Huawei Launches New Legal Challenge Against US Ban (bbc.com) 69
Chinese telecoms giant Huawei has launched a legal challenge to a decision by US regulators to classify it as a national security threat. From a report: It comes after the US Federal Communications Commission put curbs on rural mobile providers using a $8.5bn government fund to buy Huawei equipment. The firm said evidence that it was a threat to security "does not exist." The move is the latest in a series of challenges between Huawei and the US. The company has asked the US Court of Appeal to overturn the decision. Speaking at a news conference at Huawei's headquarters in Shenzhen, the company's chief legal officer, Song Liuping, said: "The US government has never presented real evidence to show that Huawei is a national security threat. That's because this evidence does not exist."
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I'm not sure WTF you're talking about, Sisco is a third party benefit administration company.
Reminds me of during the dot com boom when my friend's grandmother asked her for stock tip; she recommended Cisco, but the conversation was over the telephone, and her grandma ended up investing in Sysco instead. Now, Cisco would have been a good investment. But it turned out, Sysco was an even better investment, though not a technology company. Highest performing stock in the portfolio.
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Re: The treat is real (Score:1)
probably not far from the truth. The national security threat is simply that Huweui do it better for cheaper, via the unfair advantage of educating their children, therefore US companies cannot compete.
Smooth move, ex-lax. (Score:1)
The obvious retort by the US government is to subpoena 100% of their source codes, VHDL, etc. Because the code is where the evidence either is or isn't. Then they sneak the code to the NSA, which uses it to develop exploits...
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That's now how the law works. The government needs to defend its position on the information it had available to it when it made the decision. It could admit to stealing Huawei source code or reverse engineering binaries, perhaps in a closed courtroom.
But it won't be able to demand access to all Huawei code, and it would be kind of pointless anyway since most of that code is kept in China where US law doesn't apply. Remember when the US courts tried to force Microsoft to hand over data stored in Ireland, ag
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That's now how the law works. The government needs to defend its position on the information it had available to it when it made the decision.
All the information available to it when it made the decision showed that there was a security risk. The only possible counter-evidence is in the sources. But it's obvious that equipment made by a foreign company under the direct control of a foreign government with which you have an adversarial relationship is a security risk, just as a big wooden horse built by people you're at war with is a security risk.
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I'm sure that's what they will argue. Huawei will doubtless point out the user of other foreign equipment and it's offer to share source code, and also that even if such concerns were justified by evidence they wouldn't warrant a complete ban.
Anyway the whole thing will probably be moot by the time the trial really gets going.
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I'm sure that's what they will argue. Huawei will doubtless point out the user of other foreign equipment
And if that other equipment comes from nations where the government literally embeds government officials in the companies to "help" make decisions, it's definitely a security risk too. We should grow our own.
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As opposed to the one and only correct method, which is to embed corporate officials in government to "help" make decisions.
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As opposed to the one and only correct method, which is to embed corporate officials in government to "help" make decisions.
False dichotomy. Both are wrong. Government should set reasonable restrictions, determine guilt, and punish those corporations which violate the laws, up to and including termination of corporate charters. And no corporation should be permitted to become "too big to fail".
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A problem with "sharing source code" is the problem of proving the code embedded in the device matches the code provided. And it won't, even with maximal good intent, because there will be changes to fix bugs, to adapt to modified hardware, etc. And even if there weren't different compilers or different compiler options will produce different binaries.
That they've got little reason to trust you is, of course, another problem.
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That's easy to fix. The source code compiled with a specific version of a specific compiler will produce a specific binary image. It's called a reproducable build. You then burn that onto a ROM chip and install it in your critical infrastructure.
You can do it with flash memory so it can be updated too. They release bug fixes to you, you review them and build your own firmware image, sign it with your private key and deploy it. They don't even have the ability to push firmware to your hardware any more, the
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Sorry, but China and the US have been in an adversarial relationship that entire period. Adversarial doesn't mean hostile. You are in an adversarial relationship with anyone you're negotiating a deal with, even a close friend or relative.
An adversarial relationship means one where you are seeking to maximize your gain from a proposed agreement. (And gain is not necessarily monetary. Frequently both can win.)
