197 comments

  • sgarland 17 hours ago ago

    Right before I left Samsung Austin Semiconductor (Samsung’s fab in the U.S.), in 2019, they were phasing out local share drives in favor of a self-hosted cloud that Samsung created. The supposed reason was better security, though it’s unclear to me why they couldn’t globally apply whatever rules they wanted to enforce to all office locations, instead of forcing everyone to use a remote endpoint. The throughput was absolutely terrible, like < 1 MBps. My department had some large files, so that was fun.

    One such file was an Excel file that was more script than anything else. We had to have labels in a specific format on every machine we owned in the fab, which was something like 250 of them. The normal stuff like its id number, and also which points of contact for a technician and engineer, as well as their photos and phone numbers. Manually balancing and re-balancing every time a shift gained or lost an employee would’ve been obnoxious, so naturally instead countless hours were spent coercing VBA and ODBC to query a DB containing employee info, extracting and resizing their headshot, applying all of this to a template label, queuing a print job, and repeating. It was pretty fun to watch, honestly. I think I also had created a floor plan map somehow, and it would do its best to group a given technician’s assigned machines such that they minimized distance traveled during inspections. Anyway, the large file size was due to it caching the headshots (might have made a hidden tab for each? I don’t remember) for better performance, as that had proven to be a bottleneck.

    • ryanjshaw 16 hours ago ago

      This abuse of Excel might be in the running for a new form of esports.

      • ethbr1 16 hours ago ago

        It's always worth remembering there's exactly one reason Excel is abused -- IT isn't giving "non-developers" access to tools they need to automate their work.

        • 3 hours ago ago
          [deleted]
        • LarMachinarum 15 hours ago ago

          while I don't doubt that such situations also exist, that wasn't the reason for any of the many "Excel abusers" I've encountered in different positions. Quite to the contrary, these people all had access to the appropriate tools, but their whole thinking was totally formatted and fixated on Excel as their go-to tool for everything:

          be it things better done with a database, a word processor, a diagramming program, a label generator, a Form editor, a markup language, a web page, anything: they had all the tools at their disposal but no, no, they felt the odd compulsive need to do it with only Excel instead…

          …often leading to problems down the line when the limitations of Excel for the use case (for which it wasn't made) would show more and more but they wasted already so much time and (needless) effort doing it in Excel that they would be even more reluctant to the possibility of switching to any more appropriate tool for the task.

          • deepsun 13 hours ago ago

            In hotel industry they need to calculate and set a price for each room/night. Typically that's done by solving convex optimization (e.g. simplex method) and using "shadow values" from it as the price per room.

            Lo and behold, not every math package provides "shadow values". So you either buy a specialized math tool, or... use Excel, that has it built-in.

          • tracker1 14 hours ago ago

            The VBA hammer is real... it can force any screw, nail, staple into any hole you desire.

            Until the web version takes over, and you can no longer connect to anything real.

            • john01dav 8 hours ago ago

              I doubt that the people who use Excel care enough about computers to be deterred by cloud.

              • giardini 3 hours ago ago

                Last night enjoyed reading the HN topic

                "Lessons from writing a Kubernetes Security book" at

                https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44784495

                all about the joys and problems developers encounter using kubernetes/k8.

                And reading now, today here about Excel/VBA, it struck me that something was missing: couldn't I eliminate 90% of computer software and ease 80% of software devops simply by building/selling a system that ran purely Excel atop kubernetes?

                I mean, isn't that all there is to computing nowadays? Plus a little social media? And some AI for fun and maybe a little Excel/k8 work as frosting on the cake.

                EDIT: Upon some further thought and prompting by helpful anonymous others, I have found a slightly different path: a FORTH/kubernetes system that will be used to bootstrap versions of VBA & Excel to the cloud. This will be made available to the great unwashed masses of humanity (and their AI friends) for implementing social media for all.

        • garyfirestorm 14 hours ago ago

          Bingo. Working in an automotive OEM the entire company works on excel specifically excel vb scripts. No one knows why and no one has figured out how we got here. But it’s slow and steady abuse excel.

        • FirmwareBurner 14 hours ago ago

          Also how the simplest, fastest and most secure way to send someone from another corporation a file for collaboration is an encrypted zip and phone in the password.

      • bombcar 16 hours ago ago

        Roko's Basilisk or whatever it is should more properly be called Excel's Visual Basicilisk - once Excel becomes self-aware it is going to punish everyone who tortured it for decades.

      • CGMthrowaway 11 hours ago ago

        It just sounds like Mail Merge to me. Which if you were using a computer for work in the 90s, you might know something about. (It was also convoluted) :)

      • raverbashing 14 hours ago ago

        Maybe we need an IOCCC or Demoscene for Excel

      • boredtofears 16 hours ago ago
    • WhyNotHugo 14 hours ago ago

      > it’s unclear to me why they couldn’t globally apply whatever rules they wanted to enforce to all office locations, instead of forcing everyone to use a remote endpoint

      My guess is that they're worried that you'll download data and then copy it out of the device while the device is offline. An employee could even "lose" the device, giving an attacker unbound time to extract data from it.

      Another equally likely explanation is that the exec in charge of their cloud services gains more prestige due to his solution being universally adopted internally, or some other crap along this line.

    • burnt-resistor 2 hours ago ago

      This is a pathology of megacorps who don't continually reinvest in process and support infrastructure and instead abuse backoffice desktop software inefficiently. In 20/20 retrospect, it should've been converted from Excel to a proper app as soon as it became a bottleneck.

    • jve 16 hours ago ago

      It is great that particular tools enable employees automate stuff and make their work more effective.

      From developer point of view I see that the effort would most certainly be diverted in another kind of solution.

      But yeah, "citizen developer" stuff is a thing that microsoft pushes especially in Power Platform / Canvas Apps - one programs with WYSIWIG and Excel-like formulas (PowerFX)

      But then again I wonder who are the people that can program in VBA and chooses excel. Is it the constraint around software they can use? An excel being a GUI which you don't have to implement? Anyways, a net positive for business.

      • mjlee 15 hours ago ago

        I'm sure the free GUI is the gateway drug, but at this point practically everybody in finance uses Excel. You can pass files and scripts around and be pretty confident that the external auditor will be able to use them.

