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Why Huawei Gives the US and Its Allies Security Nightmares (technologyreview.com)

Perhaps the most insightful piece that sums up why the U.S. and its allies are apprehensive of using Huawei's products. Six reasons, we are just highlighting the pointers, click on the source story to read the description:
1. There could be "kill switches" in Huawei equipment.
2. ... That even close inspections miss.
3. Back doors could be used for data snooping.
4. The rollout of 5G wireless networks will make everything worse.
5. Chinese firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.
6. Huawei isn't as immune to Chinese government influence as it claims to be.

346 comments

  1. More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    7. It's competition to US products.
    8. People with Huawei equipment can be spied upon by the Chinese government and not as easily by the US government.

    1. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if you look at the _world_ market share for mobile networks (3G, 4G, 5G) hardware and software ( without mobile phones) at the last few years:
      Huawei (China) 25-30%
      Ericsson (Sweden) 25-30%
      Nokia (Finland) 22-25%
      ZTE (China) 10-13%
      Samsung (South Korea) 3-5%

      No Americans in sight... Or Russians, Germans, French, or British...

    2. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err... a lot of the Ericsson and Nokia gear is actually designed in the USA actually.

    3. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huawei's competitors are mostly European (Nokia and Ericsson).

    4. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What US products? We have systematically destroyed 99% of our production capacity for the components that go into cell phones by allowing corporations to fire everyone and move production to other countries which allow workers to be so badly treated that they're slaves in all but name only.

      The only part the USA plays in making a cell phone is some manufacturers assembling the parts here in order to get an "Assembled in the USA" label. We can't make enough of the components for any cell phone to qualify as "Made in the USA".

    5. Re: More reasons by Z00L00K · · Score: 3, Informative

      Basically everywhere except in China since in China ownership of a company shall be Chinese.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    6. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nokia has large operations in Germany (the former Siemens Networks) and France (the former Alcatel).

    7. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So?

    8. Re:More reasons by NicknameUnavailable · · Score: 4, Informative

      0. We know for a fact that the government backdoors the shit out of any tech made under their roof, because we do it, Intel actually got caught doing it in leaks over a half a decade ago, and they still do it. It's like giving up the ability to spy on your slaves to your next-largest competitor, you just don't do that.

    9. Re:More reasons by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Instead of speculation why not find out?

      Huawei will let governments inspect their code and publish known good firmware hashes. Does Cisco?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:More reasons by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 5, Interesting

      They are not "slaves in all but name only". The working conditions are pretty good in a lot of those Chinese factories, the workers make enough money to send home to their rural families, and despite the sensationalist claims, suicide rates are roughly equivalent to the non-factory worker population. I would say that it is far more likely that your vegetables were picked by someone in the USA that is functionally a slave or that your clothes are made by some child in a sweatshop than your phone is made by a "slave". Indeed, one of the reasons why the work has moved to China is the presence of so much SKILLED labour all concentrated in one place.

      China isn’t perfect, the factories often try to get away with shit, not everyone there is acting in good faith...but I could say exactly the same thing about a lot of places in North America. I think the real fear here is that despite everything, we AREN'T any better than the Chinese, and it offends our moral sensibilities that we might not have any moral high ground to stand on when it comes to workers and their rights.

    11. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Number 8 there is the big one.

      The US could not care less about the actual hardware security, they just want access to the equipment no matter where it is.

      Huawei has systematically refused to provide that access

      So, the US advocates against people using them "for security reasons"

    12. Re: More reasons by astrofurter · · Score: 1, Informative

      "it offends our moral sensibilities that we might not have any moral high ground to stand on when it comes to workers and their rights."

      Everyone knows that in Soviet America workers have no rights.

    13. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might just want to read the part where UK tests had one set of results, but once inserted into a production network, it produced a different set of results. The software was inspected and under test, the equipment behaved as it should. However, with same software, it was the production network were results were different than what the software would produce.
      The last time the globe found something like that, was the diesel gate that the Germans did in which software detected tested and then produced correct results, while the vehicle would then disregard the setting during regular time.

      You Germans may not care, but when Russia or China decide to roll into Europe, they will at a minimum be listening to your comms, or will simply shut you down.

    14. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, the famous German car makers Fiat Chrysler, Renault-Nissan, Ford, General Motors, Peugeot and Hyundai-Kia...