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I didn't say coercion. I was denying that we were not in an adversarial relationship. Hostile relationships are (usually) small subset of adversarial relationships.
Or, as an alternative reading, emotional arguments are a form of coercion. If you really feel that way, then using them is appropriate.
FWIW, I don't accept dishonest methods as legitimate even in hostile relationships, but I acknowledge that may disagree with me. The optimal strategy is a nuanced adaptation of tit-for-tat. But one problem wi
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Huawei already added to do that, so yeah it's a good plan.
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Huawei shared the code (Score:2)
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The government needs to defend its position on the information it had available to it when it made the decision.
No. It does not. There really is no need for anything beyond a declaration of the decision.
"Analysis of classified intelligence by US intelligence organizations resulted in the recommendation that a credible threat exists."
That's it. That is the only justification needed.
What was this intelligence, and how was it analyzed, and by whom? None of your business. It's classified. You do not get to know.
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That's pretty scary - the government can declare you and your business a national security threat and there is no legal recourse, no way to challenge it.
Reminds me of the no-fly lists and secret black-site prisons.
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That's pretty scary - the government can declare you and your business a national security threat and there is no legal recourse, no way to challenge it.
Reminds me of the no-fly lists and secret black-site prisons.
IF you are a US citizen you have the right to petition the government for redress.
If you are not... then you can attempt to get your government to resolve the issue via diplomatic channels, but you have no personal recourse against a foreign sovereign government. As you are not a citizen, they do not owe you anything. Various governments have agreed to allow certain foreign nationals to petition for redress in certain circumstances, but it is not universal.
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So, first they give it to the government and then they give it to the government.
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You assume this needs to be publically released information that could be highly classified. Revealing could reveal embedded resources, or even revealing what they found tips the bad guys off to a scurrilous feature that was discovered.
Yes it could be this is just economic pressure for a new trade agreement, but I don't see how you can get there with public proof.
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You cannot possibly get to "this is just economic pressure for a new trade agreement" in the sense of a mathematical proof. There is no conceivable way.
But there are other standards of proof. There are definitely grounds for a probabilistic conclusion that that's what's going on, depending on your priors. Which is a sticking point.
I, personally, have concluded that Huawei products are as reliable as, say, competing Cisco products..and perhaps more-so. But that if they are broken, they favor different ag
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If it turned out that it was economic pressure regarding a trade agreement, then the court would toss out the case at that point. National security is in fact involved with negotiating treaties, and the Court's role will only be to make sure that the Executive Branch was deciding something within their discretion. They're absolutely not going to even look at if some policy actually helped national security, or anything else that tries to second guess the determination. The executive branch determines if the
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On the one hand you're saying if the case isn't proven the court would toss it out, and on the other you're saying the government doesn't need to provide proof.
And on the third hand, I've got to may my decisions based on the publicly available information that I encounter. Which is definitely less than the court has available.
Sorry, but I've got to make my decisions based on the publicly available information. Saying "trust the government" doesn't work when the government has been proven to frequently lie
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Something strange is definitely going on between Huawei and Uncle Sam but we'll probably never know. Huawei was running feel good commercials in Canada saying how everyone is going to benefit from their technology.
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Something strange is definitely going on between Huawei and Uncle Sam but we'll probably never know. Huawei was running feel good commercials in Canada saying how everyone is going to benefit from their technology.
In this particular case it is Uncle Sam trying to turn back the clock and prevent deployment of mobile technology which can be used as illumination for passive Stealth busting radar: https://www.fagain.co.uk/node/... [fagain.co.uk]
That horse has already bolted, it is too late now.
There is also a raft of historic issues as well too.
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Well it's not so much the companies being friendly as business would suddenly become very difficult if they didn't. Typical mafia tactics. The Qwest CEO was jailed for insider trading but in reality it was his refusal for not spying.
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If you're "trying to work around US sanctions on Iran" you've already violated the sanctions by trying and if you ever fill out US banking paperwork where you have to certify you're not violating US sanctions, now you've committed fraud against the United States.
You're required to comply with sanctions. Attempting to get "around" them is the opposite of attempting to comply.
