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  Magic Leap to former staff: You can’t steal our secrets

Magic Leap to former staff: You can’t steal our secrets

AP
Published : May 31, 2016, 6:21 am IST
Updated : May 31, 2016, 6:21 am IST

Artificial reality startup Magic Leap is accusing two Silicon Valley employees of stealing the closely guarded secrets behind its technological tricks.

Representational image
 Representational image

Artificial reality startup Magic Leap is accusing two Silicon Valley employees of stealing the closely guarded secrets behind its technological tricks.

The allegations of betrayal and skullduggery surfaced in a lawsuit that Magic Leap filed late Thursday in federal court after the two workers, Gary Bradski and Adrian Kaehler, sued the company for wrongful termination earlier this week.

An attorney for Bradski and Kaehler denied the company's allegations.

The legal tussle over intellectual property and stock options highlights the rising stakes in artificial reality as more technology companies bet it will produce the industry's next big breakthroughs.

Since its inception six years ago, Magic Leap has emerged as one of artificial reality's most intriguing startups while raising $1.4 billion from a list of investors that include Google and China's Alibaba Group.

The last round of financing completed earlier this year valued the Dania Beach, Florida, company at $4.5 billion, even though it hasn't released a product yet and hasn't even disclosed a timetable for doing so.

Magic Leap instead has released videos providing tantalising glimpses at what it's working on: a pair of goggles that will project three-dimensional, life-like images within the real world.

The company describes the technique as “mixed reality”, although it's known as “augmented reality” through most of the technology industry.

Other headsets, such as Facebook's Oculus Rift, that immerse users in a completely fabricated world are examples of what's known as "virtual reality."

Whatever its technology is called, Magic Leap has enthralled the media with its demonstrations and the pedigree of its backers.

In a recent cover story, Wired magazine hailed Magic Leap as “the world’s hottest startup”.

Google, now part of Alphabet Inc., has become so intertwined with Magic Leap that its CEO, Sundar Pichai, sits on the startup’s board. But the battle with two of the 85 employees located in its Mount-ain View, California, office threatens to drag Magic Leap into the mud.

Jack Russo, the lawyer representing Bradski and Kaehler, said the wrongful termination suit filed against Magic Leap will prove the company tried to wrest away employee stock options worth millions of dollars without a valid reason. He predicted the evidence will make other top engineers reluctant to work for Magic Leap.

Russo also painted an unflattering picture of Magic Leap CEO Rony Abovitz. Russo said Abovitz went into a "fit of rage" after Bradski and Kaehler tried to negotiate "consulting freedom" clauses in their contracts.

Location: United States, California, San Francisco