    15. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      While we certainly aren't better in some ways, in others we currently still are. While our government may currently be run by people who can be generously termed jackasses, at least they aren't yet able to censor us and their isn't a great firewall of the US like there is in China. Oh, and you can call our POTUS a jackass and not end up in prison.

    16. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Huawei will let governments inspect their code and publish known good firmware hashes. Does Cisco?

      Having the source available in OpenSSL for years didn't prevent from Heartbleed from existing. You can have the source available, with a subtle backdoor, without necessarily noticing it.

      Second, if you have Huawei source code, you already have Cisco's since they (allegedly) copied it:

      * https://blogs.cisco.com/news/huawei-and-ciscos-source-code-correcting-the-record

      Regardless, Cisco has shown source:

      * https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-russia-tech-insight/under-pressure-western-tech-firms-bow-to-russian-demands-to-share-cyber-secrets-idUSKBN19E0XB
      * https://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/western-tech-companies-russia-cyber-code-review-1.4174834

    17. Re:More reasons by Luckyo · · Score: 2

      Prison? Try "re-education camp" if you're low enough on totem pole, and "being the star of televised execution" if you're high enough.

      Seriously, this is never in the news in the West for propagandistic reasons, but televised executions of higher ups that were in some kind of opposition to Xi's policies and rising of his cult of personality have been ongoing for quite a few years now in China.

    18. Re: More reasons by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Nokia at least is well documented to have made deals with US to insert spy gear into networks delivered to Soviet Union. That was in fact critical to getting required export licenses, since there was US technology in those networks.

      We Finns have to be flexible both ways to be able to exist with longer border with Russia than entire of rest of EU combined while remaining outside NATO.

    19. Re:More reasons by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Exactly! This isn't about the trade war at all.

      This is about national security, and the top competitors are European.

      I don't see why it is controversial that we should prefer to have sensitive equipment in our communications systems come from our actual friends and allies, instead of from countries that are politically hostile to our basic values.

      The biggest thing is that civics and civil rights in Europe are similar to the rights in the US, so there is less risk of activities that would be harmful to our way of life.

    20. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry but I can vote for restrictions on the NSA, not so much the Chinese intelligence services.
      Nice try 50c

    21. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're quick to conclude that Huawei was hiding something, could be just be buggy/quirky equipment.

    22. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You raving lunatics who say this are the same types who supported the Nazis and Hitler's Third Reich!!!!

      Forced organ harvesing of political prisoners and religious prisoners, disappeared human rights attorneys and pro-democracy activists, etc., etc., ad nauseum.

      "China isn't perfect . . ." Are you completely insane???

      http://www.filmsforfreedom.com/ravage/#about-ravage

    23. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, they told me America was turning into an over regulated socialist Venezuelan state where companies aren't allowed to fire people.

    24. Re: More reasons by sound+vision · · Score: 1

      This only factors into it if you are listening in to propaganda from one source or another. Unplug from that and see the real reasons are 100 percent practical. If whites in Russia made networking equipment we would see the same maneuvers.

    25. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoever they is, you need to stop listening to them. Probably a repubtard feeding you a narrative.

    26. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This is a strawman.

      Nobody was looking at OpenSSL like that, that's why. If heauwei were to open up their code and let governments go over it, then the eyes will be there. A government agencie will hot turn that down. Well except the USA, of course.

      You are comparing apples to oranges.

    27. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL, you think the govt is going to restrict its biggest intel/cyber gathering arm?

      Yea, show us where "we" get to vote on such things please.

    28. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Chinese phone factory INSTALLED NETS TO STOP THE FALLING BODIES OF SUICIDING WORKERS.

      https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/jun/18/foxconn-life-death-forbidden-city-longhua-suicide-apple-iphone-brian-merchant-one-device-extract

      You could say this, you could say that. Blah blah blah. Can you speak the truth?

    29. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      I was think the #1 reason is
      1. Huawei refused to put in a NSA back door.

      Remember what happened when another company didn't cooperate: https://www.businessinsider.com/the-story-of-joseph-nacchio-and-the-nsa-2013-6

    30. Re:More reasons by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      The working conditions are pretty good in a lot of those Chinese factories, the workers make enough money to send home to their rural families, and despite the sensationalist claims, suicide rates are roughly equivalent to the non-factory worker population.

      Of course they are now that they've installed nets to catch all those jumpers.

      is the presence of so much SKILLED labour all concentrated in one place

      Well you clearly live in one of the states which recently legalised weed.

      Either that or you're willfully ignorant beyond all normal comprehension. Or you're a shill, but honestly that term has no value on slashdot anymore thanks to the trolls.

