China's DJI rejects claim that it leaks data to Russia on Ukrainian military positions

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China's DJI rejects claim that it leaks data to Russia on Ukrainian military positions

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Reuters

BEIJING — Chinese drone maker DJI has dismissed as “utterly false” accusations that it is leaking data on Ukrainian military positions to Russia after a German retailer cited such information as the reason for taking its products off shelves.

Financial Post
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The rejection followed Friday’s Twitter revelation of the removal by German electronics and home appliances giant MediaMarkt in response to “information from various sources,” although it gave no details of the information it had.

On Twitter, the Chinese firm said, “DJI promotes civilian drone applications that benefit society,” adding that MediaMarkt’s accusation was “utterly false.”

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In Saturday’s statement, it said, “We do not support any use that does harm to people’s lives, rights and interests.”

MediaMarkt, which runs more than 800 stores in 12 European nations and Turkey, did not say what information it had received about DJI.

“As a responsible company, we have taken immediate action and removed the manufacturer from our product range groupwide until further notice,” it said on its official Twitter account on Friday.

MediaMarkt was replying to a user who accused DJI of leaking GPS data of Ukrainian military positions to Russia.

“We will closely examine further indications and developments,” it added.

It called the move “a clear signal for the values that have the highest priority for us,” which it saw come under attack by Russia’s “aggressive” war against Ukraine.

Users of the Chinese drone giant’s products range from photography hobbyists to U.S. fire departments.

The firm has found itself in an uncomfortable position after Russia invaded Ukraine more than a month ago in what Moscow calls a “special military operation.”

While Western firms have pulled out of Russia in protest, DJI has stayed on, like many Chinese companies, taking a cue from Beijing’s stance of refraining from criticism of Moscow over the invasion.

On March 16, Mykhailo Fedorov, Ukraine’s minister of digital transformation, said he asked DJI founder Frank Wang in a letter to cut ties with Russia, accusing its troops of using DJI products for the navigation of missiles that kill Ukrainian civilians.

The next day, DJI responded on Twitter that its products, designed for civilian use, were inappropriate for military missions. (Reporting by Eduardo Baptista; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)