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U.S. Intelligence Appeals to Academic IP Researchers: Watch Out for Chinese Spies

Earlier this year, the Biden administration dropped the “China Initiative” program established by the Department of Justice in 2018 to vigorously pursue IP thieves working on behalf of the Chinese government.

Despite dropping that title, the current administration has been no less vigorous in deterring IP theft.

The recent publication of the Safeguarding Science Toolkit published by the National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) drives that point home. (NCSC is within the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI.)

An informed, empowered scientific community is best positioned to assess emerging technologies and their applications and to design measures to guard against the potential misuse or theft of these technologies.

And as explained in the NCSC November 15th press release: “It provides research to stakeholders with a single location to access security best practices from across government and academia and to select those tools tailored for their individual needs.

The Safeguarding Science Toolkit provides guidance to research-academia in protecting the five (5) emerging technologies: Artificial Intelligence (A.I); Bioeconomy; Autonomous Systems; Quantum; and Semiconductors.

SAFEGUARDING SCIENCE GOALS

Here is the overall theme of the toolkit:

COLLABORATION WITH OTHER FEDERAL AGENCIES

This outreach by the U.S. intelligence community to academic research institutions is in collaboration with the National Science Foundation (NSF)National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST), the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and other federal agencies.

FINAL THOUGHT

Up to this point, it seems the FBI’s 56 field offices were doing most of the heavy lifting. The FBI was tasked with not only doing outreach to academia in how to protect their research from foreign bad actors, but also, of course, tasked with carrying out their primary mission: to investigate and arrest IP thieves.

I suspect the FBI welcomes this outreach;

I know academia should welcome it.

ADDITIONAL READING

November 15, 2022, Bloomberg: U.S. Advises Academic Researchers on Stopping Chinese Spying

DisclaimerIPProbe.Global is a service to the professional IP community. While every effort has been made to check information in this blog, we provide no guarantees or warranties, express or implied, regarding the content provided in IPProbe.Global. We disclaim all liability and responsibility for the qualification or accuracy of representations made by the contributors or for any disputes that may arise. It is the responsibility of the readers to independently investigate and verify the credentials of such persons and the accuracy and validity of the information provided by them. This blog is for general information only and not intended to provide legal or other professional advice.

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