      • skeezyboy 15 hours ago ago

        where else can you run vba these days?

    • CGMthrowaway 11 hours ago ago

      A common and innovative solution to this problem now, that I have seen in other fabs (not semis, but other industries), is to put QR codes on each machine. That way the info behind it can be dynamic and maintained

    • hbarka 17 hours ago ago

      At least they didn’t make you use Sharepoint and OneDrive. How fun using VBA and ODBC in 2019, proving the mighty Excel will go on as the new MS Access.

    • gedy 17 hours ago ago

      Nice ha. Your story reminds me of why I flinch whenever I hear "just give them the spreadsheet, engineer, don't argue..."

  • simpleintheory 17 hours ago ago

    The original link from Nikkei Asia that the 9to5mac article is a repost of has some more information and less generic filler:

    Link: https://asia.nikkei.com/business/technology/tsmc-fires-worke...

    Archive: https://archive.ph/ta1kq

  • ants_everywhere 18 hours ago ago

    Industrial espionage has to be totally insane to defend against these days.

    • tjpnz 17 hours ago ago

      Just knowing how the thing is built doesn't seem to be enough. Comac still sources its jet engines from Pratt and Whitney for instance, despite many years of trying no local manufacturer has been able to build them to the same spec.

      • Workaccount2 16 hours ago ago

        The product I oversee at my job is something that can only be built by people who are intimately aware of the process and have a strong understanding of the underlying engineering.

        We could hand the full project file to a competitor and they almost certainly would not be able to build functional units. The failure points are fractal, so you need a strong intuition about what part you are installing, what qualities an ideal part has, what qualities the one in your hand has, how you might install it differently because of those qualities, and/or how you might change a later process to accommodate it. Or if the part should just be junked. The process is fraught with seemingly good intuitions that will ultimately lead you to failure as well.

        These units also cannot be reworked, reused, or repaired, so any mistake before finalizing the build junks the entire thing.

        For extremely low-entropy products, mother nature is incredibly unforgiving.

        • K0balt 13 hours ago ago

          This is a bigger issue than most people appreciate, and a huge problem for the USA.

          There is a specialised trade known as tool and die maker, or just die maker (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tool_and_die_maker) that is fundamental to a country’s ability to create industrial capacity. So far, no automation tool has been able to replace their expertise.

          Without die makers, you can’t build tools that make things, you can’t build factories, and mass production in general is dependent on their skillset.

          Right now, the USA only has 50k die makers, and the average age of a die maker, including apprentices, is 54. The average age of a master die maker is 73, and the average age of a journeyman is 62. A master die maker can teach about 5 apprentices to the journey man level in a work environment, after 2+ years of basic engineering school, in about 5-7 years. A journeyman may generally considered a master after 10-20 years of experience, depending on the nature of their experience.

          We don’t have enough die makers to rebuild the industrial capacity of the USA, and we can’t teach the amount we need in less than 5-7decades without some kind of major change in the process of doing so. And since more than half of the master die makers are months from retirement or death, we are in an extremely precarious position as a viable industrial power.

          This is why it is extremely difficult to build anything physical in the USA using only USA sourced parts and materials. It’s almost impossible to even get a decent variety of screws and fasteners made here in the USA, and we can’t easy build the machines to make screws because of the critical shortage of master die makers.

          If we are to maintain the ability to build and maintain our machines, weapons, and critical infrastructure without being completely dependent on imported tools, supplies, and knowledge, we will have to reinvent the industrial process using automation or something similar to compensate for our foolish exportation and devaluation of strategic skills and capabilities.

          • ToDougie 9 hours ago ago

            Thank you for taking the time to post this. You've outlined problems that are absolutely solvable.

          • asdff 12 hours ago ago

            If the average age is 73 that's the issue right there. People are refusing to retire at 62 and make room for juniors. Then when they finally do retire (73 average seems like "dies in office" levels) there are 2 decades of missing juniors who haven't been trained in the pipeline.

            This is the shortcoming with most technical fields. No one is incentivized to see the big picture of the training pipeline that exists well outside the scope of their own company. No one likes juniors but that is their future.

            • Workaccount2 11 hours ago ago

              The actual killer is the pay and working conditions, and the problem is fairly intractable.

              If you are smart enough to be a good tool maker, you are likely smart enough to be a good 6-figure keyboard-all-day worker. Losing a finger (or three) and breathing VOCs all day for half the pay is not very enticing.

              These industries aren't glamourous for investors either. The business proposition sucks, the cost and liabilities are intense, and the margins would need to be negative to be truly competitive.

              And worse than anything, the stuff that comes from China is not only 1/10th the cost, it's also now better quality.

            • bsder 9 hours ago ago

              The problem is that these jobs are hard and the pay is crap.

              SmarterEveryDay attempted to make a grill scrubber in the US. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZTGwcHQfLY

              tl;dr He did it, but it went very poorly.

        • tracker1 14 hours ago ago

          That's not a high bar... Boeing can't seem to reliably manufacture their own designs.

        • wyre 14 hours ago ago

          What product is it?

      • mitjam 17 hours ago ago

        A relative of mine worked at a medical devices company (brain sensors). She told me how small intricacies of the manufacturing process were critical to reach good enough yield or functioning devices, at all. The critical process steps were closely guarded and only a handful employees knew how to do them. The devil is often in the details - and the moat, too.

        • 16 hours ago ago
          [deleted]
      • throw0101c 15 hours ago ago

        > Just knowing how the thing is built doesn't seem to be enough.

        See perhaps:

        > Tacit knowledge or implicit knowledge is knowledge that is difficult to extract or articulate—as opposed to conceptualized, formalized, codified, or explicit knowledge—and is therefore more difficult to convey to others through verbalization or writing. Examples of this include individual wisdom, experience, insight, motor skill, and intuition.[1] An example of "explicit" information that can be recorded, conveyed, and understood by the recipient is the knowledge that London is in the United Kingdom. Speaking a language, riding a bicycle, kneading dough, playing an instrument, or designing and operating sophisticated machinery, on the other hand, all require a variety of knowledge that is difficult or impossible to transfer to other people and is not always known "explicitly," even by skilled practitioners.

        * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacit_knowledge

      • baggachipz 17 hours ago ago

        Or for analogy, following a recipe doesn't make you a good cook.

        • motorest 15 hours ago ago

          > Or for analogy, following a recipe doesn't make you a good cook.

          For an analogy, no one cares if you're a good cook if you're able to make a passable burger. Most of the demand is not for the best burger money can buy, the just want a burger.

        • chii 17 hours ago ago

          But it also depends on how precise the recipe is - if it's described down to the exact movements the cook needs to do, which may be replicated via a machine...

          • baggachipz 17 hours ago ago

            No recipe accounts for ambient temperature/humidity, very few for altitude differences, etc. etc. It still takes knowledgable tweaks to get just right.

            • moralestapia 17 hours ago ago

              Such recipe could exist.

              • kergonath 12 hours ago ago

                They exist in the industry, where a small variation of one parameter could affect tons of products. Same for individual restaurants, cooks know how to set up their equipment. For amateur cooks at home it does not matter. They do not need that level of consistency, and it would get quite expensive.

              • adolph 16 hours ago ago

                At the end of the day, the map won't ever be the territory. Typically the properties that makes something successful are those which cannot be specified. If it were otherwise and those qualities could be specified in a reproducible manner, that thing would not be observably successful.

        • reaperducer 17 hours ago ago

          Or for analogy, following a recipe doesn't make you a good cook.

          Following a recipe can you close enough for thousands of Door Dash customers to put the original restaurant out of business.

          • baggachipz 17 hours ago ago

            I feel like you're reading too deeply into my shallow analogy.

            • FredPret 15 hours ago ago

              I'm not sure - what if China can flood the world with 80%-as-good-as-the-real-thing knockoffs at half the price and put everyone else out of business?

      • Cyph0n 17 hours ago ago

        Are P&W and Rolls Royce the only companies in the world capable of manufacturing high-end jet engines end-to-end?

        • seanmcdirmid 16 hours ago ago

          No, but they provide the best efficiency/performance for the buck. China can produce its own jet turbines, but they have to trade off performance or longevity to do it.

          • Cyph0n 16 hours ago ago

            Interesting. Thanks.

        • a2tech 15 hours ago ago

          They don't make them end to end either. Their jet engines are made up of parts supplied by thousands of suppliers.

          • Cyph0n 10 hours ago ago

            Obviously, but I would imagine that most of the “magic” isn’t in the supplied components, but in the finished product. Otherwise reproduction would be easier.

        • prussian 16 hours ago ago

          Don't forget GE Aerospace. It gets a bit weirder too since you have joint ventures like CFM and Engine Alliance.

          • Cyph0n 16 hours ago ago

            Good point. Isn’t there also Safran?

            • kergonath 14 hours ago ago

              Yes. Their engines are mostly for military applications, tough, so they are less well known of the general public. Other than that, they are half of CFM International, but again they are not very visible.

      • prussian 16 hours ago ago

        Which Comac? I thought they all used GE (CFM for Comac 919) or Russian/Chinese sourced engines.

        • ta20240528 15 hours ago ago

          That's the OP's point: COMAC is using CFM LEAP 1-C engines on the C919.

          To be fair, they have taken the effort to build the CJ 1000A engine - which is on wing testing should the tangerine fellow cut them off. But its Plan B at best.

      • mensetmanusman 15 hours ago ago

        We don’t have sensors that can grok the full building process that deep human experts have.

      • _DeadFred_ 10 hours ago ago

        I can't remember but I think Lance Air or Epic got split in a sale and a company bought the type design/blueprints but ran into issues actually manufacturing from them.

      • varispeed 14 hours ago ago

        Building even basic things is difficult. Friend of mine tried like dozen companies from around the world to manufacture very basic milled aluminium part. None of them could make it. Only one company could make 1 or 2 right out of 100.

        • helij 11 hours ago ago

          Sorry, but I find that hard to believe. Part certainly wasn't very basic.

    • sneak 18 hours ago ago

      I frequently wonder what steps SpaceX security has to take, given the insane geopolitical significance of reusable rockets and cheap access to orbit.

      • bwfan123 17 hours ago ago

        There is a very nice chapter in the somewhat dated but classic book Business Adventures [1] on trade-secrets and what happens when employees of one company move to another. In chapter 11, "A man, his knowledge, and his job", there is a story of a "space-suit" manufacturer Goodrich suing an employee for moving to its rival Latex for stealing trade-secrets. The story is timely in context of Meta hiring researchers from open-ai, deepmind etc for 100s of millions for the knowledge in their heads of the recipes which work for making superior LLMs - the knowledge of which is empirical and may take years to discover.

        [1] https://www.amazon.com/Business-Adventures-Twelve-Classic-St...

        • AlotOfReading 15 hours ago ago

          You could also argue that they're hiring people for the general expertise they have in developing frontier LLMs. Distinguishing trade secrets from general knowledge is difficult and employees building the latter to make them more valuable to new employers is an explicit policy goal of US employment law.

        • CGMthrowaway 11 hours ago ago

          What is the story?

      • m4rtink 17 hours ago ago

        I would say the main element of their success is not really in any specific close kept secrets - its in actually committing to reusable rockets and keep working until they had a working system.

        While there are some really nice components and clever ideas (Merlin/Raptor engines & very good guidance tech) this all really has been doable for decades in less efficient form.

        But so far no one other than Space X has been able to win against all the naysayers who were so sure only single use rockets are ever going to work, get enough funding to build a partial RLV & then operate it successfully as a business.

        I don't think it depends on any single technology or a set of them only they have access to - rather that they have been able to persist and see it through, unlike all the other RLV projects that never got funding to go past the paper stage or very simply not viable (Space shuttle).

        • 17 hours ago ago
          [deleted]
      • chilmers 17 hours ago ago

        So, this is admittedly a little tinfoil, but I wouldn't be surprised if Musk is happy for some degree of espionage to happen. If it looked like there was a possibility of China getting this capability first, it would light a fire under the US government to give financial and regulatory assistance to the Starship program.

