Britain and Germany Will Not Ban Huawei, Citing Lack of Spying Evidence (reuters.com) 240
An anonymous Slashdot reader writes from a report via Reuters: Despite persistent U.S. allegations of Chinese state spying, Britain said it is able to manage the security risks of using Huawei telecom equipments and has not seen any evidence of malicious activity by the company, a senior official said on Wednesday. Asked later whether Washington had presented Britain with any evidence to support its allegations, he told reporters: "I would be obliged to report if there was evidence of malevolence [...] by Huawei. And we're yet to have to do that. So I hope that covers it."
At the same time, German officials have told The Wall Street Journal that the country has made a "preliminary decision" to allow Huawei to bid on contracts for 5G networking. Catering to the surging populism, the U.S. has accused Huawei and other Chinese telecom equipments, along with European cars, as national security risks, even though the National Security Agency, American's cyber spying agency, was found to have wiretapped German Chancellor Angela Merkel, conducted economic espionage against France, and hacked into Chinese networks. Earlier this week, beleaguered Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei described the continued investigations by the U.S. into the Chinese firm -- including the arrest of his daughter and company CFO, Meng Wanzhou -- as politically motivated.
At the same time, German officials have told The Wall Street Journal that the country has made a "preliminary decision" to allow Huawei to bid on contracts for 5G networking. Catering to the surging populism, the U.S. has accused Huawei and other Chinese telecom equipments, along with European cars, as national security risks, even though the National Security Agency, American's cyber spying agency, was found to have wiretapped German Chancellor Angela Merkel, conducted economic espionage against France, and hacked into Chinese networks. Earlier this week, beleaguered Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei described the continued investigations by the U.S. into the Chinese firm -- including the arrest of his daughter and company CFO, Meng Wanzhou -- as politically motivated.
Boy who cried wolf (Score:5, Interesting)
The US has squandered its credibility. I can't say that Huawei inspires me with trust, but US accusations mean nothing.
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The US has squandered its credibility.
Huh? We pissed that away before GW'd barely begun. Anyway, to paraphrase Mao, "credibility" comes from the point of a gun.
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The US has squandered its credibility. I can't say that Huawei inspires me with trust, but US accusations mean nothing.
... and now that the US is being ruled by New York's village idiot and has decided to isolate itself, the EU is beginning to move closer to the fastest growing, and soon to be largest single economy in the world. The real irony of the situation is that this entire evolution is being driven by Trumpism and would not be happening if it wasn't for the Trump administration. American politics has devolved into a foot shooting contest.
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The EU isn't one country but that aside it wouldn't be wise for the EU to slip into the top spot even if they could. The thing about being number one is that it makes you a fat and ripe target and the EU is low hanging fruit. The US, China, and Russia can swoop in pretty much anytime and scoop it up. Hell the US already conquered it once, it was just held by the Germans at the time and they kindly gave it back to the people the Germans took it from. The US is much stronger now than then and China and Russia
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Re: Boy who cried wolf (Score:1)
Ideas are not property. IP laws are a US thing. The US has no right to apply it's rules to other nations.
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When a company like Huawei (or any company) does business with the US, has assets or people in the US, officers? Yeah, law does matter, bitch. Spread em and cough, here comes the delouser. And I hope you like cantina food.
Oh yeah, in this country? You get a full trial. WITH Lawyer, ACTUAL lawyer, not a court lackey joke like in China. You get actual rights. Especially if you're a Billionaire like Meng, it's kind of ridiculous.
You don't just get swept up off the street into a black site for months like
Re: Boy who cried wolf (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, TFA is about Huawei doing business elsewhere, and the authorities there have decided that whatever stuff US spewed about the "rich Chinks", as you call them, is baseless.
This is a welcome change, as Brexitannia has until recently followed the US repeating its lies about Iraq, Syria, Russia and whatnot to the letter.
So we see, when it comes to real money, propaganda still fails.
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The US government is just looking out for US corporations, trying to secure a bigger piece of the estimated 3.5 trillion dollars that 5G will generate by spreading FUD about their biggest competition.
