Samsung Engineer Gets 7 Years for Selling Chip Secrets to China

Key Takeaways

- A 56-year-old former Samsung engineer was sentenced to 7 years for leaking 600+ manufacturing steps for 10nm DRAM production to China's CXMT
- The engineer received $2 million for technology that cost Samsung $1.08 billion to develop over five years
- CXMT jumped from 17nm to 10nm DRAM production in just one year, a leap prosecutors attribute to the stolen intellectual property
A South Korean court has sentenced a former Samsung Electronics researcher to seven years in prison for selling critical chipmaking secrets to Chinese memory manufacturer CXMT. The 56-year-old defendant, identified only as "Jeon," leaked over 600 detailed manufacturing steps for 10nm-class DRAM production. The stolen technology, which Samsung developed over five years at a cost of 1.6 trillion KRW ($1.08 billion), was sold for just 2.9 billion KRW ($2 million).
The case is part of a larger investigation into 10 former Samsung employees indicted late last year on corporate espionage charges. Jeon is the first to receive a conviction and sentence.
How the Leak Happened
Jeon left Samsung to join CXMT and allegedly bypassed digital security measures by memorizing and transcribing manufacturing processes into handwritten notes. These notes contained what Samsung calls its "Process Recipe Plan" (PRP), a step-by-step manual for producing 10nm-class DRAM chips.
The low-tech method proved effective. CXMT was manufacturing 17nm DRAM in 2022. By 2023, the company had jumped to 10nm production. That's an unusually fast leap for a Chinese fab operating with limited access to cutting-edge lithography tools due to U.S. export restrictions.
“The defendant used his position of trust to systematically export the 'blood and sweat' of Samsung's researchers for personal gain.”
— Prosecution spokesperson during sentencing
Court Findings and Sentencing
The Seoul Central District Court found Jeon guilty of violating South Korea's Industrial Technology Protection Act. The court ruled that the leaked information constituted "core national technology" and caused potentially trillions of won in economic damage to the country.
“The leakage of this core technology has caused irreversible damage to our national industrial competitiveness and astronomical financial losses to the company.”
— Seoul Central District Court Judge
Prosecutors argued that Samsung's stolen IP directly contributed to CXMT's rapid advancement. Beyond the R&D costs, they pointed to opportunity costs from lost sales as customers potentially chose CXMT over Samsung.
The court did note one mitigating factor: Jeon's low compensation at Samsung at the time of the crime. This consideration, however, did not prevent the seven-year sentence.
Why This Matters for the Memory Industry
The timing of this case coincides with a broader shift in the memory market. Major DRAM manufacturers, including Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron, have redirected production capacity toward high-bandwidth memory (HBM) for AI accelerators. This has created component shortages for standard memory.
HP, Asus, and Dell are reportedly exploring Chinese suppliers to fill the gap. CXMT is a potential beneficiary of this shift, though its status on the U.S. "Section 1260H" list, which identifies companies suspected of aiding the Chinese military, complicates such partnerships.
CXMT's accelerated 10nm capabilities make it a more credible alternative supplier than it would have been otherwise. Prosecutors argued this competitive threat is a direct consequence of the stolen Samsung technology.
Another case of state-adjacent actors using unconventional methods to extract value from tech companies
Community Reaction
The case has drawn attention on technical forums. Reddit's r/technology subreddit featured comments expressing disbelief at the transaction economics. One highly upvoted comment called it "one of the worst ROI crimes in history," noting the engineer sold $1.08 billion in R&D for less than 0.2% of its development cost.
Hacker News discussions focused on the technical aspects, particularly how handwritten notes bypassed Samsung's digital security systems. The "low-tech" nature of the exfiltration method surprised many commenters who assumed modern semiconductor fabs would have physical security measures to prevent such leaks.
What Happens Next
Nine other former Samsung employees still face charges in the case. Their trials will likely proceed over the coming months. Samsung has not publicly commented on the sentencing.
The case underscores the high stakes in semiconductor intellectual property protection. As chip manufacturing becomes increasingly central to national economic and security interests, governments are treating technology leaks with the severity once reserved for traditional espionage.
Logicity's Take
Frequently Asked Questions
What did the Samsung engineer leak to China?
The engineer leaked Samsung's "Process Recipe Plan" for 10nm-class DRAM manufacturing. This included over 600 detailed production steps that Samsung spent five years and $1.08 billion developing.
How much did CXMT pay for Samsung's trade secrets?
CXMT paid the engineer 2.9 billion KRW ($2 million) plus stock options and other contract incentives for the stolen technology.
How did the engineer bypass Samsung's security?
Rather than copying digital files, the engineer reportedly memorized manufacturing processes and transcribed them into handwritten notes, avoiding digital detection systems.
What is CXMT?
CXMT (ChangXin Memory Technologies) is a Chinese memory chip manufacturer. It's on the U.S. Section 1260H list of companies suspected of ties to the Chinese military.
What is South Korea's Industrial Technology Protection Act?
It's South Korean legislation that criminalizes the theft or unauthorized transfer of designated "core national technologies," including advanced semiconductor manufacturing processes.
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Source: Latest from Tom's Hardware
Huma Shazia
Senior AI & Tech Writer
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