        • amelius 17 hours ago ago
        • bilbo0s 17 hours ago ago

          Musk does seem to think in terms of how much money he can get from the government for his companies. But to be fair, government subsidies are a successful strategy for entrepreneurs who want to make a lot of money.

          Maybe they shouldn't be? And I think honest people can have that debate.

          But you can't really argue against the effectiveness of government subsidy as a path to prosperity for the guy getting the money.

          • indoordin0saur 14 hours ago ago

            Despite his faults he does seem to care about the actual lofty mission statements of his companies more than just straight profit. Otherwise, you wouldn't see bizarre things like him directing Tesla to open source all their patents.

          • sharpshadow 15 hours ago ago

            It’s primarily in the government interest in subsidising, except when it’s a corrupted subsidy.

          • sockp0pp3t 16 hours ago ago

            This worked for at least one Burisma employee

      • pythonguython 17 hours ago ago

        Spacex rocketry tech is subject to ITAR regulations. That restricts who they’re allowed to contract with, data encryption and handling, but altogether those regulations are quite bare. It likely wouldn’t be enough to stop a state actor or rogue employees.

        • pc86 17 hours ago ago

          I think ITAR is mostly just to stop the outright sale of controlled items to foreign entities, not necessarily to prevent IP theft or corporate espionage.

          • blackguardx 17 hours ago ago

            I worked on an ITAR-controlled camera once and it was drilled into me than even allowing a non-US person to view the output images of the camera constituted an ITAR violation.

            • 0xffff2 11 hours ago ago

              Right, which is all well and good if you're a benevolent actor, but ITAR really doesn't do anything at all to stop you from intentionally committing (corporate or actual) espionage if you want to. There should still be controls to prevent you from violating ITAR either accidentally or on purpose.

              • blackguardx 9 hours ago ago

                The controls are you go to jail if you get caught. At least this is what one is told in the mandatory ITAR compliance trainings. That seems to be how the law works for most crimes.

        • 17 hours ago ago
          [deleted]
      • colechristensen 17 hours ago ago

        Lots of space technology is classified as weapons subject to export control. ITAR has plenty of rules about who can see information. US immigration status generally has to be green card or citizen, and country of origin and any second citizenships are considered.

        ("export control" in this sense really doesn't have to do with moving a physical object out of the country but sharing information, to the extent that a conversation in an elevator could be an export violation. most export violations amount to emails being sent to the wrong person)

        When I worked briefly in defense, for example, there would be regular random searches of my stuff as I exited the building and security would wander the building and look at what you left out on your desk while you went to lunch. Entirely seriously they told us not to wear our badge in public if we left the building and not to leave our laptops in our cars because someone might follow us and steal it. Had colleagues who were visiting a foreign country for work have their hotel rooms obviously thoroughly and messily searched while they were out.

        They also do national security missions so there are folks there with high clearances.

        Thing is that even if you did steal a bunch of information, that doesn't mean you could just copy and be successful. Any one of a million things can go wrong with a self-landing rocket that will cause it to explode, you can't just steal the whole system of operation that keeps these things from happening.

        You couldn't steal all of the secrets of a circus performer and suddenly be able to juggle chainsaws while riding a unicycle.

        • 17 hours ago ago
          [deleted]
      • _DeadFred_ 9 hours ago ago

        I imagine SpaceX having pretty fishbowl conference rooms for customers in the center of everything, with guest network ports just segmented off from the main but using the same hardware. Oh man that would stress me out if I was IT. And of course the '<Customer name> needs to print something off and needs access to the MFCs'. No, you print it out for them, like has been discussed and agreed to and keeps with ITAR. 'No, they need access, and now. Because I'm a sales guy and I won't tell them no' but if they get into/past the MFC, it's all on IT and IT being bad at their job/security, not the sales guy that demanded they get physical access.

      • oldpersonintx2 17 hours ago ago

        [dead]

      • de6u99er 17 hours ago ago

        I don't think what SpaceX is doing is that hard to replicate. There's already competitors launching smaller payloads for smaller costs per weight. Just a matter of time until they creep into SpaceX's market, while SpaceX tries to build a starship inspired by the Futurama rocket.

        • pc86 17 hours ago ago

          This comment has big "I could build a better SpaceX I just don't want to" vibes.

          • indoordin0saur 14 hours ago ago

            If only my dad had an emerald mine then I'd be the billionaire rocket scientist CEO

            • pc86 13 hours ago ago
              • relaxing 12 hours ago ago

                Funny how many words it takes to say Elon’s dad in fact own a stake in an emerald mine, invest in Elon’s business, and give Elon an incredibly privileged upbringing.

                • pc86 11 hours ago ago

                  There's a lot of unanswered questions from the article which is seems anyone with even mediocre skills as a journalist should be willing and able to answer.

                  It mentions the mine "collapsed" in 1989. Does that mean literally? Just financially? Was there an insurance payout? Did everyone lose their investment? Did Errol Musk own 1% or 90%?

                  * In quoting another article, it does say: "Errol Musk, an engineer, owned a small percentage of an emerald mine and had a couple of good years before the mine went bust and wiped out his investment."

                  Elon graduated from college less than 10 years later but says he was $100k in debt. Was he actually in debt? Did he spend years paying that off or did he (or someone else) pay it off shortly after in a lump sum or very quickly?

                  His dad provided $20k of a $200k seed round for Zip2, was the rest also from friends and family or more institutional investors? Did his dad receive equity for that or was it a gift?

                  Reading through the article again (and a little more closely than before) it doesn't seem Elon had "an incredibly privileged upbringing" but maybe that's a mix of good PR and this now being 40-some years ago? They're referred to as upper middle class but if that's all it takes to be "incredibly privileged" then 90% of the kids born to people reading HN are also incredibly privileged.

                  Arnold's piece seems to contradict basically everything else in the article so I'm not sure what to make of it, but it also sounds like he made about $350k profit over the lifetime of his ownership in the mine? Certainly not nothing but it's not opulence and it doesn't sound like most (any?) of that made its way to Elon.

                  • relaxing 10 hours ago ago

                    > Elon mostly lived with his father, who says he owned thoroughbred horses, a yacht, several houses and a Cessna. One of their homes was in Waterkloof, a leafy suburb of Pretoria that was popular with foreign diplomats.