    31. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      9. They stole their technology from Nortel networks and put them out of business, and are now doing the same with other firms.

    32. Re:More reasons by lordlod · · Score: 1

      Of course.

      Huawei provided code to prove that they had nothing to hide. The tests and hashes are specifically to ensure that the inspected code matches the production code. If the tests don't match you have to assume that they have problems, that is their purpose. If the test results magically change when the device is introduced to a production environment you can guarantee it.

    33. Re: More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Number 8 there is the big one.

      The US could not care less about the actual hardware security, they just want access to the equipment no matter where it is.

      Huawei has systematically refused to provide that access

      So, the US advocates against people using them "for security reasons"

      Probably. Personally I'd prefer defence in depth regardless. Perhaps the parts come from foreign sources, but the software of known pedigree is loaded in America. The next level, at the cell towers we can mandate different sources, or even American sources, where you can have those system monitor for possible stealth communications and such. It's a little harder to require people at their houses to source their routers from other sources, but enough would to possibly catch some bad behaviour.

      Basically try to design systems such that trust is limited and problems can be contained by surrounding systems. Of course similarly you can't rely on digital signatures that are purely of one country of origin. You need redundancy to really trust anything.

      I'm not too worried about a kill switch. If it happens it happens. Just require enough diversity in the infrastructure that the worst cases are mitigated. Basically whining that Huawei doesn't product secure stuff is pretty darn useless. Your opening assumption should be that it is all insecure, so how do we mitigate it?

      Now if people want to argue that poor working conditions or environmental laws are a legitimate reason for tariffs, as opposed to a, erm, Trumped up reason, that is another topic.

    34. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the fuck do people always show up to attack the US when China is criticized? Useless pieces of shit, your whataboutism is getting really exhausting.

    35. Re: More reasons by cheesybagel · · Score: 2

      The USA government also cancelled a contract AT&T had with Huawei where they would retail their smartphones. Huawei is currently the #2 smartphone vendor in the world, #1 is Samsung, #3 is Apple (used to be #2 last year).

      Huawei also competes with Cisco and Juniper in router equipment.

    36. Re: More reasons by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Link to a story about the AT&T shenanigans.
      https://www.nytimes.com/2018/0...

      Not new though.

      The USA did the same thing to Japan's supercomputer industry in the 1980s.

    37. Re: More reasons by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Being neutral can be quite profitable. Just ask the Swiss.

    38. Re:More reasons by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      France also used to harvest organs from convicts. Don't know if they still do it though.

    39. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      7. There are no American products with which Huawei competes in this space. All European.

    40. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey! You cant spy on our wage slaves, thats OUR job!

    41. Re:More reasons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am not sure who told you this, but that would violate the French constitution as well as quite a few international treatis signed by France.

    42. Re: More reasons by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I literally just outlined the way it was profitable for us.

    43. Re:More reasons by dcw3 · · Score: 1
      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    44. Re:More reasons by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      And for the hoi polloi, mobile execution vans are used.

  2. I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Every point made here is just as true from the other side too. I know China is investing heavily in developing high-end microprocessor designs and manufacturing capability, but shouldn't it make strategic sense for them to also spend as much money as it takes to purge their country of Microsoft? Windows Update could be easily repurposed for espionage, and even if the US government doesn't control it yet, they could surely do so if they situation was desperate enough. I'd expect China to be throwing huge piles of money into transitioning away from Windows entirely for all military and government functions, and all major companies too. They even tried with Red Flag Linux, and that ended badly. China is striving for hardware manufacturing capability, but seems to be unconcerned over software.

    1. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Mod up.
      5G also means more towers and less certainty in tapping the base station, hence stingray like solutions. But with 5G stingray generally wont work unless the telco plays the game over very short distances. They keys that open doors work everywhere. Any new entrant would be detested, not just Chinese. USA is also sore that it missed the manufacturing boat, even after Nokia and Sony were pushed aside. Now to make a mobile at cutthroat margins means updates almost bi-monthly. That means a tight relationship with Q and shitty insecure Android.

      Anyway the USA could and does have the forensic knowledge to to a proper job. Not that it will matter - every international flight and hotel guests will be offering low price handsets to poison this hateful boycott. Any more of this shit, and the Chinese will add tattletale red rights to indicate exceptions with full logging. Blackberry had their chance, but decided not to compete.

    2. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Oh it has.

