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China Tells Government Offices To Remove All Foreign Computer Equipment (theguardian.com) 127

China has ordered that all foreign computer equipment and software be removed from government offices and public institutions within three years, the Financial Times reports. hackingbear writes: The government directive is likely to be a blow to US multinational companies like HP, Dell and Microsoft and mirrors attempts by Washington to limit the use of Chinese technology, as the trade war between the countries turns into a tech cold war. The Trump administration banned US companies from doing business with Chinese Chinese telecommunications company Huawei earlier this year and in May, Google, Intel and Qualcomm announced they would freeze cooperation with Huawei. By excluding China from western know-how, the Trump administration has made it clear that the real battle is about which of the two economic superpowers has the technological edge for the next two decades. This is the first known public directive from Beijing setting specific targets limiting China's use of foreign technology, though it is part a wider move within China to increase its reliance on domestic technology.
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China Tells Government Offices To Remove All Foreign Computer Equipment

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  • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @09:48AM (#59500696) Homepage Journal

    Interesting. Is the Linux kernel considered "foreign"?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Does Finnish count as foreign enough origin?

      Does the international nature of the project make it stateless?

      If stateless, do they plan on using a RESTful API?

      Also, don't worry--they're only removing DCE, not DTE.

    • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

      They said foreign equipment, not national copies of foreign equipment. If the origin of Linux is a problem, China will have no problem blatantly copying it, while cutting corners, and claim it as their own.
      • They can copy Linux all they want, so long as they comply with the GPL license. Getting cooperation from Google for proprietary add-ins would be tough.... and the firmware needed would have to be re-thought.

        Or, they could used BSD licensing, which permits them to do any possible imaginable thing they want with the BSD code.

        This, however, further removes China from the rest of the world, and is more of a trade barrier. One of the benefits of FOSS is that it's improved across the world so long as you adhere t

        • by Anonymous Coward

          The GPL license is a legal document in Western courts. Good luck making it apply inside China. An "illegal" license restricting what the CCP does probably doesn't hold water.

          • You could say the same thing about the copyrights/patents on MS Windows/OSX/whatever.
            • Linux is Open Source, they don't have to reverse engineer anything, that's why I think that China is about to create their own counterfeit Linux, and as the AC above points out the CCP is going to wipe their collective ass with the GPL.
              • Consider how this affect exports. Where do 85% of smartphones and PCs come from now, vs how many after they attempt to compromise the GPL? Isolationism never, ever works in the long term.

              • by Megol ( 3135005 )

                They could ignore the GPL if they wanted to with some problems due to the international nature of copyright - but why? There's no logical reason to do that.

                • by green1 ( 322787 )

                  You could ask the same about the hundreds of western companies that blatantly ignore the GPL when shipping their products. The consequences of doing so appear to be basically zero for all those companies, so why not China as well?

        • They can copy Linux all they want, so long as they comply with the GPL license.

          ORLY?

        • Getting cooperation from Google for proprietary add-ins would be tough

          Not at all. They already forgot every human right just to earn a few bucks in China.

        • by jacekm ( 895699 )

          Year, right. China and honoring licenses.

        • ...so long as they comply with the GPL license

          Did you miss the part where it says "China??"

          • China has to export for a living. GPL litigation harms their big pride moments, like big hyperscale computing, and more. Their ability to export given lots of judgments against them means they can use their own stuff, but not export it. China is in the business of exports. They'll stifle their own gains.

            If they remain GPL compliant, anyone can use their code. Then the "edge" is back to labor and logistics in exports. Think about it. Anyone can fork Linux or its derivative, Android. So long as that person co

        • an court in china will just say the license is dead in china and close the case

      • It said foreign software AND hardware.

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
      I'd guess not, since they have made their own distro [wikipedia.org] and have supposedly deployed it in a number of politically and strategically sensitive locations. (An earlier effort, Red Flag Linux [wikipedia.org], now appears to be discontinued).
    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Probably not, at least when you use a Chinese distro. The interesting question is what do do about an office-suite and a web-browser. Is LibreOffice or FireFox "foreign"?

