-profile venture backers, and smartphone maker Xiaomi, Alibaba and Tencent are some of the corporate investors. Zhipu is one of China's promising start-ups creating AI models trained on huge amounts of data that can underpin various applications. The world's second-largest economy plans to increase its computing power by 50% by 2025, which would help continue to develop AI applications. However, the U.S. has looked to cut China off from key technologies required to develop AI models.
Persons: Zhipu, China's, OpenAI, ChatGPT Organizations: Getty, Zhipu, U.S, Nvidia Locations: U.S, China, Washington
[1/2] Thailand's Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin arrives at Beijing Capital International Airport to attend the Third Belt and Road Forum in Beijing, China, October 16, 2023. "And if you look at the month-by-month statistics, Chinese investments are still increasing," he told Reuters. "So I see that in the next two or three years, Chinese investments will still increase drastically in Thailand." But a large proportion of the 228 Chinese investments proposals this year have come in the electronics sector, according to the BOI. Chinese investments will likely continue for the next two years, Jareeporn said.
Persons: Srettha Thavisin, Tingshu Wang, General Narit Therdsteerasukdi, Srettha, Xiaomi Corp's, Alain Lam, Narit, Jareeporn Jarukornsakul, Jareeporn, Chayut, Shri Navaratnam Organizations: Thailand's, Beijing Capital International Airport, Forum, REUTERS, Rights, of Investment, Investment, Reuters, Thai, Initiative, HK, Toyota, Isuzu Motors, WHA, Thomson Locations: Beijing, China, Rights BANGKOK, Thailand, Singapore, Southeast Asia's, Thailand's, Thai
HONG KONG/BEIJING, Oct 17 (Reuters) - Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup Baichuan has raised $300 million from investors including Chinese tech giants Alibaba (9988.HK) and Tencent (0700.HK), it said on Tuesday. The company said on its WeChat account that the round followed an early $50 million angel round. China's craze over generative AI has triggered a flurry of product and fundraising announcements from startups and tech giants, as the industry races to find a homegrown rival to Microsoft-backed OpenAI's ChatGPT. Shunwei Capital, a venture capital firm chaired by Xiaomi's chief executive Lei Jun, participated in the capital raise, according to a source familiar with the matter. Baidu (9888.HK) on Tuesday unveiled the newest version of its generative AI model, Ernie 4.0, saying its capabilities were on par with OpenAI's pioneering GPT-4 model, but analysts cautioned the launch lacked major highlights versus the previous version.
Persons: Wang Xiaochuan, Baichuan, Lei Jun, Shunwei, Ernie, Josh Ye, Roxanne Liu, Jason Neely, Emelia Organizations: HK, Microsoft, Shunwei, Baidu, Thomson Locations: HONG KONG, BEIJING, Hong Kong, Beijing
Putin and Xi’s strengthening bond has a weakness
  + stars: | 2023-10-17 | by ( Lisa Jucca | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
The $190 billion two-way trade relationship is up 29% since 2021, and has roughly doubled since Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014. A warm meeting between Putin and Xi will reaffirm China’s intention to carry on this robust business. Yet Russia’s lack of viable trade avenues makes its leader look more like a vassal than a peer to the Chinese president. Follow @LJucca on XCONTEXT NEWSRussian President Vladimir Putin is attending the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing on Oct. 17-18 where he is expected to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping. China and Russia declared a "no limits" partnership in February 2022 during a previous Putin visit to Beijing, just days before Moscow troops launched an invasion of Ukraine.
Persons: Vladimir Putin’s, Xi Jinping, Brent, Putin, Xi, Vladimir Putin, Una Galani, Thomas Shum Organizations: Reuters, People’s, Reuters Graphics, Bank of France, Centre for Research, Energy, Clean, HK, Forum, Soviet Union, Thomson Locations: HONG KONG, Beijing, Ukraine, People’s Republic, Crimea, Reuters Graphics Moscow, Russia, Europe, U.S, Republic, China, Hague, Moscow
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 16 (Reuters) - The global smartphone market contracted by 8% to its lowest third-quarter level in a decade on subdued demand for major brands including Apple (AAPL.O) and Samsung (005930.KS) in most developed markets, according to data from Counterpoint Research. Market leader Samsung posted a 13% drop in sell-through volumes in the period. It said the festive season in India, the 11.11 sale event in China and end-of-year promotions across regions would also support the market. So far, emerging markets have been a bright spot for smartphone sales in an otherwise dour year. In the third quarter, the Middle East and Africa were the only regions to record year-on-year growth, according to Counterpoint data.