      The Chinese government still thinks they're clever for stealing US tech.

      https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/1455559/CIA-plot-led-to-huge-blast-in-Siberian-gas-pipeline.html

      That's just a hint of what goes on.

      The reason the US government doesn't steal foreign tech and give it to US companies is because they know it's an attack vector like a flash drive labeled honeymoon left in a bank parking lot.

    3. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by markdavis · · Score: 5, Interesting

      >"I'd expect China to be throwing huge piles of money into transitioning away from Windows entirely for all military and government functions, and all major companies too. They even tried with Red Flag Linux, and that ended badly."

      You are correct that they shouldn't trust closed US software/hardware (yet we probably shouldn't either). Although their attempt with using Linux didn't end "badly", it just ended because for whatever reason, they decided not to pursue it. At the time, it was probably less about security than a bluff to try and force Microsoft to lower prices and/or include certain "features", coupled with their unwillingness to port their applications to the platform. Actually, it could have been a huge win for them had they continued the process.

    4. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes. And that tells me exactly what the US government expects to be to do to a "US made" phone.

    5. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget that Microsoft caved in and shared the source code of Windows with the Chinese.

    6. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they might've realized that ``open source'' was worse for them than Windows (easier to hide things in Windows [irrelevant if you're microsoft or not] than in Linux).

    7. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

      Windows Update could be easily repurposed for espionage
      If you didn't before, now you see one of the reasons why so many of us hate Microsoft, have shunned Windows 10, and moved to Linux: when you don't have control over the machine, the machine can instead control you. With Windows 10, the only 'control' you have over Windows Update is to stop and disable the Service completely; you don't have any ability, like in the past, to pick-and-choose which updates get downloaded and installed. Therefore you're not in control of your own computer anymore, not in any substantial way.

    8. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Artem+S.+Tashkinov · · Score: 2

      They even tried with Red Flag Linux, and that ended badly. China is striving for hardware manufacturing capability, but seems to be unconcerned over software.

      I suspect it didn't end badly: the Chinese probably got full access to Windows source code and they negotiated a deal with Microsoft, so that Windows Updates were controlled by the Chinese side, so that Microsoft couldn't push backdoors at will.

      A win-win situation for all the involved parties: Microsoft still can sell Windows to China, the Chinese can still run all their win32 software without any compatibility issues.

    9. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      5G = cancer cloud

    10. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      The US Government isn't switching to US-made phone ICs, they're switching to European ones.

    11. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by hackingbear · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The reason the US government doesn't steal foreign tech

      Except the US government has done exactly that:

      The report recommends “a multi-pronged, systematic effort to gather open source and proprietary information through overt means, clandestine penetration (through physical and cyber means), and counterintelligence” (emphasis added). In particular, the DNI’s report envisions “cyber operations” to penetrate “covert centers of innovation” such as R&D facilities.

      The level of American hypocrisy makes me vomit every day.

    12. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe for China some local office has to sign all patches to be deployable to the system. However they could still sneak in a backdoor. I doubt everything is monitored to such extent.

    13. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they might've realized that ``open source'' was worse for them than Windows (easier to hide things in Windows [irrelevant if you're microsoft or not] than in Linux).

      Only if China honors the requirement of supplying the source code to whatever open source projects they fork.

    14. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We weren't spying to steal the tech you idiot. We were spying to see what capabilities it had. Learn the difference.

    15. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by hackingbear · · Score: 1

      the differences are that
      1. accusations against China were propagated by the US cybersecurity and spying industry, whereas the accusations against US were proven by leaked documents.
      2. the US is hypocritical whereas China or anyone else outside of American allies are not.

    16. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, random rpm repos sure are safer than Microsoft and their SDLC!

    17. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      The Chinese are less open about cyber-prosecution and do not have a free press to publish the leaked documents with. I'm afraid to say that China is _not_ hypocritical is to ignore several thousand years of recorded history. And I'm afraid that ll governments are hypocritical at various times.

    18. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Antique+Geekmeister · · Score: 1

      > but shouldn't it make strategic sense for them to also spend as much money as it takes to purge their country of Microsoft?

      I think not. They pirate Windows on a _massive_ scale, and usually are better served by spending their time and money on other efforts. The security vulnerabilities of old Windows releases simply leave their citizens more vulnerable to government monitoring and control of the systems at whim, with plausible deniability for such abuse. There are tactical and strategic goals served by their continuing reliance on pirated Windows XP and Microsoft Office.