      I expect this will just result in a Chinese Linux distro (may already exist) with all the usual stuff you need. Let's face it, while MS stuff is easier initially, they do not have anything special anymore anyways. Also, there are enough competent developers in China to at least do "forks" with minimal changes and a Chinese support team for

      • Let's face it, while MS stuff is easier initially, they do not have anything special anymore anyways

        They're one step ahead on that one. See WPS Office. [wps.com] The Chinaclone MS Office that's at least as compatible as LibreOffice. They have ports for Windows and Linux.

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          Let's face it, while MS stuff is easier initially, they do not have anything special anymore anyways

          They're one step ahead on that one. See WPS Office. [wps.com] The Chinaclone MS Office that's at least as compatible as LibreOffice. They have ports for Windows and Linux.

          Interesting. So they have one major component already in place.

      • Linux is Finnish (Torvolds)
        VLC is French (Baptiste)
        GStreamer is Spanish/Dutch (Taymans)
        Konquerer/KHTML is German (Knoll)
        I can go on...
        The point is, there is no reason China should not use Linux. And frankly Deepin is damn good. I mean, way better than any other desktop Linux attempt so far.
        Oh... and China has their own office suite which is actually pretty good.
        I do not think China will have much trouble making Huawei computers running Deepin happen. Their only real shortcoming at the moment is GPUs and if
        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          I think anyone who underestimates the Chinese in 2020 will find egg on their faces.

          Indeed. The only thing that happened here was that some development that was going to happen anyways got accelerated.

    • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @10:22AM (#59500880)

      It was literally written by the NSA, you know?

      And if you believe that means nothing because "many eyes"... Yeah, they said that about OpenSSL too. Underhanded backdoors is a thing. It even has a contest.

      Also, remember how the NSA assured us before. About DES, RSA, etc. It is kinda their game.

    • Re:Linux (Score:4, Insightful)

      by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @10:30AM (#59500908) Homepage Journal

      More importantly is x86 considered foreign? Are there any Chinese companies making x86 CPUs or are they planning to move to a different architecture?

      It could give a massive boost to whatever architecture they pick, and create a viable ecosystem outside of x86 for desktop... And maybe even outside of ARM for mobile.

      Or maybe it's just part of the on-going trade war, and a serious attempt to boost security. Or maybe it's both.

      • Exactly. Might be interesting.

      • Well there's VIA and Zhaoxin. China also has the Longsoon MIPS chip, which I believe has a Linux port.

      • They are already prepared to stop using X86 if they are forced to, this is why Trumps strategy is myopic and short term. The China has developed it's own architecture having used home grown MIPS chips for military applications for some time. See this article https://news.cgtn.com/news/201... [cgtn.com]

      • Re:Linux (Score:4, Informative)

        by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @11:22AM (#59501172) Homepage

        More importantly is x86 considered foreign? Are there any Chinese companies making x86 CPUs or are they planning to move to a different architecture?

        China managed to license first-gen Zen [wikipedia.org] CPUs from AMD, while that's probably not a long term solution they have a stopgap measure there.

      • An architecture will not harm security as it is a high-level on paper design that can be easily verified. An implementation would allow NSA inserted backdoor.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Why bother with x86 though? Presumably Windows is out so there is little reason to stick with it now.

      • More importantly is x86 considered foreign?

        No, but it is patent protected. No chance to export anything without a license and they just lost the licensing for a lot of the stuff which they were cooking under the joint venture of AMD with their silicon foundry people.

        The Chinese have their own MIPS derived designs, but they are ~ 5 years behind Intel and 7 years behind Ryzen/Threadripper performance wise. They are still more than fast enough for a clerk typewriter running a local version of Linux in some god foresaken local government office though

        • for dogsbody PC usage i.e. word processing etc, being behind Intel AMD technically is not really an issue and that would count for a really high percentage of users. They could still probably get the high performance Intel/AMD machines for the niche uses
  • ...as both a counter move and as a way to reduce the possibility of US spying.

    But the real question is, how much of it is really possible to replace, as China definitely lags behind in quite many key areas of computer tech.

    To be fair, they have made great strides in many of them and even lead in some related tech, but still overall they are behind and I doubt three years is enough time.

