He is clearly unwilling to change, so, Super Micro is just going to die a painful death.
> ...
> Shares of Super Micro were up as much as 5.4% on Tuesday.
Huh?
The people with billions of dollars in the market know what is happening with their portfolio companies before it is announced, they're not waiting around for newspaper to say something. Newspapers are for us nobodies at home. If you've got billions to play with, you can get your own high-quality primary sources of information that are better and faster.
> On Thursday, the Justice Department announced it had indicted 71-year-old co-founder Wally Liaw, along with a Supermicro sales manager in Taiwan, Ruei-Tsang "Steven" Chang, and a contractor Ting-Wei "Willy" Sun for conspiring to smuggle the GPUs starting in 2024.
https://www.pcmag.com/news/co-founder-of-us-server-maker-ind...
> Prosecutors allege that Mr Liaw used brokers to order servers containing advanced Nvidia chips on behalf of a “pass-through” entity in South-East Asia; many were assembled in America and shipped to that entity, then repackaged in unmarked boxes and sent on to China. To fool customs inspectors, those involved allegedly created thousands of “dummy” servers to sit in the warehouses where the buyer claimed to store the equipment.
https://www.economist.com/business/2026/03/26/a-new-case-of-...
The good news jail time for a founder is sounding quite possible.
If you're helping break federal law and you know about it, you should go to jail.
That's what I presume the "contributed to this" meant, this=this crime
Unless you think there is some reason why those running that same federal government are free to commit any type of federal crimes they wish with no repercussions...