Boy who let the wolf in, better title. (Score:4, Informative)
https://www.hongkongfp.com/2018/12/12/three-hong-kong-passports-arrested-huawei-exec-meng-wanzhou-revealed-canadian-court/
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/dec/07/meng-wanzhou-huawei-cfo-court-bail-fraud-sanctions-breach-canada
https://www.businessinsider.com/second-huawei-employee-arrested-in-poland-on-suspicion-of-china-spying-2019-1
https://www.scmp.com/business/companies/article/2177512/huawei-and-skycom-firm-accused-breaching-us-sanctions-shared-web
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-china-huawei-tech/huawei-units-to-be-arraigned-on-u-s-criminal-charges-on-feb-28-idUSKCN1PN2WP
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/third-canadian-detained-in-china-following-arrest-of-huawei-exec-2018-12-19
https://www.forbes.com/sites/arthurherman/2018/12/10/huaweis-and-chinas-dangerous-high-tech-game/
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Mod informative
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Almost all of those links except one or two is about the US sanctions breach, that no one but the US cares about.
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Re: Boy who cried wolf (Score:4, Funny)
The US government is just looking out for US corporations, trying to secure a bigger piece of the estimated 3.5 trillion dollars that 5G will generate by spreading FUD about their biggest competition.
Meanwhile the British and Germans are saving billions on not having backup infrastructure.. If we lose any data we'll just ask the Chinese government for it.
Espionage based backup is insanely cheap.
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You don't just get swept up off the street into a black site for months like in China
You people are so funny. There are plenty of examples of America doing exactly this.
When they dont just assasinate or drone strike the people instead.
America 'justice' is so non existant most people just take plea bargains and never even make it to the 'fair trial' stage.
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No but they do execute children in their own nation with machine guns and tanks. Hell per their story that Tibet is part of their country they burn their own civilians alive.
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Oh really? When was the last time you were slowly roasted to death? Which individual who suffered both did you ask?
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When you are caught red-handed with the bag of coke, a scale and some more baggies, how much "justice" were you hoping to evade? Maybe when you were caught with that stolen car and they tried to flee with it, you expected a slap on the wrist?
You mean that armed robbery just wasn't suppose to end up in homicide, say it ain't so.
The vast majority of defendants are very much guilty. You may disagree with the law but the criminal justice system doesn't write the law so best complain to your Congresscritter.
Real
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IP laws in European Union are in general more draconian than in US due to GDPR.
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Apologies, I'm engaged a discussion on GDPR and confused it for a moment.
I meant the old copyright directive from about a decade ago.
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My post is about talking about two things at once and accidentally mixing them up. I was referring to the copyright directive from about a decade ago, that resulted in some rather nasty national legislation in most EU member states, far more strict than DMCA.
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Chinese IP laws are not extremely lax, they're actually quite tight. China has been the state making the most international patent claims for quite a while.
Problem is not tightness or laxness of these laws. Problem is the selective application of the laws.
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IP laws are an international thing supported by international treaties, treaties China has repeatedly promised to enforce.
Re:Boy who cried wolf (Score:5, Informative)
^ This. (Score:3, Interesting)
When the British are willing to publicly turn their nose at their 'ally' in a big way like this, you know it is bad.
Personally, having used rooted Huawei phones, and having previously had them be one of the few phone companies to allow unlocking without having to phone in, I can say that Huawei phones are/were nicely engineered, had unique features compared to their competitors and were immensely reliable (I only stopped using mine after misplacing it for a few weeks, and having a replacement purchased for
Re:^ This. (Score:4, Interesting)
Just because the backdoor was left open by China, doesn't mean they're the only ones who can walk in. Isn't that what we've been saying about "government-mandated backdoors" all along? Who's to say an American TLA won't use the same backdoor to find/plant incriminating evidence on your phone?
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"When the British are willing to publicly turn their nose at their 'ally' in a big way like this, you know it is bad."
Especially since more than enough support has been released publicly to refute those claims.