    • moving from Windows to Linux within 3 years would be possible I guess. But moving away from Intel and AMD to Chinese CPU makers? That sounds more unlikely. Even their Kirin mobile SoC is based on a foreign ISA (ARM).

      • by Bert64 ( 520050 ) <.moc.eeznerif.todhsals. .ta. .treb.> on Monday December 09, 2019 @06:11PM (#59502800) Homepage

        Linux is based on a foreign design too, but they have the complete source code and sufficient resources to thoroughly audit it (assuming they havent already)...
        The same is true of ARM, it's a specification on paper and they can create their own implementation of the spec.
        There are also MIPS based processors already being produced by china, and nothing stopping them adopting Risc-V.

        All of these architectures can run linux, and virtually all linux application software is already available for them or is just a recompile away. The actual user does not care what architecture the underlying hardware is, so long as the applications they use can run on it.

        • you forget the part where they would have to throw away millions of perfectly good working PCs just because they have an Intel or AMD CPU.
          Installing Linux is easy compared to that.

          Of course they can design a replacement CPU. But have it working, and deployed in all China in 3 years is not realistic.

          • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

            Well in the space of 3 years many organisations do indeed throw away and replace all their machines... They will just have to ensure that the replacements are chinese.

      • moving from Windows to Linux within 3 years would be possible I guess. But moving away from Intel and AMD to Chinese CPU makers? That sounds more unlikely. Even their Kirin mobile SoC is based on a foreign ISA (ARM).

        It doesn't matter if the tech originated from foreign sources. All that matters is that current and future designs as well as manufacturing is domestic. Consider how much of their current domestic jet engine design and production is originally from foreign sources.

        Plus Intel/AMD CPUs are so overpowered for what most people do at home, school or work that it would not matter if a purely domestic design was behind in performance. Few users would notice. And again the domestic design will probably start wit

    • by Way Smarter Than You ( 6157664 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @10:01AM (#59500774)
      I read on slashdot that China doesn't need the US at all and is only do us a favor by trading with us. Any day they want they can crash the US economy and don't need anything at all from the US. They are this huge unstoppable tiger build from steel, entirely independent of the West. They designed everything. They build everything. We should just give up now. And now with them not buying new stuff from multi national corporations they may have to find buyers who aren't evil dictatorial mass murdering scumbag sociopaths. This is a dreadful decision for all of those highly moral mega corporations. Oh woe! Whoever will they sell to now? If only Hitler hasn't lost they could still be selling to the Nazis, too. Hello, IBM, shitheads, and your modern evil megacorp clones now doing business with China.
      • by caseih ( 160668 )

        It's true that US has very little by way of tangible goods that China wants. In fact the rest of the worlds doesn't have that much that China wants, short of raw resources and food. This has always been true for years, going back to the opium wars, which forced China to accept the only thing Britain had really to offer at the time: hard drugs. To this day China still feels resentment over this disastrous trade that destroyed so many chinese lives.

        So there's not a lot that the west has that China needs by

        • by iserlohn ( 49556 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @11:07AM (#59501108) Homepage

          China is in a precarious position pivoting from low-value to high-value manufacturing. The advanced equipment for manufacturing the quality products for export is still mainly produced by foreign companies. They have tried to overcome this through forced tech transfers, but that all died down once it was clear that the CCP regime wasn't planning to play by the rules and started exporting high-speed rail technology they acquired from foreign companies supplying their HSR expansion.

          In terms of cultural exports, China is low down on the list due to the lack of freedom of expression and overall stifling media landscape. That's not going to change in the short-to-medium term.

          In term of consumer imports, foreign luxury brands dominate precisely because of the point above.

          The US is acting on self-interest, for sure, but that doesn't mean that China and the CCP regime is equal in moral standing or in economic strength. The truth is that the CCP growth model is unsustainable in it's current form, precisely because of its inability to integrate 'harmoniously' with its neighbours and the western world (South Korea and Japan among them).

        • To this day China still feels resentment...

          Nations are constructs and constructs don't have feelings. Oh, you meant Chinese people?? Just like us, most of them are too busy struggling to have time for "resentment" over abstract events from the past.

          Don't anthropomorphize geopolitics.

