US Senators Voice Concern Over Chinese Access To Intellectual Property (reuters.com)
Leaders of the U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee said on Tuesday they were concerned about what they described as China's efforts to gain access to sensitive U.S. technologies and intellectual property through Chinese companies with government ties. From a report: Senator Richard Burr, the committee's Republican chairman, cited concerns about the spread of foreign technologies in the United States, which he called "counterintelligence and information security risks that come prepackaged with the goods and services of certain overseas vendors. The focus of my concern today is China, and specifically Chinese telecoms (companies) like Huawei and ZTE that are widely understood to have extraordinary ties to the Chinese government," Burr said. Senator Mark Warner, the committee's Democratic vice chairman, said he had similar concerns. "I'm worried about the close relationship between the Chinese government and Chinese technology firms, particularly in the area of commercialization of our surveillance technology and efforts to shape telecommunications equipment markets," Warner said.
We sold our soul long ago when we allowed the blind capitalistic pursuit of cheaper labor to ship a large portion of our manufacturing capacity overseas, primarily to China. Anyone with a brain understood that by doing this we were giving them our IP and in the long term it would probably be a bad deal for us, but we allowed short term pursuit of higher profits to make the decisions and the government was perfectly happy to look the other way, as long as those fat corporate campaign contributions kept flowing.
I don't blame China. They simply used our greed against us. Well played, China. Bravo.
Maybe now is a good time to shut the barn door.
Don't forget how to properly differentiate:
- Worrisome Threat To Our Technological Edge: the Chinese/Indians reached in and took the secret sauce
- Shortage Of Qualified Engineers: we brought in people from China/India on short-term visas, taught them the secret sauce recipe, and forced them to return home.
- US Companies Must Remain Competitive: we outsourced the secret sauce to China/India to boost our quarterly results.
We don't want other countries getting access to IP, however we don't want to regulate business and allow them to do what is the most profitable, but we want these business to hire only American workers, without telling the companies that they have to hire American workers. We want to hire American workers to fill all the jobs, but we are at full employment and companies have a hard time finding employees.
If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
So, we should all be worried because this senator is also worried - even without any evidence warranting the worry. Right?
What are you talking about "without any evidence"? There is a history of Chinese corporations acting exactly how they are describing.
Isn't that how we ended up bombing [chaos into] some country in the Mideast more than a decade ago?
Nice strawman but nobody is talking about dropping bombs in another nation.
Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
And these corporate blow boys are just now figuring out that dealing with China means they will suck every iota of technology out of your company and throw it back a year later as their own?
Seriously...it's 'way past time Americans at least made a token effort to get control of their government back from the oligarchs.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
Listen - we put Donald Trump in the white house.
Donald Trump.
No, really - Donald Trump.
If I were some other large nation, I'd want to send some folks over there to just, well, save any important pieces of information, perhaps get a few pieces of future historical artifacts before this small era of human history crashes.
Seriously - we elected a cartoon parody of human greed and cruelty as our president - by choice. Many things have gone horribly wrong if you can't recognize how utterly stupid that is.
Trump will sell them a few airports shortly, they already bought a few ports.
Selling them the rope they will use to hang us.
That is literally what America has done, and now after they've all gotten their paydays from ignoring it from so long all of a sudden they want to shout out 'takesies backsies!' as though we will magically regain our former level of dominion so we can maintain our almost century long hubris (longer really, but the current hubris is mostly post-WW2 due to aging out.)
Anyone who thinks china lacks creativity or the research mindpower necessary to eclipse us, hasn't paid enough attention to both foreign and american patents dating back to the early 20th century (probably farther, but that is as far back as I've seen documented and photographed examples). The dragon is awakening for its second dominion over the world and as much as the US would like to imagine itself as a tiger, it is most akin to a rooster... with its head cut off.
Repeal the 3 term laws and let us see if our leader elect for life Trump can dig us out of this hole, hopefully by privatizing all state and federal land in the US and carefully selling it to those chinesy bearded guys in nice silks who promise to make payment long time :)
captcha was 'bickers': as in 'congress bickers over which part of America to sell off next, having long ago sold off production of American flags, except in Minnesota.' :D
They are a backward and violent people
In the last 50 years, America has been in over a dozen wars and military interventions. China has been in one.
The murder rate in China is one sixth of America's rate.
Perhaps you mean "official" violence against their own people? America "wins" there too, by arresting and imprisoning more than 4 times as many people per capita.
So who is more violent?