Re:Boy who cried wolf (Score:5, Insightful)
You're just repeating the flamebait summary, when actually the UK is only refusing to "completely ban" them. They're still agreeing that extensive "mitigation" is necessary, and they won't be allowed everywhere. So only a partial ban.
You're just some foreign propagandist's tool. Like a bot, but stupider.
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Enough evidence has already been publicly released to damn them. I don't know why the Brits are turning traitor.
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Enough evidence has already been publicly released to damn them. I don't know why the Brits are turning traitor.
Could you cite the links to this publicly released evidence? There is certainly a lot of noise... Thanks.
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These aren't mine, they were posted elsewhere. We also had a story about their bonus program for employees who steal trade secrets based on how sensitive what they've stolen is.
https://www.hongkongfp.com/2018/12/12/three-hong-kong-passports-arrested-huawei-exec-meng-wanzhou-revealed-canadian-court/
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2018/dec/07/meng-wanzhou-huawei-cfo-court-bail-fraud-sanctions-breach-canada
https://www.businessinsider.com/second-huawei-employee-arrested-in-poland-on-suspicion-of-china-sp
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There is no "intellectual property". There are various temporary monopoly licenses given by the state (patents, copyrights, etc.) to the author of an intellectual work to recoup their costs. But the catch is that those licenses are limited.
Trying to turn them into a perpetuity is a lawyer trick, which only feeds the "intellectual property" lobbyist and lawyers, and does nothing for the real authors, who actually come up with the clever ideas.
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There's Kickstarter, Patreon,
Yes, let's disrupt the boring old business model of artists getting paid for stuff they sell because people like it, and replace it with a return to begging.
Sorry, begging on the internet.
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You're asking for people to prove a negative. It's the responsibility of the person making the accusations to provide evidence of wrongdoing. Nothing ever satisfies someone asking for evidence to prove a negative.
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What do states spying on states have to do with states spying for businesses? States spying on each other is fair game and it has been no secret the US spies on everyone and everyone spies on the US since at least the 80's. The only surprising thing with the leaks is how successful they are at it but what they don't generally do is bring government sized and capabilities to promote private interests (except maybe in a rare instance where it a security interest). China is a different beast with the state and
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What do states spying on states have to do with states spying for businesses? States spying on each other is fair game and it has been no secret the US spies on everyone and everyone spies on the US since at least the 80's. The only surprising thing with the leaks is how successful they are at it but what they don't generally do is bring government sized and capabilities to promote private interests (except maybe in a rare instance where it a security interest). China is a different beast with the state and business tightly coupled.
The US done the same an been caught doing it on numerous occasions. Not that want to defend, fuck both US and China on mixing national and business espionage.
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"Show me a big US company that has no China subsidiary."
Show me something US Intelligence would be doing with Chinese business that isn't defensive. Their entire industry and IP base came from the US.
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The side that wins such wars is the one that is more geopolitically advantaged. China is very much disadvantaged here, just from the point of view of the massive structural problems. Just because Shenzhen is innovative doesn't outweigh the structural inertia of almost 99% of the rest of the country.
It doesn't outweigh the fact that entire Chinese success wholly depends on US continuing to provide their shipping maritime security guarantees as started with Bretton-Woods. That's why they are in a process of a
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"It is a lot simpler -- the Chinese companies are generally more innovative, competitive, flexible and adaptable and therefore China is a lot more pro free-market than the US today."
ROFL In the sense they sell non-functional fake hardware, produce additional runs of products ordered by US companies, and everything they sell on Alibaba was invented in the US (okay, there is some European in there as well). The handful of Chinese products anyone has ever heard of are just attempts to replicate and make their
It's naive to think foreign designs are no threat (Score:2, Insightful)
Every sufficiently capable country should be mandating a complete set of source code minimally and ideally developing homegrown designs and manufacturing capability for security reasons. Relying on the US, China, and/or other countries is a really bad idea. Some countries have recognized the threat and responded accordingly. At least India, Russia, and Iran have some home-grown design, development, and manufacturing capabilities that they are working on. If only they were offering competing products on the
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It isn't like they do much. They make censored state versions of a few things and they adapt some software to run on their cheap knock off devices.
