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United States Businesses China

US Blacklists More Chinese Tech Companies Over National Security Concerns (nytimes.com) 82

The Trump administration added five Chinese entities to a United States blacklist on Friday, further restricting China's access to American technology and stoking already high tensions as President Trump and President Xi Jinping of China prepare to meet in Japan next week. From a report: The Commerce Department announced that it would add four Chinese companies and one Chinese institute to an "entity list," saying they posed risks to American national security or foreign policy interests [Editor's note: the link may be paywalled; alternative source]. The move essentially bars the entities, which include one of China's leading supercomputer makers, Sugon, and a number of its subsidiaries set up to design microchips, from buying American technology and components without a waiver from the United States government.

The move could all but cripple these Chinese businesses, which rely on American chips and other technology to manufacture advanced electronics. Those added to the entity list also include Higon, Chengdu Haiguang Integrated Circuit, Chengdu Haiguang Microelectronics Technology, and Wuxi Jiangnan Institute of Computing Technology, which lead China's development of high performance computing, some of which is used in military applications like simulating nuclear explosions, the Commerce Department said.
Each of the aforementioned companies does businesses under a variety of other names.
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US Blacklists More Chinese Tech Companies Over National Security Concerns

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  • These companies will simply cheat and fire up a subsidiary in America, buy the parts and quietly ship them back to China.

    It was 1 thing to say that we can not use parts from Huawei based on their spying on coms (that is a real concern and was smart). BUT, to deny the sale of CHIPS to these other companies is silly. They can get them anyway they want.
    If the concern is for stolen trade secrets, well, companies should have the right to not hire Chinese or others that they think pose a security risk.
    It us
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by SirAstral ( 1349985 )

      It always helps when politicians do things to make their voters happy even when it does not actually work towards their interests or can be escaped due to loopholes.

      Voters do not care what actually happens so long as they can maintain a certain posture.

      Like democrats that feel sorry for all of these refugees, but not sorry enough to go and put a stop to the atrocities they are running from. They need those atrocities to keep happening to drive everyone able to flee here so they can use it for political fue

      • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )

        We don't care if China is murdering people... we just care if we are going to get cheap toys from China and if Uncle Sam is going to get a little something something for their trouble.

        China is its own country and its own responsibility. Generally, we don't give two shits what China does in its own country because it's a sovereign nation. The only time when it becomes a concern is if the United Nations feels China is doing something so bad that it warrants a coalition to stop it from doing so. China is a stupid fucking totalitarian police state. The only way to fix that is to basically go in and overthrow their government but that will lead to World War 3.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      No only can they quietly avoid the ban directly to China they can use a huge network of friendly Chinese contacts around the globe to avoid it through other countries, while they prepare to completely eliminate the need for all American components.

      When China dominates the semiconductor industry what will America export?

      Bye bye American empire. You won't be missed.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Blocking Chinese access to any particular technology just gives them an incentive to pour massive resources into developing their own versions. They’ve learned that US companies are not reliable suppliers. Same as many former allies have learned that being an ally of the US is a double edged sword.

    Cuts in sales to China by US companies means less money for US companies to invest in developing advanced products. Don’t be surprised if by 2030 China will be the sole supplier of the worlds best, m

    • by Anonymous Coward

      At least give them the short term pain. China will catch up eventually, but stalling them for another 5-10 years is not a bad idea.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        dont worry about the chinese, they already have better and cheaper MCUs and networrking equipment, their arm processors are heavily subsidized by the government.

        You're not slowing them down, you're giving them incentives.

        It's kinda sad to see the great America keep shooting themselves in their feet....
         

  • by hackingbear ( 988354 ) on Friday June 21, 2019 @01:42PM (#58800686)

    The Chinese hi-tech companies should thank the US for clearing out American products from the biggest market [datenna.com], so they can eventually enter the lucrative cycles of being able to sell primitive products and re-invest the proceeds to create more advanced products, without having to compete with the most advanced American products upfront, and in a few short year they will produce more advanced ones.

    Oh, don't the US know that Chinese supercomputers already cleared out of American chips [wikipedia.org] and achieve top performance long time ago?

    • Oh, don't the US know that Chinese supercomputers already cleared out of American chips [wikipedia.org] and achieve top performance long time ago?

      If world economic and military domination depended on LINPACK, the US would be toast. Unfortunately for China, being on top of the Top 500 list is mainly for bragging rights and respect among those that don't actually run real applications.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Bill Clinton illegally bestowed Most Favored Nation trading status on China without the consent of Congress (which never sued over it because it kinda wanted it that way too), which is what allowed US Military technology to be transferred to China in the first place.

    Just revoke that status.

    • by zifn4b ( 1040588 )
      Good luck with that. Members of the US Chamber of Commerce would not want that because they're more interested in profits at the expense of their own country. That's what is otherwise known as: treason.
    • This has nothing to do with security - if it did, we would be doing exactly what you say. The U.S. should never have allowed the use of technology that wasn't developed and manufactured entirely within the country. It also makes sense to limit the use of Chinese technology in our infrastructure, even when that infrastructure is owned by private entities. But removing the ability for consumers to choose if they would like to buy Chinese technology completely violates the principles of a free market and th
      • The U.S. should never have allowed the use of technology that wasn't developed and manufactured entirely within the country.

        I meant this within the context of our military.

  • Look, I know you think tech should be free, but ...

  • "Financial diplomacy" from US...

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