                    > Wanderlust ran on both sides of the family. On holidays, Errol and his kids would travel, he said: to Europe, Hong Kong, throughout the United States. Or they'd take the plane to Lake Tanganyika [in Zambia], where Errol had a stake in an emerald mine.

                    That sounds more privileged than upper middle class to me.

        • sneak 17 hours ago ago

          It is insanely valuable, both commercially and strategically.

          If it weren’t that hard to replicate, several countries (and Bezos/Blue Origin) would have replicated it by now.

          I think you vastly underestimate how difficult rocketry is. There’s a reason “rocket science” is colloquially a metaphor for an extremely difficult and technical task.

          • llm_nerd 17 hours ago ago

            >If it weren’t that hard to replicate, several countries (and Bezos/Blue Origin) would have replicated it by now.

            There is a 100% chance multiple countries/companies will have replicated it in the next decade. If SpaceX never existed, they likely would have achieved it at the same pace regardless.

            This is the same with EVs. If Tesla never rose, the world EV market outside of Tesla would have seen precisely the same rise.

            There is a tendency to attribute the early movers with innovation in the inevitable, where we all stand on the shoulders of others and just reach a little higher.

            As to the rocket science misnomer, that's a space race hangover where an engineering role was extremely public and celebrated, but in actual reality "rocket science" is a mediocre field with miserable pay and high unemployment.

            As to how valuable it is, "insanely"? The world has a fairly finite launch need, such that SpaceX made a whole new business -- Starlink -- to make work for their capacity. Economically the space launch business is relatively minuscule.

            • jmpman 17 hours ago ago

              I question your EV take. Tesla proved a business model, the technology and path from niche sports car to the best selling car on earth, and now on to the lowest cost per mile robotaxi. Simply knowing that a solution exists and is financially viable, is enough to motivate the competition.

              • llm_nerd 16 hours ago ago

                >Tesla proved a business model

                Through almost all of Tesla's existence, its business model was ironically the sale of gasoline vehicles. Because, of course, Tesla's entire business model relied upon selling green credits to incumbent ICE vehicle makers.

                So it didn't really prove much of a business model, effectively being parasitic.

                >the technology and path from niche sports car to the best selling car on earth,

                The overwhelming bulk of the technology advancements that enable modern EVs -- from advances in batteries to cameras to sensors to embedded controllers and CPUs -- is thanks to the smartphone industry. Modern EVs owe infinitely more to those than they do to anything Tesla did.

                >knowing that a solution exists and is financially viable, is enough to motivate the competition.

                I think of this much like compact fluorescents. Remember those? We all rushed to transition, and then they were absolutely demolished in every metric -- efficiency, colour, and most importantly the amount of environmental contamination when disposed -- by LED lights. I feel like we're going to feel the same about early EVs.

                >now on to the lowest cost per mile robotaxi

                Is this a serious comment?

                • trogdor 15 hours ago ago

                  > The overwhelming bulk of the technology advancements that enable modern EVs -- from advances in batteries to cameras to sensors to embedded controllers and CPUs -- is thanks to the smartphone industry.

                  Would you point me to a source where I can read about this?

            • dagw 17 hours ago ago

              If Tesla never rose, the world EV market outside of Tesla would have seen precisely the same rise.

              would have seen the same rise _eventually_. I know from a friend that worked R&D at a major car company that Tesla really lit a fire under then and 'forced' them to push their own EV experiments from proof of concepts to commercial product much faster than they where originally thinking about doing it.

              • llm_nerd 16 hours ago ago

                The EV ventures of most automakers are massive money losers (just as it always has been for Tesla outside of selling green credits and subsidies). But for sure they all rushed to get there not because the EVs themselves were valuable, but because of the insanity of the capital markets where Tesla is valued at a trillion dollars at a 200x P/E, while the rest of the market is at like a 7-14x ratio. Everyone wanted some of that irrational hype.

          • 4gotunameagain 17 hours ago ago

            The problem lies in forming and managing such a huge organisation that deals with the problem in an efficient and lean way, not the technical aspects.

            The materials science aspect is a challenge, not to produce, but to produce with a sane cost.

            The rocket science aspect of things (namely the linearisation of the booster model in order to be able to be solved in constant time by an MPC) is more or less a solved problem.

            Coordinating such complex interconnected systems will always remain one.

            • tonyhart7 17 hours ago ago

              so it still "rocket science", you saying that the hard part is to make it lean and efficient

              isn't that what they do in SpaceX????, your comment literally counterproductive

          • vFunct 17 hours ago ago

            SpaceX itself replicated the DC-X from the 90's. The reason the DC-X was cancelled was because of the economics. Reusable rockets are a solved problem, with only the economics of it a barrier (see Space Shuttle). SpaceX has to rely on their own investor funding for Starlink to remain a viable entity.

            • peterfirefly 14 hours ago ago

              The DC-X was stupid, dumb, insane, bunkers, and a waste of money and not replicable.

              "sure, let's put four RL-10 hydrogen engines on it! They are expensive and the worst possible for the low-altitude flights we are going to do so some sucker will believe we can do multi-stage reusable flights to orbit".

              "sure, we don't actually need to go to orbit anyway. That was always a dumb idea. Who said we ever wanted to do that? No, suborbital is really useful, we promise. And we are going to do it with a single stage (using hydrogen) cuz we are so smart and the future and everything!"

              "sure, let's build a specialized hydrogen tank in a stupid shape."

              "sure, let's give the whole single-stage low-altitude rocket a k00l shape that makes it more expensive."

              "People knowing it can't be done shouldn't interrupt people doing it wrong."

    • duxup 17 hours ago ago

      It seems to me companies ... don't care out side some easy to do basic things.

      But when push comes to shove if manufacturing is cheaper in a country where lots of folks want to steal your things. -shrug- Short term profits win.

      • 93po 17 hours ago ago

        am i crazy for not caring if a company in a foreign country obtains trade secrets and manufactures the same thing? like we're all humans and we all want access to whatever it is they're building, it seems like more people building the thing is a good thing. if that impacts Samsung's profits, why do I care? its not like corporations give a shit about me

        • khuey 16 hours ago ago

          Well who are you? Maybe there is no reason for you to care.