Idiots (Score:1)
Does evidence of bad customer service count? (Score:5, Interesting)
The real problem would be finding evidence that American companies can be trusted, eh?
From the purely economic perspective, China has the most to lose if they allow any private companies to get involved in spying. I'd go even farther and say that the Chinese leaders (including Xi) have redefined "communism" to mean "whatever makes money". That means it would now be an attack on "The Party" if Huawei did anything that threatened their corporate profits.
Having said that, I think the real threat to Huawei's profits is bad customer service. I've actually owned about 6 Huawei devices going back more than a decade. Technically they have all been on the scale from good to excellent, and the prices have put them on the scale from excellent value to superior, but the customer service has always been on the scale from none to miserable. I think if Huawei seriously wants to be an international player in broader areas of consumer electronics, they desperately need to rethink and redo their entire customer service operation. Nuking the support part of their website would be a good start. (Maybe it isn't so gawdawful in Chinese? I'm sure it can't be worse.)
Then again, there are some features to look for to determine if ANY maker's devices have been designed with espionage in mind. Level 0 would be things like unmentioned microphones, but the google just won that boobie prize. Level 1 would be reasonable features like EEPROM that has legitimate purposes but which could be used to install malware. After all, every device may need an upgrade at some point.
Level 2 would be clever design for fail safe concealment of the espionage-related capabilities. For example, a DRAM without power protection could be used for holding malware that would automatically disappear when the power is cut for any reason. Part of the POST could check for the network environment so as to detect if the device has been moved into a trap or DMZ (thus preventing re-installation of the spyware).
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My Huawei just got Android Pie update last night. I am pleased because I owned the Android phone for a year now. All my previous Android phones got 0 support after 3 months of owning them.
Re:Does evidence of bad customer service count? (Score:5, Insightful)
Huawei is not a private company. It is a state-run institution. The only private companies in China are small to medium operations. Everything big enough to be strategically important is owned and/or managed by the Chinese army or the Chinese Communist Party.
Americans tend to assume that the rest of the world is like the US, but it isn't. Here, we have private companies. They are usually willing to cooperate to some extent with the government, but they are still mostly privately owned and managed. That is approximately the current situation throughout most of Western Civilization, but it is actually quite rare elsewhere.
Most importantly, China does not run on that model at all. The Chinese Communist Party owns the government and military, which in turn owns almost all of the industry and technology.
Imagine if the NSA got into the business of building cell phone network equipment using chips produced by the Air Force Cyber Command's semiconductor foundry and financed as a joint venture by the CIA and the Pentagon. No big deal, right?
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Were you talking to me? There is a tangential point of possible contact in my second paragraph.
Based on what you wrote, I think you are quite naive about how the CIA and NSA do things. Also misguided about China, though that's more in the area of exaggeration. There are more similarities in the behavior of corporate cancers than you seem to appreciate.
However your apparent attitude certainly makes it appear that you would hate to be confused by any actual facts that don't support what you've already decided
US Industry==US Governmnt (Score:4, Insightful)
If you think US Industry and US Government are not connected when the corporations basically buy the elections for their favorit politicians than I have a bridge to sell you. US National Security is defined as whatever is good for US business. Huawei was alright till it was making copies of Western Tech. Now that they have actually overtaken and hold most of the 5G patents they are bad for US business and hence bad for US National Security.
Whether the companies are state owned or the state is company owned in neither China or the US system do you have independent govt and industry.
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"If you think US Industry and US Government are not connected when the corporations basically buy the elections for their favorit politicians than I have a bridge to sell you. US National Security is defined as whatever is good for US business. "
It is a completely different thing. Politicians are sold on the free market as well in the US and they battle each other, whatever is helping one company or industry is hurting another. The form of business and government interaction that is of concern in the US is
Re:US Industry==US Government (Score:2)
Thats a distinction without a difference. Neither US is a capitalist country nor is China a Communist country. Both of them are Crony Capitalist or Fascist (Like Mussolinis Italy).