Persons: Shannon Stapleton, Samsung, Akash Sriram, Juby Babu, Aditya Soni, Pooja Desai Organizations: REUTERS, Apple, Samsung, Counterpoint Research, Reuters, HK, Huawei, Thomson Locations: Midtown, New York City, U.S, United States, Europe, Korea, India, China, East, Africa, Bengaluru
Apple's iPhone has officially been dethroned from its position as the smartphone market share leader in China, according to a Monday report from Jefferies analysts. But Apple's iPhone has seen a significant, double-digit decline, and its volume growth year over year has been negative since the iPhone 15 launched, according to the analysts. "We believe weak demand in China would eventually lead to lower-than-expected global shipments of iPhone 15 in 2023," the analysts wrote, adding that the trend suggests the iPhone will "lose" to Huawei next year. The analysts noted that resale iPhone 15 devices are all "trading at discounts to official selling prices," which also reflects the weak demand in China. The Morgan Stanley analysts said they will be watching Apple's total revenue, services revenue growth, gross margin and revenue growth in China from its September quarter, but that the December quarter guide "is what will matter most."
Persons: Tim Cook, Morgan Stanley, Apple, Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, Jefferies, Huawei, Xiaomi Locations: Cupertino , California, China
New Delhi/Hong Kong CNN —An executive at Vivo, one of China’s top smartphone makers, has been arrested in India in connection with a money laundering probe, raising fears of a renewed crackdown on Chinese businesses in the country. Guangwen Kuang, the head of administration at Vivo India, was taken into custody on Tuesday by India’s Enforcement Directorate (ED), his lawyer, Mudit Jain, told CNN. The ED is the country’s main financial crimes investigation agency, responsible for probing money laundering and violations of foreign exchange laws. Despite the regulatory crackdown, Vivo is still India’s second biggest smartphone brand, commanding 17% of the market in the second quarter, according to Counterpoint Research. Authorities in India later banned Chinese apps and subjected deals with Chinese firms to greater scrutiny.
Persons: Guangwen Kuang, Mudit Jain, Kuang, , Xiaomi, Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Vivo, Vivo India, India’s, CNN, Jain, Samsung, Research, Global Times Locations: New Delhi, Hong Kong, India, Vivo, China, China’s, Vedika
A man walks past a logo of Xiaomi, a Chinese manufacturer of consumer electronics, outside a shop in Mumbai, India, May 11, 2022. A Xiaomi India spokesperson strongly denied the accusation. A spokesperson from Vivo did not respond immediately to repeated requests for comment, nor did the NewsClick news portal, which has denied all wrongdoing in the past. “It is further learnt that big Chinese Telecom companies like Xiaomi, Vivo, etc. NewsClick said this week it does not publish any news or information at the behest of any Chinese entity or authority.
Persons: Francis Mascarenhas, Prabir Purkayastha, NewsClick's Purkayastha, Xiaomi, NewsClick, Munsif, YP Rajesh, Andrew Heavens Organizations: REUTERS, Xiaomi, Vivo Mobile, Vivo, Media, Chinese Telecom, YP, Thomson Locations: Mumbai, India, DELHI, NewsClick, NewsClick's, Delhi, China, Court, New Delhi, Bengaluru
Indian shares likely to open lower on extended global weakness
  + stars: | 2023-09-28 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
The new logo of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) building is seen in Mumbai, India, July 12, 2023. REUTERS/Francis Mascarenhas/file photo Acquire Licensing RightsBENGALURU, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Indian shares are expected to open lower on Thursday, tracking global markets, as worries over higher interest rates and surging crude prices weighed. Domestic investors will also focus on surging crude prices, which rose 3% overnight. Higher oil prices will negatively impact India, the world's third-largest importer, which is also reeling under lower-than-expected monsoon rains. FIIs sold 3.54 billion rupees ($42.53 million) of shares, while domestic investors bought 3.86 billion rupees shares on Wednesday, provisional exchange data showed.