          TSMC alone is 12% of Taiwanese exports. The entire semiconductor industry is 25% of Taiwan's GDP. It's obvious why the Taiwanese government and society, to say nothing of TSMC's shareholders, would care.

        • fidotron 16 hours ago ago

          Yes, because if you tolerate that you disincentivize actually developing the IP in question in favour of stealing everyone else's, which leads to nothing being developed.

          • 93po 14 hours ago ago

            is it impossible for society to advance without IP laws? is capitalism a requirement for advancement?

            • melagonster 4 hours ago ago

              Obviously, if this happened, Taiwan would not exist now.

            • flkenosad 13 hours ago ago

              No. Of course not. This is just something IP holders say because they profit.

            • cosmicgadget 6 hours ago ago

              Do non-absolutes exist?

        • rangestransform 14 hours ago ago

          I work at a tech company and I’d rather have other countries pay my company to do it, rather than do it themselves with less-than-US salaries

        • duxup 17 hours ago ago

          I really can't answer that, it's your call if you care or not.

          I think that the more of a free for all folks stealing tech as they wish will push companies who do the development work towards more proprietary / DRM and similar solutions ... I don't like that.

          Allowing people to profit from their inventions / investments encourages more such development, and without that discourages it or encourages less good options.

        • echelon 17 hours ago ago

          Some countries have all the talent and manufacturing and sourcing advantages. Once they take the lead, you might never be able to keep up.

          Your engineers lose their jobs, your businesses go bankrupt, you exit that entire field entirely for your entire population. Slowly your ability to do work begins to evaporate.

          It's happened before and it'll continue to happen.

          • zozbot234 16 hours ago ago

            > Slowly your ability to do work begins to evaporate.

            To be clear about this, you can still physically do the work same as before, it's just become uneconomic/not competitive. It's not all bad though. Having another country take the bulk of the market leaves you free to differentiate and specialize in one or more profitable niches that are not being served well by what is now the main supplier. You might end up dominating some fraction of what's now a vastly bigger market, with improved economies of scale that you're free to exploit as well.

            • echelon 16 hours ago ago

              That's a bit like an exercise left to the reader. Or wishful thinking.

              We hope that it works out that way, but there's simply no guarantee. It's not an economic law.

              If the country supplying said thing can have domestic companies deliver at lower margin, you're still kind of screwed. Their internal competition fills out the niches, which they can then export.

          • 93po 14 hours ago ago

            isnt that what tariffs are for?

            there's something that rubs me wrong about the argument of "we need IP laws because otherwise someone else might do the same thing as us, but better, and we won't be able to compete"

    • monkeyelite 18 hours ago ago

      [flagged]

      • onlyrealcuzzo 18 hours ago ago

        We are doing much better off with the status quo than TSMC firing everyone who isn't of the same religion, and even then, it's not hard for a spy to pretend to be <insert religion here>.

        • monkeyelite 18 hours ago ago

          > We are doing much better off

          I’m not making a value judgement. I’m making a prediction about material conditions.

          > TSMC firing everyone who isn't of the same religion

          I didn’t say that. But circles of a trust around important information.

          > it's not hard for a spy to pretend to be <insert religion here>.

          Yes it is.

          • bitzun 18 hours ago ago

            Can you explain why? I have pretended to be multiple kinds of Christian with success despite being none of them.

            • monkeyelite 17 hours ago ago

              Because religious vocabulary, etiquette, and clothing are learned from decades of involvement usually as a small child.

              It’s kind of like saying you’re going to pretend to be a different class, but more particular.

              > I have pretended to be multiple kinds of Christian with success

              I don’t know what context you mean. But I guarantee others can tell you aren’t a member of the group even if Christianity aims to be open in inviting new people.

              Another common situation is they recognize you have some connection but can tell you aren’t an active participant.

            • dmbche 17 hours ago ago

              Harder to pretend when speaking with colleagues that are the real deal. Also very likely to "step out of line" accidentally over time as lot of time is spent with colleagues.

              It's not hard to pretend to be anything for 5 minutes to someone who doesn't know anything about what you're doing.

              • onlyrealcuzzo 17 hours ago ago

                Naively, I was assuming TSMC would still operate like TSMC, not the Taliban, and that they'd focus on doing their work, not religious performance, but I guess anything is possible!

                Suggesting TSMC start operating like the Taliban to protect their trade secrets seems like an obviously bad idea, though.

                But we don't live in a vacuum, so I guess it's all just opinion pieces.

                • dmbche 8 hours ago ago

                  What are we on about now? The taliban?

                • monkeyelite 15 hours ago ago

                  Please don’t be facetious

                  • onlyrealcuzzo 13 hours ago ago

                    Okay, substitute Taliban for the Church of Scientology or the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.

                    It's a marginally less absurd proposal.

                    My point stands.

                    Proposing extreme religious nepotism as a good counter-measure to deal with espionage 1) would be minimally effective (see the IDF infiltrating Hamas and Iran regularly), and 2) is ridiculous.

        • meindnoch 17 hours ago ago

          >even then, it's not hard for a spy to pretend to be <insert religion here>.

          There are religious groups which you can only be born into. Some people believe that one such religious group wields the most power on our planet.

          • mananaysiempre 17 hours ago ago

            Is there a Druze world government out there that I’m not aware of? :) It’s absolutely possible to convert to Judaism, for reference, though the faith is non-proselytizing (not actively seeking converts) and the status of converts is disputed among the more extreme Orthodox groups (but what isn’t).

          • FirmwareBurner 17 hours ago ago

            The religion installing wires above NY so they can cheat it?

          • 17 hours ago ago
            [deleted]
      • ants_everywhere 18 hours ago ago

        > groups have to return to more traditional forms of trust (family, religion, creed, etc)

        a relevant acronym is MICE (money, ideology, compromise/coercion, ego). Religion would fall under ideology.

        See e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterintelligence

        • monkeyelite 17 hours ago ago

          Money and coercion is what corporations have now and it doesn’t work very well because the incentive is to violate it as soon as a better offer comes along.

          I’m saying it has to be deeper and more durable.