Fascism without the racism comes down to state directed capitalism where the State instead of being a regulator (as in Capitalism) or owner (as in Communism) is a promoter of industry. State directed capitalism. Mostly directed through export licenses, tax incentives, tariffs, exemptions to worker laws.
Nothing wrong with fascism (
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Huawei is not a private company. It is a state-run institution. The only private companies in China are small to medium operations. Everything big enough to be strategically important is owned and/or managed by the Chinese army or the Chinese Communist Party.
Americans tend to assume that the rest of the world is like the US, but it isn't. Here, we have private companies. They are usually willing to cooperate to some extent with the government, but they are still mostly privately owned and managed. That is approximately the current situation throughout most of Western Civilization, but it is actually quite rare elsewhere.
Most importantly, China does not run on that model at all. The Chinese Communist Party owns the government and military, which in turn owns almost all of the industry and technology.
Imagine if the NSA got into the business of building cell phone network equipment using chips produced by the Air Force Cyber Command's semiconductor foundry and financed as a joint venture by the CIA and the Pentagon. No big deal, right?
Huawei is not owned by the Chinese state. It is owned by the company's employees, Ren Zhengfei (founder & CEO) and some of the managers with the latter two probably owning a majority of the shares. The Company employees shares are managed by the employee union.
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In general that website is not a credible source, though it is possible the specific author is an outlier. If you want to cite such sources, you need to include something to indicate that you or the source are worth paying attention to.
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So the main difference is that in China the government controls big companies, and in the US the big companies control the government.
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Very succinct response, though I suspect you're trying to argue with a troll. While I agree with you, I think there is actually an adversarial element involved because the corporations (and the fools who think they own and control the corporations rather than vice versa) are locked into the single dimension of money. Therefore they are focused on buying the cheapest politicians, which ultimately evolved into "investing" most of their money in the former Republican Party. Yes, they still make some donations
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"From the purely economic perspective, China has the most to lose if they allow any private companies to get involved in spying."
Chinese major private companies ARE public companies. The US state exchanging spies with other countries is of little relevance the companies here largely make or break on their own with the exception of some security concerns.
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Unclear what you are tying to say. About the most charitable interpretation I can imagine is that you are confused about reverse engineering and standardization. The entire IP question is a can of worms that I did not particularly want to open here.
My (intended) focus was on Huawei's pretenses of being an international company...
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China uses economics to create "soft power". Where the US would send in the CIA to organize a coup or assassinate someone, China offers loans and builds infrastructure and does a lot of our manufacturing.
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Another short and insightful reply, but where are the mod points. (In my own case, I think they they've been permanently removed.)
And yet no one in this discussion has offered any constructive suggestions on the primary topic. I still have no idea what to do about Huawei's terrible customer support for my latest (and possibly final) Huawei device. They actually sent me email offering to exchange it, which is NOT what I want. Near as I can tell, there is nothing wrong with it, but I just don't understand it
Spy chips on SuperMicro boards and WMDs in Iraq (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure one has to assume back-doors exist in network equipment and handle the risks - but in Cisco hardware, such back-doors (as trivial as "default passwords") pop up like every other month, even before the NSA tampers with the devices during shipment.
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We should explore the validity of said sanctions law, not just swallow it whole.
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"What is the US justification for those sanctions?"
Beside the point? The sanctions exist.
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Ffkom, so if Huawei DOES turn out to have operated a subsidiary shell corporation to evade US sanctions law.. does that mean YOU HAVE NO CREDIBILITY, IN FACT, IN THE FINAL ANALYSIS?
Found the CIA shill.
Related:
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Sanctions don't have to be valid, they're policy.
So, you're saying that it is okay for a nation to lie to justify hostile policies against other nations? Well, excuse me, but that goes against both the spirit and the letter of practically all international law. Any nation that does that should be shunned, including yours.
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I'm reading it again: "Sanctions don't have to be valid". That is, the justification for them can be made up. This is unacceptable and should be shunned, and this is exactly what the two countries mentioned in TFS are doing.