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        I read on slashdot that China doesn't need the US at all and is only do us a favor by trading with us. Any day they want they can crash the US economy and don't need anything at all from the US.

        Stopping trade would hurt China badly too. But unlike the US Winnie the Pooh doesn't need renewed support every four years, so it's easy to send the arrows pointing down when it hurts the most. And any democratic candidate who takes over will find that China doesn't care it's under new management. That's been one of their most basic plays, we are offended and will stay offended until you apologize on behalf of the US. By playing politicians out against each other they often get concessions from one to fix t

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      But the real question is, how much of it is really possible to replace, as China definitely lags behind in quite many key areas of computer tech.

      I thought China made most of our electronics these days.

      • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

        But they don't design the IP. And yes, they may copy the current gen but it takes a wealth of knowledge and man-power just to get a microchip up and running, let alone working with the OS and software stack.

    • by stooo ( 2202012 )

      >> I doubt three years is enough time.
      They are much faster than you think.

    • So, it's just going to affect Microsoft. Everything else is made in China.

    • I can well understand this as both a counter move and as a way to reduce the possibility of US spying.

      And those who have studied or been paying attention to China's economic and industrial policies for the last few decades would understand that this was the goal all along. They routinely do this sort of thing. Use foreign tech to gain experience and capabilities and reverse engineer (or better yet force a technology transfer) and at some point domestic tech will offer a compatible or equivalent capability. For example in aerospace, partner with aircraft and engine manufactures to develop domestic capabiliti

  • This is Win/Win!!! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @10:05AM (#59500790)

    Now that China will have to deal with all the crap Chinese products that that I have to deal with then Xi will be forced to purge all of those bottom feeder manufactures and the overall quality of Chinese products will improve! And that will spur Western manufactures to im prove *their* game!

    • China needs to step their QC game up until the western "industry standard" brands start feeling some warmth. For now, they keep taking "cheaper" shortcuts by ignoring safety regulations. Cheaper for the manufacturer, the user will be left with a short-circuited piece of crap if he survives the lithium explosion.
    • Except they will keep the good stuff for themselves, and export their garbage, as long as we continue to demonstrate that we're willing to buy it.

    • What's gonna happen is (should this nonsense actually take place, instead of everyone just pretending to obey by slapping a "Made in China" sticker on their laptops and servers) - China will ramp up its industrial espionage efforts.
      Except that is not the same as growing your own development capacities. Or even copying the production process.

      Oh... they may end up flooding the market with cheap Chinese knockoffs of Intel and AMD and Samsung and Micron products but they will simply never be as good as the real

      • Hm, I dunno. The USSR was an unsustainable totalitarian structure, but it still managed to beat the US in every heat of the space race save for the most important one, before eventually collapsing. China makes a lot of crap, but also a lot of great stuff, simply because they make a lot of stuff. They have a lot of brilliant people because they have a lot of people. The crap pays off because of an economic race to the bottom. If a different driver becomes more important, lots of people will get to work towar
  • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @10:12AM (#59500832)

    China has ordered that all foreign computer equipment and software be removed from government offices and public institutions within three years.

    Should be easy. They're all made in China anyway.

    Important question though: does China consider equipment made in Taiwan to be domestic, Chinese produced equipment or foreign equipment?

    • Important question though: does China consider equipment made in Taiwan to be domestic, Chinese produced equipment or foreign equipment?

      Brilliant question.

    • by geek ( 5680 )

      China has ordered that all foreign computer equipment and software be removed from government offices and public institutions within three years.

      Should be easy. They're all made in China anyway.

      Important question though: does China consider equipment made in Taiwan to be domestic, Chinese produced equipment or foreign equipment?

      No I don't believe they do because most of the Taiwan manufacturers are heavily influenced by the USA. My former company has a fab in Taiwan and China forced our executive team to build another in China because of this.

    • by PPH ( 736903 )

      Russian components

      So, everything with vacuum tubes has got to go?

    • by malvcr ( 2932649 )

      My opinion ...

      The basic design about what is a computer or an operating system is there, no surprises, and a lot of people everywhere with enough knowledge to create them from scratch. The main problem is that to do such type of things requires a huge quantity of time, particularly if things must be well made and secure.

