Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China United States

US Agrees To Remove Xiaomi From Blacklist After Lawsuit (bloomberg.com) 66

Xiaomi and the U.S. government have text to set aside a Trump administration blacklisting that could have restricted American investment in the Chinese smartphone maker. From a report: The Chinese smartphone giant had sued the government earlier this year, after the U.S. Defense Department under former President Donald Trump issued an order designating the firm as a Communist Chinese Military Company, which would have led to a de-listing from U.S. exchanges and deletion from global benchmark indexes. The U.S. Defense Department has now agreed that a final order vacating the designation "would be appropriate," according to a filing to the U.S. courts Tuesday. Xiaomi declined to comment. Pentagon representatives weren't immediately available for comment after normal hours. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said at a regular press briefing in Beijing she wasn't aware of any deal the firm may have reached with the U.S. "The Parties have agreed upon a path forward that would resolve this litigation without the need for contested briefing," according to the filing, which didn't state whether the agreement included any conditions for removal. The parties involved are negotiating over specific terms and will file a separate joint proposal before May 20.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

US Agrees To Remove Xiaomi From Blacklist After Lawsuit

Comments Filter:
    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Not sure if AmiMojo/ShangaiBill are awake at this hour.

      • Those aren't even the beginning of the CCP sockpuppets on here. They come in after the story slows down and sledgehammer you with mod points from the puppet accounts.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        I'm awake. This is good news, Xiaomi make some great gear. Their vacuum cleaners are top notch and so are their phones and TV boxes.

        I don't know why anyone wouldn't welcome this, what do you think Xiaomi is doing that warrants a ban?

        • by RevDisk ( 740008 )
          Xiaomi was alleged to be in part controlled by the People's Liberation Army. The PLA is directly hostile to the US Department of Defense, and is engaged in espionage, spying and hacking attempts basically on a daily basis. Xiaomi disputes the ownership part. The real answer is, no one outside of the PRC likely knows for sure. But the US courts more or less asked the DOD to prove it, and they couldn't or didn't.

          To directly answer your question, if the US Army or Marines manufactured smart phones or otherw
          • by cusco ( 717999 )

            You are aware that the US s engaged in espionage, spying and hacking attempts basically on a daily basis directed at at least a dozen countries, right?

            The Pentagram can't limit its personnel from buying any damn phone they want for personal use, and Xiaomi was never in the running to sell phones to the military, not really sure what your point is (beyond the obvious xenophobia).

    • The people who would benefit don't post here. Slashdot's heyday was when the "Slashdot effect" actually meant something. Now bots outdo us on a regular basis.

    • This appears mainly about targeting Xiaomi specifically on military ties. Xiaomi is different than Huawei, cannot invest in privately owned Huawei. Xiaomi complying with Global reporting is beneficial and unless going to ban other China hq companies then should treat Xiaomi fairly. Yes Xiaomi still has to comply with China rules which could cause other conflicts, but the blacklist was a firm designation of military ties. Need a better rule but that will cast a wider net with deeper implications to global co
  • ...The U.S. Defense Department has now agreed that a final order vacating the designation "would be appropriate," according to a filing to the U.S. courts Tuesday...

    Next will be blinking on Nord Stream 2, for I do not see how USA's policies can stop the project, with just about 100KM of pipe laying left. So much has been sunk into it thus far.

    As Putin once said, "The dogs bark, but the caravan goes on".

    The USA can bark here, many will ignore!

    • by Elledan ( 582730 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2021 @10:59AM (#61376708) Homepage
      Nordstream 2 looks to be dead in the water, actually. With the Greens looking to become the new main party of Germany with the election later this year and ousting the Conservative party, Nordstream 2's days seem solidly numbered.

      So far the Greens have advocated a strong line against Russia and Russian gas. Very likely they'll side more with the US than with Russia even on 'business' deals.
  • by TomGreenhaw ( 929233 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2021 @12:21PM (#61377054)
    Free trade used to be a Republican rallying cry. Now they use free trade policies to hammer their political foes. This should not be a political issue.

    That said, I for one have serious issues about computer products made in China. They likely are social scoring everyone on the planet and I find that offensive. Their laws preclude any kind of real privacy. If they treat their citizens this way, imagine how they feel about Americans or Europeans. I don't need a law to tell me to look elsewhere for products. The right answer is public education about privacy, not corrupt trade barriers.

    All modern smart phones are essentially trojan horses loaded with spyware. We consumers should be free to make informed decisions about privacy and product choice.
    • Quote: "That said, I for one have serious issues about computer products made in China."

      So... basically... you... have serious issues about ALL computer products available in the market.

      Are you using a telegraph to write on Slashdot?

      • Yes, I do have problems with nearly all products. Currently I place a lot of my trust in Samsung, but I would prefer a US made and regulated family of consumer devices. I like everyone else is living with it but I don't have to like it and am holding out hope for alternatives.

        I'm uncomfortable with my government telling me which brand of spyware I have to buy. Our reality is really starting to look like a Dark Mirror episode as there are no good choices, only less bad ones.
        • +1. My first phone was an openmoko. It was a lot of fun to hack a multi-level icons system using only shell script. I loved that. Now, that phone would not have been able to do a fraction of what smartphones can do today thanks to app stores. My Android phone is my way to not need windows, since you don't always have an app for Linux but usually there is at least one for Android. And Android is still way better than Windows in terms of security, stability, viruses, updates, ...

          But it still very much lacks

          • I've been thinking about trying the Pine Phone. I also am playing around with the Open Smart watch. I made something I call the MusicBox that is replacing my Alexa and Samsung Smarthings home automation setup.

            Privacy is only one of the reasons I'm in the process of kicking the mass market stuff to the curb. I'm sick of the code rot (are you listening Alexa) and abandonment of support for "vintage" products (are you listening Samsung, Google and Apple). Also, these things don't really do everything I want
  • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Wednesday May 12, 2021 @01:28PM (#61377418)
    Countries that oppress their citizens should be forced to only engage in commerce with other countries that do the same. It's insane that democracies engage in trade with these hooligans. Go ahead and have fun down voting this you CCP animals.

"All the people are so happy now, their heads are caving in. I'm glad they are a snowman with protective rubber skin" -- They Might Be Giants

Working...