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China United States Technology

US Stops Granting Export Licenses For China's Huawei (reuters.com) 36

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Reuters: The Biden administration has stopped approving licenses for U.S. companies to export most items to China's Huawei, according to three people familiar with the matter. Huawei has faced U.S. export restrictions around items for 5G and other technologies for several years, but officials in the U.S. Department of Commerce have granted licenses for some American firms to sell certain goods and technologies to the company. Qualcomm in 2020 received permission to sell 4G smartphone chips to Huawei.

One person familiar with the matter said U.S. officials are creating a new formal policy of denial for shipping items to Huawei that would include items below the 5G level, including 4G items, Wifi 6 and 7, artificial intelligence, and high-performance computing and cloud items. Another person said the move was expected to reflect the Biden administration's tightening of policy on Huawei over the past year. Licenses for 4G chips that could not be used for 5g, which might have been approved earlier, were being denied, the person said. Toward the end of the Trump administration and early in the Biden administration, officials had still granted licenses for items specific to 4G applications.
Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said that China opposes the United States abusing an overly broad notion of national security to suppress Chinese firms unreasonably. The move "goes against the principles of the market economy and rules of international trade and finance, hurts the confidence the international community has in the U.S business environment and is blatant technological hegemony," Mao said during a press conference in Beijing on Tuesday.
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US Stops Granting Export Licenses For China's Huawei

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  • by haruchai ( 17472 ) on Wednesday February 01, 2023 @08:19AM (#63256431)

    I expected this move by the USA at least 10 years ago

    • I expected this move by the USA at least 10 years ago

      The USA has had open support for China ... providing they were behind in all ways. The biggest fundamental change is that China ended up largely dominating the development and became one of the first to market with 5G devices. Given the estimate of well over $1tn for the market value of 5G technology that scared the ever-loving shit out of the USA who are now trying their best to suppress Chinese advancement.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's telling that they only include items below 5G level. Huawei did the research and got the patents, so aside from it having minimal effect on Huawei, it would screw a lot of US companies that are reliant on Huawei for the technology they licenced.

  • This seems really really stupid to me. No one wins wars, everyone looses.
    • by schwit1 ( 797399 )

      'America' is not. The Neocons and the Military industrial complex are. You see them trying to keep the Ukraine conflict constantly supplied with weapons.

      Trump started no new wars. What other President can make that claim?

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        This 100% this. Its not just the neocons though anymore its the NWO rah rah globalism crowd as well.

        Hint anyone 'THEY' are not labeling a populist at this point is a traitor. Those in office should be removed for failing to uphold the Constitution. The mission of the federal government is set out in the preamble. They are supposed to be "Promoting the GENERAL welfare, providing for the common DEFENSE ... and securing the blessing of liberty to OURSELVES and OUR posterity"

        Engaging in WARS OF CHOICE and tha

      • Very subjective your ststements. Can you explain the actions by that administration that made sure Russia would invade Ukraine? Anouncing intent to leave NATO, announcing a complete withdrawal from Afghanistan, trying to drasticly cut troop levels in Europe and the US,. Reports of top secret documents ending up in Russian hands. Or are they irrelevant or never happened?

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          Some of them never happened, most are irrelevant. Even if our policies encouraged Russia to invade Ukraine its NOT OUR PROBLEM!

          Russia does not pose a threat to us any longer. They have virtually zero ability to do force projection over here. They only thing they have missiles and nukes, which they can't use because of MAD.

          The USA has no interest in maintain troop levels in Europe or really in NATO at this point. The EU should deal with Europe's security problems NOT us!

          • Russia has threatened to attack other countries in Western Europe just since the Ukraine unrest, a few of them are NATO members. He has mentioned openly more than once he did not intend to stop with Ukraine. Taking that and only that into account it makes everything I mentioned above very relevant. As for the reasons you say didn't happen will you be more specific about which?

  • by williamyf ( 227051 ) on Wednesday February 01, 2023 @08:56AM (#63256533)

    The meat and potatoes of Huawei IS NOT the cellphone/handset/tablet/laptop division, but rather the Telco gear (the core switches, SDH/fiber gear, basestations, datacomm [routers], and storage) that power celular/fixedline and internet networks.

    Huawei could not care less if they do not get any more intel or ARM processors for handsets or laptops, but they would be devastated if they loose access to FPGAs for basestations.

    Huawei has been preparing for this day for a long time.

