All you need to know about Super Micro, the US computer firm allegedly compromised by Chinese spies
Silicon Valley-based information technology company Super Micro Computer (Supermicro) saw its share price plummet more than 40 per cent after a Bloomberg BusinessWeek report on Thursday alleged that it sold servers compromised by Chinese spies to major US tech firms including Apple and Amazon. Here’s what you need to know about the company.
What does it do?
Headquartered in San Jose, California, Supermicro was founded in 1993 by Taiwanese-American Charles Liang. It specialises in servers and server motherboards – products that connect all the system components in a computer and allows them to interact. While the company engineers the motherboards and servers mostly at its US headquarters, the products are almost entirely manufactured by contractors in China.
What is the allegation against it?
The Bloomberg story alleged that Supermicro’s servers had been compromised by Chinese interests. Citing 17 unnamed government and corporate sources, it said Chinese spies had planted tiny microchips inside the servers used by about 30 American companies – including Apple and Amazon.com – and multiple government agencies, giving Beijing access to their internal networks.