    • amelius 17 hours ago ago

      Compartmentalize your company. Make sure people from one compartment are unaware about things people from other compartments are doing. Don't transfer/hire across compartment boundaries.

      • ujkhsjkdhf234 17 hours ago ago

        This is such a bad idea.

        • amelius 17 hours ago ago

          Care to say why? Security always comes at a cost ...

          • ujkhsjkdhf234 17 hours ago ago

            You don't need to deliberately create silos in order to secure a project. We've had people working on top secret projects and while people may not have known the specifics the company was kept up to date on the progress and outcomes of the project. We brought people in from other teams after an extra vetting process and additional NDA specific to that project.

            • amelius 17 hours ago ago

              With industrial espionage, NDAs aren't going to cut it ...

              • xxpor 15 hours ago ago

                For the vast vast majority of companies, their success comes down to culture and execution rather than "the tech secret". You can't really steal that.

                I will grant you, the specific case of TSMC is definitely in the rarer case where there are true tech secrets.

        • nunez 16 hours ago ago

          Apple does this.

          • amelius 16 hours ago ago

            Apple is great because their hardware and software is so well integrated.

            If they compartmentalize their hardware and software departments, we might as well split them into a hardware and a software company.

          • ujkhsjkdhf234 16 hours ago ago

            Most companies aren't Apple.

  • KaoruAoiShiho 17 hours ago ago

    Locally in Taiwan, there’s growing suspicion that the 2nm process technology was leaked to Japan’s Rapidus.

    People are questioning whether the technology was leaked to Rapidus through Japanese equipment suppliers.

    • AnonMO 17 hours ago ago

      make no sense since Rapidus 2nm process is from IBM.

      • tonyhart7 17 hours ago ago

        idk which shocking, Japanese company try to steal TSMC or IBM have 2nm process out of nowhere

        • trynumber9 15 hours ago ago

          IBM has kept researching in Albany. They license manufacturing technology to other parties even if they gave up trying to build their own fabrication facilities a decade ago.

        • speed_spread 17 hours ago ago

          "Out of nowhere" would be a stretch. IBM may not have mass-market volume anymore but they kept up the production chain to build mainframes (and I would guess other "specialty" products) for institutional customers.

          • tonyhart7 17 hours ago ago

            Intel struggling to reach that level while still producing mass chips, Texas instrument is not even close to that level while being No 2 on US in many many years

            and You tell me that this guy have bleeding edge tech without telling people??? and suddenly build that in Japan??? seems like bullshit since US literally need to make TSMC come to the US

            if IBM can build that, US Gov don't need to suck a TSMC d*k

            • protimewaster 16 hours ago ago

              IBM has been publicly working toward 2nm since at least 2021, though, so it doesn't seem like it's coming from nowhere. Unless this is a completely different 2nm development, here's a presser about it from 2021, titled "Introducing the world's first 2 nm node chip" (https://research.ibm.com/blog/2-nm-chip)

              • tonyhart7 15 hours ago ago

                [flagged]

                • tomasphan 10 hours ago ago

                  What’s going on big guy? Maybe take a break from commenting

                  • tonyhart7 7 hours ago ago

                    I thought HN commenter would be smart people, turns out they just good at Tech and sucks at everything else

      • bilbo0s 17 hours ago ago

        We can make hypersonic missiles.

        I still want to get a look at China's. Right down to the metallurgy.

      • re-thc 17 hours ago ago

        > since Rapidus 2nm process is from IBM

        Unless it has great yields with 0 issues, there's always things to learn from. It's also possible the IBM process isn't what it seems and there's more to it.

  • faeyanpiraat 18 hours ago ago

    This article was just the headline repeated in various forms with some generic filler

    So strange

    • jihadjihad 17 hours ago ago

      I love that there is the headline, an intro, a heading for a section about the iPhone 18, and then another heading titled "TSMC says employees tried to steal trade secrets", which is literally a word-for-word substring of the headline.

    • CGMthrowaway 18 hours ago ago

      When there isn't any info but you have to turn in 400 words to your editor/get paid by the word...

    • dortlick 16 hours ago ago

      There is literally no indication in the article that this has anything to do with apple other than them being a potential user of the TSMC 2nm process. Strange they tried to connect this story to apple.

    • SilverElfin 16 hours ago ago

      Yep. It doesn’t detail what was stolen, how they were found, if they’re arrested right now, or who it is suspected they are working for. Useless article beyond the headline.

    • never_inline 17 hours ago ago

      At least, it doesnt look like chatgptese.

  • TheAceOfHearts 17 hours ago ago

    Could someone help contextualize what parts of this manufacturing process are considered the most important and closely guarded trade secrets? I'd love to hear some slightly more concrete examples.

    How easily could another company replicate this process if they knew all the key details? It was my understanding that access to photolithography machines was one of the major obstacles in replicating chip manufacturing processes.

    • zozbot234 17 hours ago ago

      > Could someone help contextualize what parts of this manufacturing process are considered the most important and closely guarded trade secrets?

      There's way too many fine details to even begin to list. Modern chip fabbing is the closest thing on the planet to actual dark magic, and the difficulty only rises exponentially with every new fabrication node. Literally any part of this could be considered a "trade secret" if it's not already described publicly as part of patents, academic research or both.

    • 15 hours ago ago
      [deleted]
  • delroth 18 hours ago ago

    It's nice to see TSMC's internal security teams are detecting these things, but it would be more surprising news if this kind of IP theft wasn't happening to be honest...

    • 0cf8612b2e1e 17 hours ago ago

      Only the bad criminals get caught.

  • ge96 16 hours ago ago

    My probably-racist sounding comment or nationalistic is my concern for software being owned by a certain entity and then this group is going to be used for the foundation of AI with our military, it will be interesting to see how that turns out.

    edit: in this case someone pointed out it's a different nation so I'm surprised

  • mschuster91 18 hours ago ago

    Reminds me of the now-infamous "capacitor plague" [1] of 1999-2007 that keeps cropping up in electronics repair.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor_plague

    • gus_massa 17 hours ago ago

      I guess you got downvoted because the connection is not obvious. The relevant paragraph of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capacitor_plague#Implications_... is

      > [...] A materials scientist working for Rubycon in Japan left the company, taking the secret water-based electrolyte formula for Rubycon's ZA and ZL series capacitors, and began working for a Chinese company. The scientist then developed a copy of this electrolyte. Then, some staff members who defected from the Chinese company copied an incomplete version of the formula and began to market it to many of the aluminium electrolytic manufacturers in Taiwan [...]