You can't weasel yourself out of it by whataboutism and references to the "Communist scare".
As for this "thieving ethnostate criminal cabal without laws" thingy that you're talking about... That actually smells and sounds a lot like a PNAC US cabinet, the third edition of which is in pow
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You're confusing the argument here. Before the legality is the issue of the legitimacy. The legitimacy of the US "sanctions" comes from the old and tired idea that "might makes right". Now, it is very shortsighted to argue legitimacy from this point of view, because legitimacy should be based on principles and not on circumstances.
"Might" is transient, and the US has already weakened considerably since the peak of its power in the late 40s and the early 50s of the 20th century. In another 2 decades, or mayb
BND and GCHQ say no to the NSA? (Score:3)
The NSA allowed the BND and GCHQ to grow. Their staff worked with the NSA/CIA for decades.
This is how the BND and GCHQ responds to the USA after decades of US support and sharing?
The USA asked Germany and the UK for one telco thing over the decades and the UK and Germany say no the USA?
All the training, equipment, crypto help, tracking of the IRA and the UK says no after decades of free US support?
All the help the USA tax payers gave West Germany with the Stasi and Soviet Union?
Time for the USA to get its Special Relationship going with Canada and New Zealand.
Give more supportive nations like New Zealand the full NSA upgrades and let Germany and the UK enjoy their Communist telecom equipment.
5 eye nations that like the USA, the NSA and its decades of support. Nations that appreciate US tax payers support.
The US supported the UK and West German, now Germany for decades.
Now Germany and the UK will trade that US support all in for one generation of Communist telecom equipment?
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or, all 3 of them, the US, Germany and Great Britain, are liberal democracies, and the military can't control the idiots in charge. Compare that to China, where the military has executive control of all corporations of any strategic interest, and there is no difference between senior party leadership and senior military leadership.
Yes, politicians will be fucking idiots. That happens in liberal democracies.
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ROTFLMAO.
When the French bombed the "Rainbow Warrior", where was the USA, that's right , saying nothing, doing nothing because New Zealand had gone antinuclear.
The US even put in trade barriers (while giving China Favoured Nation Status).
At the Peal Harbour remembrance, the New Zealand navy was not permitted to be in the military base but in the civilian port.
The US has ben taken multiple times to the WTO (which the US set up for its benefit) by NZ to fight trade barriers, tariffs , agricultural subsidies,
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West Germany and Germany had to accept full US support.
About more than spying (Score:2)
The problem the US have with Huawei is about more than whether they have been spying or not - it's about the fact that the US as a nation have lost control of the technology because the Chinese are the only credible firms producing 5G equipment. That means that they can control or break the standards in subtle ways, and then deliberately make it much harder or impossible for US (or other non-Chinese) firms to compete on a level playing field (by making only Chinese equipment truly cross-compatible). I don't
Owned by the GOVERNMENT! (Score:2)
good... (Score:2)
...now the UK just have to stop threatening to send their war ships into sensitive areas[1] and that'll help avoid pissing off the Chinese and perhaps help them post Brexit.
[1] If they really want to ensure freedom of navigation, why not send a dirt great oil tanker or something? TBH, I imagine there are very many British ships going through those seas every day. Is there any evidence of the Chinese trying to prevent *anyone* using those waters? ...anyone who isn't an obvious threat to them, that is.
Bigger issues (Score:4, Interesting)
Britain is facing Brexit and a bunch of trade and economic issues. They'd rather stay in the good graces of the Chinese, the idea being they can replace stuff they would have bought from Europe with Chinese goods. And then there's the idea that if they don't get on board with 5G at a price point they can afford, their economic disadvantages will be worse yet.
The Germans probably figure they're just too smart to worry about hacked Chinese equipment, especially if they can isolate it with some good homegrown or European sourced technology. Plus they may well have come up with counter-espionage techniques that defeat Russian and American penetration that defeating the Chinese can't be any harder.
And in both cases, we can blame Trump's idiotic foreign policy for some of this. I'd wager if we had made Britain feel like they had a trade ally in Brexit and not shit all over German foreign policy, they might have gone along with us on Chinese telecom equipment.