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Huawei should have never had to be sneaky, and it got caught doing something it had every right to do, but the political reality is that the US doesn't care.
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Problem with that is, they are US sanctions, not Chinese ones. The US is abusing its domination of the internal banking system to try to force companies that are not based here to still follow sanctions.
Huawei should have never had to be sneaky, and it got caught doing something it had every right to do, but the political reality is that the US doesn't care.
Ahh... so you are saying that the US government does not have the right to enact sanctions or to place restrictions on using the US banking system.
It does.
If you wish to use the US banking system, you must follow the laws regarding it's use. One of those laws is to not violate US trade sanctions.
If you are not willing to follow US requirements, then do not do business with the US.
If you agree to follow US requirements, but then you decide to violate those requirements... you may get caught. If you get cau
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That is a pretty scary amount of power outside one's own borders that no other nation h
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It's because the communists are pulling out all the stops to cover for the fact that they are asking to hard wire spy tech into the nation's data transmission infrastructure.
Re: PLENTY OF EVIDENCE EXIST!!! (Score:2)
Is there some reason you think at&t can't do business in China? Are at&t analogous to Huawei? I'd've thought that Cisco are a closer match and iinm they do a lot of business in China... perhaps not so much recently since they're no longer competitive.
Funny how the chinese (Score:4, Insightful)
feel it's perfectly ok to freeze the NBA out of their tv market costing them hundreds of millions of dollars because they didn't like a tweet sent by one guy even thouugh the league bent over backward to distance themselves from it. Yet somehow they insist on the US scrupulously following rules of law when it comes to a major national security issue.
Commies gonna commie.
Re: Funny how the chinese (Score:2)
More like dics gonna dictate but yeah
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You think the NBA freeze out happened by accident? It was at the behest of the chinese government. Huawei is owned and controlled by the communist government in china. The communist party brooks no dissent or criticism. Or do you believe all the uighurs have been put in summer camps for fun and games?
You know damn well it's the government and not the people. Disingenuous much?
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Huawei is not owned or controlled by the Chinese government, to any greater extent than Western companies are owned or controlled by their governments.
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The thing is we follow rules as legislated and interpreted with two parties currrently able to legislate.
It's a far cry from ''the party'' able to control at will without any process.
This is sufficient justification;
https://www.cyberscoop.com/and... [cyberscoop.com]
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That's the problem, globalism forces us to apply rules designed for internal use to what are defacto enemies. Globalism assumed some new world order where nationalistic interests are no longer relevant would materialize. Russia and China's regional annexations have put the lie to that assumption. All globalism did is reduce our technological advantage.
Is the current situation as dangerous as cold war? Perhaps not. Is making China even stronger and more belligerent towards western allies in the region more d
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feel it's perfectly ok to freeze the NBA out of their tv market costing them hundreds of millions of dollars because they didn't like a tweet sent by one guy even thouugh the league bent over backward to distance themselves from it. Yet somehow they insist on the US scrupulously following rules of law when it comes to a major national security issue.
Commies gonna commie.
That's an insightful comment.
Of course, the Chinese rebuttal is that they have always been a nation of law. They are the world's foremost democracy and land of freedom ... on paper.
The cautionary insight from criticism of the Chinese paper-tiger constitution and legal system is that the strength of a constitution and legal system is not the collective words on paper but the practical enforcement of those laws through the executive and judicial systems. The US is currently facing this very crisis, and how
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Ah, moral equivalency. So refreshing!
Ask the Uyghurs how life is in the camps! Why are the people of Hong Kong flying American flags at the rallies?
Those people should be glad they are so much better off in the people's republic!
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There really isn't any difference between communists and fascists. The real enemy is tyrants and always has been.
Private secret owners (Score:2)
They might as well... (Score:2)
Forget the security issues, what's more important (Score:2)
And I do not want my tax dollars going to China!
I don't care if it costs twice as much, those funds should stay in the US. Huawei competes with American companies. American governments should only spend tax dollars to support American companies. If for some reason that isn't possible, turn to an ally (Sweden, Japan, Korea...) as a supplier. China shoul