    • voxadam 16 hours ago ago

      Asianometry has an interesting video on the topic titled What Happened to the Capacitors in 2002? [1]

      [1] https://youtu.be/rSpzAVpnXo4

    • sgarland 17 hours ago ago

      TIL! The only time (knock on wood) I ever had a motherboard go bad was an MSI from around 2002, due to a blown capacitor. To their credit, MSI had great support at the time, and sent me a new one after I sent a photo of the blown capacitor.

  • 0cf8612b2e1e 15 hours ago ago

    How big are all of the design files for a modern chip? 10MB? 100gig? Billions of transistors, but surely a lot of compressible redundancy.

    Not that I think you can just plug in a thumb drive and download as you please, but just a sense of scale on how much data describes the design.

    • seanw444 14 hours ago ago

      > Not that I think you can just plug in a thumb drive and download as you please

      Why not? It's just data, and a thumb drive stores data. As long as it fits.

      • 0cf8612b2e1e 14 hours ago ago

        I meant that plugging in a thumb drive and downloading the company jewels is sure to be noticed. I was hoping for something a tad more clandestine. USB storage devices on my corporate laptop are auto mounted as read only and need policy exceptions to be able to write.

        • j_walter 14 hours ago ago

          This was not just from a thumb drive as that is very tightly controlled at TSMC (they did catch someone right away before it got leaked). The employees were caught printing info and removing it from the company (caught due to magnetic ink setting off the metal detectors) as well as using phones to take pictures of their laptop info while connecting from offsite. Taking pictures of remote laptops is a more covert way, but both employees were caught through suspicious pattern analysis and review of access logs of people right before they quit the company.

      • xadhominemx 11 hours ago ago

        TSMC practices compartmentalization. The entire recipe is never stored in one place.

  • chasil 14 hours ago ago
  • metalman 17 hours ago ago

    Grandpa worked heat treat at the alegany national forge, where they made stuff like the beams for the empire state building, periscope tubes, and the 16" guns for the biggest battle ships, each thing had to be tempered in a very specific way, and to deal with spying and espionage, the charts and instuments used on the shop floor were all deliberatly wrong,and the written instructions were also wrong leaving the person in charge to know how to convert the given instructions into what was actualy done through a secret method, not complicated, but essentialy impossible to reverse engineer. There is a story of soviet engineers who somehow were invited to tour the RR jet turbine factory, and were given shoes that had extra sticky soles they wore only for the tour, which ewere then used to anyalise the metal chips that get picked up from the shop floor..... never ends, expected.....even honored

  • 0xTJ 15 hours ago ago

    I'm confused about the iPhone 18 part; I assume that it would just be one of their usual processes, possibly with a few tweaks.

    • j_walter 14 hours ago ago

      The iPhone 18 part is for clicks...it really has nothing to do with the iPhone 18 and everything to do with TSMC's N2 process.

  • epistemovault 17 hours ago ago

    So even if someone steals the secret sauce, does that mean they can actually cook the same dish?

    • mrheosuper 4 hours ago ago

      When you have secret sauce, the next thing to do is hiring the right cook, which is much easier to do.

    • amelius 16 hours ago ago

      No, but if you want to cook the same dish it sure helps to have the secret sauce.

  • theodric 16 hours ago ago

    Serious props to TSMC for having the processes in place to catch this or figure it out, sacking the alleged bastards, announcing the insider breach publicly (and accepting the consequences of a moment of corporate vulnerability, but at the same time showing their transparency and commitment to protecting client IP), and further not allowing mere job loss to be the end of the story. I had no particular opinion about TSMC, but my respect for them has moved up a notch now.

  • amelius 15 hours ago ago

    Funny thing is that Apple doesn't know how to make an iPhone.

  • quyleanh 16 hours ago ago

    They said [1] in article but put iPhone 18 chip process just for clickbait… Disappointed.

    [1] No details have been shared on the nature of the information obtained. It is likely that it relates to the 2nm process in general rather than anything specific to Apple’s A20 chip.

  • NoMoreNicksLeft 17 hours ago ago

    Gee, I wonder which nation-state actor was orchestrating this...

    • karakot 16 hours ago ago

      I always wondered - why people use a nation-state notion? Why not just a state or a country? USA is not a nation-state, or UK, or India, or Russia, etc. Does your question imply that none of these countries are capable of orchestrating this and only nation-states can do it?

      • overfeed 8 hours ago ago

        > I always wondered - why people use a nation-state notion?

        It's a shibboleth, similar to HN favorites: "orders of magnitude" and "orthogonal". Shibboleths are often social signifiers, sociology has lots of research on why people use them

        • karakot 8 hours ago ago

          ha-ha, thanks, makes sense.

      • matthewbauer 13 hours ago ago

        Hard to know what OP meant, but I took it as an oblique reference to China.

        • karakot 8 hours ago ago

          Well, is China a nation-state or a multi-national state, or essentially just a country(state)? English is my third language, so I just wonder do I miss some nuance here.

      • NoMoreNicksLeft 13 hours ago ago

        New Jersey is a state. I do not think that they have the wherewithal to attempt such. Scotland is a country, but I don't think their occupiers would allow them to try. Granted, it is an awkward term, and I too wish there was a better one.

        >Does your question imply that none of these countries are capable of orchestrating this and only nation-states can do it?

        It's not clear to me that Russia can summon the ambition. But point conceded.

    • bilbo0s 17 hours ago ago

      They claim it was Japan.

      More specifically, Rapidus.

  • OfficeChad 8 hours ago ago

    [dead]

  • 18 hours ago ago
    [deleted]
  • mathiaspoint 14 hours ago ago

    Hard to feel bad for Apple when a lot of this is about locking customers out of their own devices and then cheaping out with contract manufacturing. I almost want to cheer on the employees doing this.