USA already spies on them (Score:2)
Remember when Obama was in office and there was outrage over spying on Angela Merkel's phone? Yeah, figured you forgot about that.
So Germany can either get in bed with America again, where the Germans know for an absolute FACT that America will be spying on them... or, they could take a gamble on Huawei.
As a government, I wouldn't trust either, but since they are not making the technology themselves, they will have to choose the lesser of the evils.
Simple (Score:2)
If Huawei really is an innocently accused company that has nothing to do with the Chinese state and its intelligence branches, they should state so and if necessary move out of China to escape any forced cooperation. But this hasn't happened and to me it is a clear admission that all the rumors are true.
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You must be new here.
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" I am sure Huawei spies. Most tech companies do. " - Ok... do most companies spy for China's Communist Party?...
No, most of them spy for the US's Republicrat party (which is in turn just a mouthpiece for the financial cartel).
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Why does Huawei have to abide by sanctions that China isn't a party to? US law applies to the US, not the whole world. US spies all the time and treats its so-called allies with contempt. Remember the debacle over US tapping German chancellor's phone.
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Why does Huawei have to abide by sanctions that China isn't a party to?
They (allegedly) resold American technology to Iran in violation of the licensing contract, and in violation of American law.
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They also allegedly dragged tricked a bank with US operations (HSBC related) into violating the Iran embargo by financing the sales into Iran. Apparently that's classed as fraud.
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Which would also be in violation of international law.
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The US government and US businesses are separate entities, that is a very big difference. The companies spying don't have the resources of the state at their disposal or the inclination to sell what they find to the state (not that China has anything to steal) and tapping the phone of the German chancellor isn't exactly a shocker. Germany has had some fairly nasty Chancellor's in the past.
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Because China isn't punishing but rather encouraging them due to the tight ties between the state and business in China.
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do most companies spy for China's Communist Party?
Why do you care? What is the CCP going to do to you?
You have far more to fear from your own government.
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I don't know, devalue their currency to steal our jobs and manufacturing, use that advantage to steal our manufacturing technology, hack our infrastructure/businesses, international business, steal our ICBM technology, industrial and tech IP, and siphon our wealth. Of and hire a sockpuppet using the nick "ShanghaiBill"
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devalue their currency to steal our jobs and manufacturing,
Anyone actually living in China can tell you that the country has been trying hard, really hard, to pop UP their currency, e.g. by restricting the annual maximum of foreign currency an individual can *send out* of China. Otherwise, Yuan would be worth as much as Yen. so you should thank them for popping up their currency, else made in China products would be much cheaper.
use that advantage to steal our manufacturing technology,
Joint venture requirement is allowed under WTO treaty which they and the US have both signed up to. And requiring tech transfer is not "st
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"Anyone actually living in China can tell you that the country has been trying hard, really hard, to pop UP their currency, e.g. by restricting the annual maximum of foreign currency an individual can *send out* of China."
That increases the value of their currency in reality, it does nothing for how they value their currency on international exchanges. When they start restricting the maximum amount of currency coming IN, value their currency appropriately on the foreign exchange, and start putting heavy tar
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When they start restricting the maximum amount of currency coming IN,
Except that China is, and has been so most of last 4 decades, putting more effort restricting the outflow of foreign currencies [reuters.com]. Your assertion has no base.
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"Personal attack is a sign of paranoia"
No, his posting history indicates this is exactly what he is. He posts irrationally supportive responses including information ranging from misleading to outright false. It's called propaganda.
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It is when the AC trolling inbreds start coming out in force that /. needs to start thinking about banning a/c posts on a story-by-story basis. Any story which meets certain criteria *is* going to be inundated with this kind of trolling, something which is predictable.
Of course that just raises the bar a little.
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Thats censorship. I thought slashdot was above censorship? Or is it only OK when you want to do it?
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They already paid the Clintons. They dont want to pay again
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Of that magnitude? Apparently yes, as far as public statements seem to indicate at this point in time.