Persons: Francis Mascarenhas, FIIs, Janane Organizations: Bombay Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Rights, NSE, Exchange, BSE, Treasury, Dixon Technologies, Sethuraman NR, Thomson Locations: Mumbai, India, Skyserve, Bengaluru
China enforces new filing rules on smartphone app stores
  + stars: | 2023-09-27 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: 1 min
HONG KONG, Sept 27 (Reuters) - China's cyberspace regulator on Wednesday released the first batch of mobile app stores that have completed filing business details to regulators as it enforces a new set of rules to expand oversight on mobile apps. A total of 26 app stores operated by companies including Tencent (0700.HK), Huawei (HWT.UL), Ant Group(688688.SS), Baidu (9888.HK), Xiaomi (1810.HK) and Samsung (005930.KS) have submitted filings to the authority, according to the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC). Notably, Apple's App Store is not among the app stores on the list. This comes after the CAC issued a new rule last June requiring mobile app distribution platforms to submit business details to the government as it expands oversight on mobile apps in the country. Reporting by Josh Ye; Editing by Jacqueline WongOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Josh Ye, Jacqueline Wong Organizations: Wednesday, HK, Huawei, Ant, Baidu, Samsung, Cyberspace Administration of China, CAC, Thomson Locations: HONG KONG, KS
via REUTERS Acquire Licensing RightsNEW DELHI, Sept 23 (Reuters) - Social media platform X's head of policy for India and South Asia, Samiran Gupta, has resigned, two sources said, a top departure that comes ahead of India elections and as the company fights a court battle with New Delhi over content removal. Gupta was the most senior India employee for X, formerly known as Twitter, and responsible for "key content-related policy issues" and "defending Twitter's position with new policy developments and support in-country sales organization," according to his LinkedIn profile. Gupta, who was designated as X's Head of Global Government Affairs for India and South Asia, declined to comment to Reuters. There are roughly 15 X employees in functions like compliance and engineering in India, said one of the sources, but Gupta was the only executive engaging with the government and political parties. India in September told a court X is a "habitual non-compliant platform" and for years has not followed many orders to remove content, undermining the government's role.
Persons: Samiran Gupta, Gupta, Elon Musk, Musk, Narendra Modi, Aditya Kalra, Simon Cameron, Moore Organizations: REUTERS Acquire, Twitter, Global Government Affairs for, Reuters, LinkedIn, Elon, Twitter Inc, Thomson Locations: DELHI, India, South Asia, New Delhi, Global Government Affairs for India, Delhi
A worker holds a Lava mobile handset at its manufacturing plant, in Noida, India, October 23, 2018. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsBENGALURU, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Homegrown Indian mobile phone firm Lava will launch 4G feature phones as it aims to corner a third of the market share for the entry-level devices within a year, while also gradually boosting its budget smartphones, a top executive said. Since it was set up in 2009, Lava has become popular for the budget phones, which have a keypad but no high-end features. Research firm Counterpoint estimates that Lava has a share of less than 1% in the world's second-biggest smartphone market, with 650 million such devices. Lava also plans to boost its smartphone offerings in the budget segment.
Persons: Anushree, Sunil Raina, Mukesh, Raina, Munsif, Aditya Kalra, Clarence Fernandez Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, International, Reuters, Samsung, HK, Thomson Locations: Noida, India, China, Bengaluru
[1/2] The Tesla Energy Powerwall Home Battery is unveiled by Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk during an event in Hawthorne, California April 30, 2015. Although Tesla sought a number of incentives to set up a battery storage factory, Indian officials conveyed these would not be available, one of the sources said. It is largely dependent on coal-based power generation as storage technologies are expensive and not yet widespread. With incentives, Powerwall costs more than $5,500 in California, with additional costs for solar panels. It is eligible for U.S. federal tax credits and local state and utility incentives for solar and energy storage.