      However ... how much in the government service must be there? We must forget about to mimic an occidental office, as it is full of trashware and not needed features together with a lo

  • Isn't everything Chinese inside, nowadays? ;)

    But frankly, what do they expect? if the CIA swaps one of their chips for an exact copy that merely has a dopant-level hardware backdoor (and yes, that is a thing), what are they gonna do? How would they even tell?

    I'm sure they have the same capabilities, so they must know.

    Is this purely political posturing then? "I don't love you either anymore!"?

  • Egads! They're double Chinese! Our only recourse is MAGAA - Making America Great Again, Again!
  • by SpaghettiPattern ( 609814 ) on Monday December 09, 2019 @11:02AM (#59501094)
    All legally bought copies will be deleted. Yes, both.
  • I could be wrong, but the article is talking about China banning government agencies from using US branded products. My understanding is that they are allowing private citizens and companies to use US branded products. After working at a US government facility I know that the US government does not allow its agencies from purchasing Chinese branded products (like Lenovo, for example). Even though they Dell/HP, etc. are built/assembled in China. This policy has been going on for a long time (pre-Trump).
    • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

      Not all US government agencies are banned from using foreign products. Only a select few (which require secret clearance) does.

      • by tim620 ( 1052986 )
        Maybe I was incorrectly assuming it was all US government agencies. I was working for a contractor at a US Geological Survey facility. I was always told that the US government does not allow foreign / Chinese branded servers and storage. I assumed that meant all agencies, especially since nothing at our facility or my project required secret clearance.
  • The South China Morning Post reports: China stockpiles US chips amid fears of worsening trade relations. [scmp.com] Imports of US computer chips risen strongly in the past three years, as the risk of a "silicon curtain" descending looms over tech firms.

    China is stockpiling US computer chips, a sign that tech companies there are preparing for worsening trade relations that could lead to being cut off from American technology.

    As US President Donald Trump's tariff war with China morphs into a more general confrontation

  • "Let China Sleep, for when she wakes, she will shake the world," (Napoleon Bonaparte)
    • "Let China Sleep, for when she wakes, she will shake the world," (Napoleon Bonaparte)

      Sounds like a good reason to keep her up.

  • Many posters asked if Linux is considered a US component or not. Well, the linux kernel is opensource and born in finland, but linus is now a USoA citizen, and much of the development since the late 90s has occurred under american companies. Same with many other parts of a distro. Having said that, the bar of "nationality" for linux in most other cases where this has become an "issue", is at the distro level, rarely at the individual component level. So, on servers RedHat is a definitive no-no, while Suse i

  • I RTFA'd I cannot find a link to the text of this directive. Does it exist? Can we see it?

    Foreign made?

    Foreign owned?

    Foreign designed?

    Foreign IP?

    Do they have to stop using iPhones or stop using all current CPU designs?

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • When Donny the Fraud was lying, cheating, and stealing his way into the White House, he made a lot of promises to make America great again, can anyone say ANY way in which he actually DID?

      The people who voted him in, did it to make liberals cry tears. So long as the liberals are crying tears, they are happy. Nothing else matters. Not rule of law, not democratic principles, not the US Constitution, nothing. Getting liberals upset are all that matters.

    • Well said. Mod parent up.

  • The rest of the world shouldn't sell the Chinese any technology either, until they stop the human rights abuses and the nightmarish dystopian social credit scoring.

  • Seriously, the west needs to follow this example. China KNOWS that they are spying on the west. And most likely, the west is spying on them.
    But the west, needs to require that ALL computers used in the governments and public places use only parts from allied sources.
  • I don't know how that'll work in China, but in the US it would be impossible to remove all foreign gear and still keep the lights on. The US would crash to a halt and probably never fully recover.

  • In the West, you have to rent the software because the companies have gotten too lazy to write compelling upgrades and have too much overhead to be able to afford to sell it to you outright. In the West, you have a very hard time finding a manufacturer that's willing to make 10 of something. They're only interested in you if you want thousands of something. In China, you will find tiny companies willing to make or modify something and do very small quantities. In China, something like injection molding

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