New Car Accusation of Copying Great Wall Ignites Hot Discussion, FF Global President Wang Jiawei Responds Face-to-Face
Phoenix Technology News, August 3rd. In response to recent controversy over Faraday Future's new car accused of copying the Great Wall, FF global president Wang Jiawei responded on his social media account today. He explicitly stated that the relevant car models are the result of collaboration between FF and its Chinese industrial partners, and there is no copying situation.
Wang Jiawei explained FF's cooperation model, believing that this is not copying but rather a mutually beneficial partnership. He described it as "each doing their job, each taking what they're good at," aimed at combining the advantages of both parties to quickly bring excellent Chinese products into the US market and achieve landing. He emphasized that this cooperation mode is not something anyone can do, having its unique features.
Wang Jiawei pointed out that FF contributed its accumulated core abilities and values in this collaboration. One of FF's core strengths lies in being able to develop localized products according to US market demands, such as conducting collision tests meeting American standards, and developing operating systems tailored to local usage habits.
Wang Jiawei finally revealed the latest developments in the project to prove its unique value, stating that relevant vehicles have already been tested on public roads in the US and FF has obtained 10,000 paid orders. He acknowledged that doing the right thing will always be accompanied by support and criticism, but FF will resolutely push forward with what it believes can create incremental value for all shareholders.