Persons: Elon Musk, India's Modi, Tesla, Narendra Modi, company's, Musk, Modi, Aditya Kalra, Aditi Shah, Sarita Chaganti Singh, Sudarshan, Kirsten Donovan Organizations: Tesla Energy, Tesla Motors, Elon, Thomson Locations: Hawthorne , California, India, DELHI, New Delhi, Tesla's California, California, Houston, Dallas, Texas
Chinese electric vehicle maker Nio launches a smartphone at an event in Shanghai on Sept. 21, 2023. He told CNBC that among Nio users from which the company makes a profit, more than half are iPhone users, while the other half uses flagship Android phones from Huawei and other brands. Nio is the first high-end Chinese electric car brand to release its own smartphone, which Li said the company developed in about a year. Huawei also sells its in-car software to other electric car companies such as Avatr and BAIC's Arcfox. He pointed out that the Nio phone app has 600,000 active users a day, about 1.5-times the number of car users.
Persons: Evelyn Cheng, William Li, Li, Nio Organizations: CNBC SHANGHAI, CNBC, Huawei, Apple Locations: Shanghai, China, Europe, Germany
[1/2] The Tesla Energy Powerwall Home Battery is unveiled by Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk during an event in Hawthorne, California April 30, 2015. Although Tesla sought a number of incentives to set up a battery storage factory, Indian officials conveyed these would not be available, one of the sources said. It is largely dependent on coal-based power generation as storage technologies are expensive and not yet widespread. With incentives, Powerwall costs more than $5,500 in California, with additional costs for solar panels. It is eligible for U.S. federal tax credits and local state and utility incentives for solar and energy storage.
Persons: Elon Musk, India's Modi, Tesla, Narendra Modi, company's, Musk, Modi, Aditya Kalra, Aditi Shah, Sarita Chaganti Singh, Sudarshan, Kirsten Donovan Organizations: Tesla Energy, Tesla Motors, Elon, Thomson Locations: Hawthorne , California, India, DELHI, New Delhi, Tesla's California, California, Houston, Dallas, Texas
Sept 20 (Reuters) - Enovix (ENVX.O), a Silicon Valley firm developing new battery technology for consumer electronics such as mobile phones, said on Wednesday it has acquired Korean battery maker RouteJade in a cash-and-stock deal. Enovix said it paid $16.5 million in cash and 6.2 million shares of common stock for RouteJade, which had previously been a supplier to Enovix. Enovix Chief Executive Raj Talluri told Reuters that the deal will help Fremont, California-based Enovix vertically integrate its battery manufacturing operations as it scales up a factory in Malaysia next year. With the deal, "we are able to really take advantage of all the new materials coming out and quickly run them through R&D and manufacturing, so we can change our battery composition quickly," Talluri said. Enovix is developing a technology that can replace part of a battery called an anode, traditionally made out of graphite, with silicon instead.
Persons: Enovix, Raj Talluri, Talluri, That's, Stephen Nellis, Matthew Lewis Organizations: Enovix, Reuters, HK, Lenovo Group, San, Thomson Locations: Silicon, Korean, Fremont , California, Malaysia, Malaysian, San Francisco
Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty ImagesBEIJING — China's capital city is taking swift steps to allow robotaxi businesses to grow. As of Tuesday, the suburban Beijing city district of Yizhuang is officially letting local robotaxi operators — primarily Baidu and startup Pony.ai — charge fares for fully autonomous taxis, with no human staff inside. "We have very high confidence ... maybe only in three years, our full driverless vehicles are going to be running over the whole Beijing city," he said in an interview with CNBC on Monday. Out of more than 200 robotaxis that Pony.ai operates in the region, only about ten are currently fully driverless, Zhang said. Beijing city did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.
