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US Blocks Huawei From Building LTE Network

An anonymous reader writes "The U.S. government has cited national security as a reason not to let Chinese company Huawei build an LTE public safety network. They're worried about Huawei's close ties to the Chinese government and the threat of any devices Huawei manufactures being bugged. Of course, whoever gets the contract is going to be manufacturing their devices in China anyway, but it looks like a Chinese company won't be allowed to deploy the infrastructure."

14 of 156 comments (clear)

  1. Huawei was in the news in Europe as well... by thrill12 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ... for advertising with a lot of important and big customers' "success stories" (such as TGV) that were in fact never real customers of Huawei/were never worth a success story. Guess they really are trying hard to set foot 'here'. (http://www.automatiseringgids.nl/nieuws/2011/41/%E2%80%98huawei-jokt-over-europese-klanten%E2%80%99)

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    1. Re:Huawei was in the news in Europe as well... by WindBourne · · Score: 4, Informative

      Not surprised. Just like the 'Chinese success', it is all predicated on constant lies and deceptions. But considering that Huawei is Chinese gov (in fact, more Chinese gov, than America Air was US Gov). In fact, unless a company has outside participation, it is 100% owned AND MANAGED by the gov.

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    2. Re:Huawei was in the news in Europe as well... by m.ducharme · · Score: 4, Funny

      In fact, unless a company has outside participation, it is 100% owned AND MANAGED by the gov.

      Which is totally incompatible with the American model, where the government is 100% owned and managed by the corporations.

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  2. US Blocks Huawei From Building LTE Network by omar.sahal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Makes you wonder sometimes why the US gets so suspicions of other nations some times! You need to look at an accusation sometimes and figure out if this is telling you more about the accuser than the accused!

    1. Re:US Blocks Huawei From Building LTE Network by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Cheap anti american b.s.
      They are banned by the UK & India, their "employees" were caught red-handed trying to steal info in Indonesia & India.
      Not to mention that they usually copy products from rivals such as Cisco.

      Seriously, have you any idea what a threat the Chinese government poses to the world? even though they love money now, the country is still run by totalitarian freaks. Do you think anyone at a Chinese corporation can stand up to the Chinese intelligence agencies and say "no"?

  3. Even if it is bugged... by CMcQueeny · · Score: 3, Informative

    Even if we assume they're both tainted with devious Chinese spyware (and I'm not sure that China would want to harm such a huge and valuable debtor, by the way) which of these sounds like a bigger threat:

    1. A large Chinese-built wireless network which the government can monitor or shut down with relative ease.

    2. A vast semi-regulated sea of Chinese-built devices of all kinds flowing into the US, too many to be effectively controlled or destroyed, many of them used by emergency and government workers.

    Come on, people. Maybe China is a threat to us and maybe it isn't, but if there's a problem, at least attack it in a logical way.

  4. Re:it's ok for the U.S. govt... by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 4, Insightful

    it's ok for the U.S. govt to *actually* have warrantless wiretapping, but it's not ok to have china *maybe* doing warrantless wiretapping?

    Under US laws? Yes.

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  5. Re:Emergency Response by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Difference is, Huawei notoriously counterfeited hardware for years. Highest profile example was Huawei v Cisco, Huawei basically ripped off the hardware and the software 1:1, hex edited their name on to the OS. Huawei does not deserve to be in our market at all.

  6. Re:it's ok for the U.S. govt... by WindBourne · · Score: 5, Informative

    How did you get modded up? If we do wiretapping of telecom networks ESP. SECURED networks, in another nation, that would be called .... SPYING. And NO nation sees that as being legal.

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  7. Re:Emergency Response by Kagetsuki · · Score: 3, Informative

    I've dealt with Huwei wireless gear on and off and have constantly found it to be absolutely awful. That is unless you expect things like 3G data adapters to tweak out after 5 minutes because they overheat or IP Phone boxes that drop connections like it's a sport. Seriously, I'd trust tin cans and string with my life before a Huwei product.

  8. Re:Occupy America! by Quila · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The intelligence services of a few countries have found ties between Huawei and the Chinese military and intelligence services. Currently, the Chinese are the biggest spy threat to the US. Not allowing this company to build our communications infrastructure sounds like a reasonable, safe decision.

  9. Re:They never really mean it by Duradin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "costs to feed and transport this border protection force would be on the scale of a major war."

    Given just the cost of transporting fuel in Afghanistan moving the troops there to the Mexican border would probably be on the scale of a minor police action and not a major war.

    Move some bases down there and do boot camp on the border.

    Tunnels can be detected (to a point where they'd have to dig too deep to be practical) if anyone bothers to put the devices and manpower in and flights over the border would make for cheap gunnery practice.

    As for people starving, NPR interviewed a tomato farmer all upset that his illegals were fleeing some new laws, illegals that had skills the local work force lacks, hmm, sounds like the job for a work visa, of course, they wouldn't be cheap illegals then.

  10. Re:Obligitory by Synerg1y · · Score: 3, Interesting

    after stuxnet? :)

    Totally feasible, would slashdot feel better if they were excluding muslims rather than the Chinese? :)

  11. Re:Emergency Response by w_dragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And at the time it was true of the Japanese products. And before that it was the Germans supplying the low-quality junk products. Today it's China, and tomorrow it will be someone else.