    - They divested their Honor cellphone brand while it still had value:

    - They also divested the server division in preparation for the day when they would lose access to X-86-64 and Windows (yes, they use Linux too)

    But telco is a whole other ballpark. No one, not even the telcos themselves, care too much about what is inside the gear, as long as it works.

    For instance, Huawei uses Power chips in basestations, switches (fixed and mobile) and some other gears. Since the Power istruction set is open, we{1} would not care less if they use Power chips from IBM (USoA) or an NXP (Dutch) QorIQ Qonverge B4860s, or some inhouse developed alternative{2} as long as it works

    We could not care less if an Optical mux has an Acacia comunications (USoA) chip inside or a tejas networks (India) chip inside. We do not care if a ODU has a Xilinx (USoA) FPGA or an FPGA from AGM Microelectronics or Gowin Semiconductors (china).

    We could care less if our Oceanstor Storage uses Toshiba Enterprise HDDs (Japan) instead of using Seagate or WD (USoA)...

    Also, Huawei was more than happy to let all the limelight fall on the consumer divisions (terminal, in Huawei's parlance), for while everyone was attentive to Huawei's ARM, Android and Laptop woes, Huawei had ample time to stockpile chips and other supplies, and develop alternatives using non-USoA supplied materials too keep alive and well the meat and potatoes of the operation.

    JM2C
    YMMV

    PS: If, after all that, anyone is still fixated on that will happen to the consumer/terminal division (the tablescraps of the opeeration), they will keep selling cellphones, mind you, at some point those phones will not be flagships anymore, and if (or rather when) the USoA fully sanctions SMIC (instead of the partial sanction they have now), they will be able to fab their Kyrin back into semi-modern nodes whith them, as for Laptops, they will probably use Zhaoxhin processors for those, with Kylin as the OS (if push comes to shove), and latter some of the homegrown processors, and make a killing selling those to the Chinese goverments, which will probably throw them a lifeline... Yesm their precensce on the global market for consumer electronics will all but disapear, but they will still be a powerhouse in the (vast) chinese market.

    {1} I say we because I work in telecoms in my country, and for full disclosure, from Jun '07 'til Jul '08 I was in Huawei's Payrol, and from '12 'til '16 I was a freelance trainer for them in the Enterprise division.

    {2} Huawei's chip design division Hisilicon is very capable, and the PowerISA is open/free as in speech

    • When some countries banned huawei 5G equipment use by telcos, a lot of the chinese staff wound up in places at ericsson, the new equipment supplier, so the CCP still has subjects in the places they want them.

      In international meetings at IEC related events (although I only attended a few) it was clear to me that huawei was operating very differently from everyone else. Mutual benefit as a kind of gentleman's agreement was the way of the old guard. Huawei, and now the new Ericsson (the huawei staff brought in

  • They are a foreign intelligence agency masquerading as a business, and they are under no pressure to EVER make money.

    Their only job is to get a footprint that they can use as leverage and for intelligence.

    Crypto AG was similar
    https://www.theguardian.com/us... [theguardian.com]

  • by oumuamua ( 6173784 ) on Wednesday February 01, 2023 @09:45AM (#63256657)
    China ate everyone's lunch and now the West is playing dirty. It was fine while the West could profit and sell airliners and other high tech products but now China has moved up the food chain; they lead in 5G, https://www.lightreading.com/5... [lightreading.com] they just launched an airliner: https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]
    Authoritarian regime/Human rights abuses/Taiwan - these issues have always been there and did not matter until recently.
  • It's somewhat amusing to see China claiming they want a market economy. There's no evidence of that yet.
  • Slashdot commenter dynamic_cast said that he opposes China abusing an overly broad notion of national security to support Russia's war crimes unreasonably. The move "goes against the principles of the market economy and rules of international trade and finance, hurts the confidence the international community has in the Chinese business environment and is blatant ass-hattery ," dynamic_cast posted during a coffee break on Wednesday.

  • Export licenses are based on the consignee of record.
    If I try to export to cnee ABCD, Co., and ABCD Co is blocked, I can't export.

    Of course, if ABCD saw this coming years ago and divested critical manufacturing to shell companies EFGH and IJKL *they can still receive the products* so ...how much does it matter?

    US gov't might say 'that's fraud and that's illegal!' which yes, basically it is. But if that foreign country makes such dispersion of importers legal, then ipso facto it IS legal (there) and it ends

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