Persons: Ning Zhang, Beijing's, Zhang, Yin Yong, Pony.ai, Baidu, Alphabet's Waymo, Pony.ai's Zhang, , Leswing, Lora Kolodny Organizations: Visual China, Getty, BEIJING, Baidu, CNBC, Daxing International, robotaxis, General Motors, California Department of Motor Vehicles, Beijing Daxing, Google Locations: Beijing, Yizhuang, Pony.ai, Yizhuang district, Daxing, U.S, San Francisco, California, China, Shenzhen, Wuhan, Chongqing, Guangzhou, Shanghai
A logo of Huawei Technologies is seen at its exhibition space, at the Viva Technology conference dedicated to innovation and startups at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France June 15, 2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsBEIJING, Sept 13 (Reuters) - China's Huawei Technologies inked on Wednesday a global patent cross-licensing deal with Xiaomi Inc (1810.HK), according to a statement from Huawei. The deal covers communication technologies including 5G, it said, and marks the resolution of a patent licensing dispute between the two firms. Local Chinese media reported in March that Huawei was suing Xiaomi for alleged infringement of four registered patents mainly related to wireless communication technology, smartphone photography and screen lock technology. Huawei also has patent license agreements with other tech players such as Oppo and South Korea's Samsung (005930.KS).
Persons: Benoit Tessier, Xiaomi, Clarence Fernandez, Tom Hogue Organizations: Huawei Technologies, Viva Technology, Porte de, REUTERS, Rights, Xiaomi Inc, HK, Huawei, Local, Samsung, Ericsson, Beijing, Thomson Locations: Porte, Paris, France, Rights BEIJING, South
The private equity firm's follow-on investment translates into an additional equity stake of 0.25% in Reliance Retail on a fully-diluted basis, taking KKR's total equity stake in the Indian company to 1.42%, the retailer said in a statement on Monday. That year, KKR had invested 55.5 billion rupees ($669.65 million) in Reliance Retail. Morgan Stanley acted as financial adviser to Reliance Retail. Ambani said in 2019 that the group planned to list the retail business in five years. Reliance Retail reported a consolidated net profit of 91.81 billion rupees ($1.11 billion) for the financial year that ended in March 2023, on revenue of 2.6 trillion rupees.
Persons: Maggi, Niharika Kulkarni, Mukesh Ambani's, Jimmy Choo, Spencer, Pret, Ambani, Morgan Stanley, Aditya Kalra, Toby Chopra, Tomasz Janowski, Deepa Babington Organizations: REUTERS, KKR, Co Inc, Retail Ventures, Reliance, Reliance Retail, Saudi Public Investment Fund, General Atlantic, United Arab, Asian, IV, Reuters, Qatar Investment Authority, Unilever, Thomson Locations: Mumbai, India, DELHI, United Arab Emirates
China's Ant Group unveils finance AI model as race heats up
  + stars: | 2023-09-08 | by ( Josh Ye | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
[1/2] Ant Group sign is seen at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China July 6, 2023. REUTERS/Aly Song/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsHONG KONG, Sept 8 (Reuters) - Ant Group unveiled a finance-specific artificial intelligence (AI) model on Friday and started testing consumer and professional apps for the product, joining a crowded race to deploy AI in heavily regulated China. The foray by Ant into financial AI is notable as the company founded by billionaire Jack Ma is China's biggest fintech firm, with more than 1 billion users worldwide for its Alipay payment app. Ant follows AI announcements by tech giants Tencent (0700.HK) and Xiaomi (1810.HK) on Thursday and Ant's affiliate Alibaba (9988.HK) in April. The Zhixiaobao 2.0 app, designed to give consumers financial tips, can match the average financial professional in market analysis and reasoning capability, Ant said.
Persons: Aly, Ant, Jack Ma, OpenAI's, Josh Ye, William Mallard Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, REUTERS, Ant Group, HK, Thomson Locations: Shanghai, China, HONG KONG
At a time when shifting geopolitical alliances are elevating India's strategic importance, such curbs add to the contradictions global investors have to negotiate as they hunt for viable alternatives to a slowing China. They said the move will add to end-product costs for foreign vendors and shift consumer spending toward Indian firms or established foreign vendors with a manufacturing base in India. To attract foreign investors, Modi's government doubled to 170 billion rupees ($2.04 billion) its initial budget in May for a production-linked incentive scheme for IT hardware that was approved in 2021. watch now"India's large and growing domestic market, limited political instability and long-term policy continuity bolsters India's appeal to investors," Dasgupta said. Attracted by such lofty projections, global investors have also poured into Indian equity markets this year.