I'm more worried about the close relationship between the US government and US technology firms, like Verizon corporate douche-bag Ajit Pai becoming head of the FCC.
Support Right To Repair Legislation.
There is no secret to making "cola" {...} The Chinese did not learn to make cola by "stealing" Coke's "secret recipe".
What the above poster is trying to tell about is not the actual recipe of Coke's own spin on cola-based caffeined drinks.
(The recipe isn't actually that much a secret. e.g.: In several markets, local food and beverage law require the content to be explicitly stated on the label).
What is the key matter is that the Chinese owners of the outsourced manufacturing plant will analyse the *process* of manufacturing - i.e.: the methodology used by Coke to produce their drinks at industrial scale.
And that's the thing they can better : making a manufacturing plant better and more efficient at producing soda drinks.
To quote the relevant part :
The Chinese company then spent 10 years studying Cocoa Cola's products, workflow, supply chain, and so on until they understood it better than Cocoa Cola.
To make a much beloved /. car analogy :
they didn't copy the general concept of making a metal can box with 4 wheels and a motor on it.
they looked at how Ford's specific own-invented Ford process to mass-produce cars, they'll look into the basic feature sets that seem to interest customers and that manufacturer seem to concentrate on (everyone wants extra features like radio and cup holders)
then they'll get good at making not so bad knock-offs at a smaller price and craptastic "only in shape" copies, that sell at a fraction of the price but still somehow hold together long enough for the customer to buy them and only break down later on the way home.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
at least when stuff was made in mexco it was no red china with there soft IP laws.
Never mind the Russians trying to undermine the duly elected government of the United States with the assistance of a national political party. Let's pay attention to the Chinese instead.
That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
The way they treat IP, I think it will be in better hands than what the US is doing with it. Midn you, I am eneither Chinese nor USian, so I will get screwed no matter what (alas not by a female).
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
For years companies offshore tech to China and provide nice campaign contributions to politicians, now these people are crying foul.
mfwright@batnet.com
The US also has its computer hardware, software, and other technologies being used in China. Microsoft, Google, Facebook, etc., also have extraordinarily close relationships with the US government, e.g. They all make a handsome profit selling surveillance data and analysis services to US security agencies and other allied countries. Meanwhile the NSA, CIA, and FBI are working tirelessly to make US software less secure and more vulnerable to malicious attacks more than ever before. If anything's a threat to national security, it's them, not the Chinese.
Debate is a form of harassment. Do not question my truth.
Interesting article in The Atlantic:
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/03/trump-china/550886/
Trump has abdicated US "soft power" everywhere just as China builds up its own global influence.
By showering him with perks (21-gun salute, banquet in the Forbidden City, etc.), China is treating Trump just as his casinos do to gamblers by encouraging them to continue to lose money.
The whole concept of owning IP shipping manufacturing overseas is flawed. IP is a made up asset that can be removed at any time with no effort the part China. All they have to do is say they won't follow US patent and copyright law an they have all the manufacturing capabilities and all the intellectual property. What exactly can the US do about it?
That is the problem with made up assets they can just as easily be unmade.
They don't figure out how to make junk. It starts out as junk because it takes time to fully copy a complex process. Before you know it their stuff is better. This is exactly what happened to US radio manufactures experienced with the Japanese. Of course it helped that the Japanese subsidized their local industry to compete with ours too. More or less the same thing happened with US auto makers. And just recently the Chinese have starting making pens that compete with the best from Germany.
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to the folks who are really in charge. They're not bound by country any more. They've got world wide investments. They global, not local.
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When counties are looking to modernize they take a lax view of the IP in other countries. As it reaches the state of the art for the day and starts to push the boundaries then they will respect IP rights as they will want theirs respected. Eventually China will become a leader in pushing their IP protection onto other countries. This is quite a while off but it will happen. The US has gone through these stages, ignoring the IP of British companies when the US was trying to build up it's manufacturing base. But I guess what's good for the US isn't good for others especially when what is being talked about is the voluntary transfer of IP to China by US companies. Nobody is forcing them to enter the Chinese market and hand over their IP.
And we don't usually pay people to come here (unless they're from Slovakia).
She's Slovenian, not Slovak.
Slovenia is a former part of Yugoslavia, and lies between Italy and Croatia.
Slovakia was the eastern half of Czechoslovakia, and lies between Poland and Hungary.
Would have been nice if the government and private companies had thought of this 10 years ago. It is now too late and companies have little choice but to give China whatever it wants for free.