Persons: Javier Ghersi, Narendra Modi's, There's, Pravin Krishna Johns, it's, Pravin Krishna, Krishna, Rajeev Chandrasekhar, Taiwan's Foxconn, iPhones, Sumedha Dasgupta, Dasgupta, Modi, Goldman Sachs, Organizations: Apple, Samsung, Dell, Pravin Krishna Johns Hopkins University's School, Johns Hopkins University's School, International, BMI Industry Research, South, BMI, Sumedha Dasgupta Economist Intelligence, Economist Intelligence Unit, CNBC, Bharatiya Janata Party, U.S, The, Monetary Fund, Capital Locations: India, China, Russia, Ukraine, Vietnam
Apple experience a $200 billion market cap drop amid investor concerns about China. A new phone from Huawei has been built mostly with equipment from China. Apple generated almost a fifth of its $394.3 billion net sales from the region in its last fiscal year . This week, Apple's main competition in China, Huawei launched a new 5G smartphone, the Mate 60 Pro. Other tech companies may be next.
Persons: Tim Cook, Cook, Joe Biden Organizations: Apple, Huawei, Service, Xiaomi, China's Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, Bloomberg, Jefferies Locations: China, Wall, Silicon, Taiwan, Washington, Beijing, Guangzhou
Surveillance cameras are seen near an iPhone advertisement at an Apple store in Beijing, China September 7, 2023. One of the sources said they had not yet been given a deadline to cease their iPhone use. Apple and China's State Council Information Office, which handles media queries on behalf of the government, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Bloomberg on Thursday reported that China planned to broaden the ban to state firms and agencies, citing sources. China has increasingly emphasized using locally made tech products, as technology has become a major national security issue for Beijing and Washington.
Persons: Florence Lo, China's, Tesla, Tim Cook, D.A, Davidson, Tom Forte, Yuvraj Malik, Jaspreet Singh, Brenda Goh, Alexander Smith, Shounak Organizations: Apple, REUTERS, U.S ., Staff, China's, Information Office, Huawei Technologies, Observer, Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Citi, Canalys, Government, HK, Huawei, Thomson Locations: Beijing, China, HONG KONG, BEIJING, Washington, U.S, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Bengaluru
Surveillance cameras are seen near an iPhone advertisement at an Apple store in Beijing, China September 7, 2023. One of the sources said they had not yet been given a deadline to cease their iPhone use. Apple and China's State Council Information Office, which handles media queries on behalf of the government, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Bloomberg on Thursday reported that China planned to broaden the ban to state firms and agencies, citing sources. China has increasingly emphasized using locally made tech products, as technology has become a major national security issue for Beijing and Washington.
Persons: Florence Lo, China's, Tesla, Tim Cook, D.A, Davidson, Tom Forte, Yuvraj Malik, Jaspreet Singh, Brenda Goh, Alexander Smith, Shounak Organizations: Apple, REUTERS, U.S ., Staff, China's, Information Office, Huawei Technologies, Observer, Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, Citi, Canalys, Government, HK, Huawei, Thomson Locations: Beijing, China, HONG KONG, BEIJING, Washington, U.S, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Bengaluru
The logo of car manufacturer Tesla is seen at a dealership in London, Britain, May 14, 2021. REUTERS/Matthew Childs/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsCompanies Tesla Inc FollowXiaomi Corp FollowBEIJING, Sept 5 (Reuters) - Tesla Shanghai has sued a Chinese firm over tech secret infringement and unfair competition disputes, Shanghai Securities Journal reported on Tuesday. The lawsuit against Bingling Intelligent Technology, a chip designer and auto parts maker based in Changzhou, Jiangsu province, will be heard in the Shanghai intellectual property court on October 10, according to the report. A investment fund unit of Xiaomi owns 11.9% of Bingling, the report said, citing Chinese business data platform Tianyancha. Reporting by Qiaoyi Li and Brenda Goh; editing by Jason NeelyOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Matthew Childs, Qiaoyi Li, Brenda Goh, Jason Neely Organizations: REUTERS, Shanghai, Shanghai Securities, Bingling, Technology, Xiaomi, Thomson Locations: London, Britain, BEIJING, Changzhou, Jiangsu province, Shanghai
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