    19. Re:I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The level of American hypocrisy makes me vomit every day.

      I think that's probably just your AIDS acting up.

    20. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by hackingbear · · Score: 1

      LOL, is there a requirement that leaked documents must be published by press of the same country? Where did Ed Snowden fret to and holes up still? LOL

    21. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well then why don't you just take an axe to your goddamned computer and not use any of them anymore you jizz-licking faggot.

    22. Re: I'm surprised it doesn't go the other way. by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      Last I noticed, every nation was hypocritical.

  3. US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's why we are to be afraid. Guess what, your mobile mandatory location identifying device (as required by US law) is a leash.

    1. Re:US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      All popular computer applications are spyware now. Everything is data-mining you as much as possible. It's part of society. The correct thing to do is ditch everything and start from scratch. Build a new internet, new protocols, that use mandatory encryption for every action. The military already does that, but civilians are stuck with the shitty version of the internet.

    2. Re:US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah? What does Debian mine?

    3. Re:US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Debian is sending your user data to Israeli intelligence and to the NSA.

    4. Re: US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Systemd hardcodes 8.8.8.8 for dns failover in Debian, does it not?

    5. Re: US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you Debian.
      Debian source code is a simple implementation that handles most complex use cases. As an example, Debian has TCP/IP polling that attempts to keep a connection alive longer than newer modules. The idea was that users probably intended to keep open a connection that was user generated. Once the connection was sure to be gone then it was closed. Nowadays, of course browsers and the like open all number of transient connections and Debian is not designed for that. Newer versions of Debian being worked on by some former Apple engineers will handle both types of use cases: automated transient connections and user-generated permanent connections - there is no release link (there was but it had an error now) but likely will be one once the new project gets a home page

    6. Re: US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your dignity.

    7. Re:US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And just how, exactly, does encryption help, except against MITM tapping/modification?

    8. Re: US govt propaganda by fortfive · · Score: 2

      This is the real point. Folks like us (well me, anyway, i don't know about all you zombies) are just a resource for which governments and big corporations are competing.

    9. Re:US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Show us what laws require "your mobile mandatory location identifying device (as required by US law) is a leash."
      Here. I will get you started.

      Let us guess. You will not be backing up your claim. You are just one of the common trolls running around here. Bloody Git.

    10. Re: US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, let's decide the work. You redesign the entire IP stack from scratch, also all of the routing protocols and network service protocols like ntp, dns, etc. Oh, and the government had its hand in AES, so you'll need to make another one of those as well. And then, I'll do the work of exposing the security vulnerabilities so that you have to keep redesigning everything.

    11. Re: US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      who cares. debian is so irrelevant now its funny. heil ubuntu.

    12. Re: US govt propaganda by fustakrakich · · Score: 2

      Appears so! Quite a food fight there. I wonder if the bug was ever reopened... Talk about security nightmares...

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    13. Re:US govt propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Encryption does not solve everyone and everything being data mined, it just prevents you from being able to notice that you are.

    14. Re:US govt propaganda by wyHunter · · Score: 1

      Which was advocated by Bill Clinton, the man STILL the darling of the left - despite #MeToo.

  4. happened in India by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Working as a switch engineer* I heard stories from people working in India, that during one of their border clashes, the Chinese switches they had installed were completely remotely disabled causing total chaos. To be fair I have heard similar stories about American equipment. I think that's even public knowledge in the case of the Iraq war. I'm really not convinced that having third country equipment will save you (look at Ericsson in Greece before the Olimpics).

    My main question here is, why are you allowing all your citizens to depend on Chinese chips in their smartphones when you don't want to rely on them yourselves?

    * I do not mean Ethernet switch.

    1. Re:happened in India by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's a nice piece of fake news, on par with the oft told story about the Soviet "peace" tractors that allegedly "destroyed" a million-strong Chinese invasion force in the 60s with megalasers from low Earth orbit.

      I'm sure, however, that had such a thing as you described happened, it would have received ample coverage by the Indian press.

      Care to find some links?

    2. Re:happened in India by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet, India stopped buying Huawei equipment after there latest skirmish with China. 5eyes had very little work to do to convince them that they are a threat.

    3. Re:happened in India by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Switches stopped working in Iraq because they drop "bombs" on electrical substations that have, instead of explosives, a giant spool of conductive filament that they spew out, which blows all the fuses and fries equipment that is easy to replace in times of peace, but difficult to replace during a war. This allows the widespread incapacitation of electric grids, and shuts down most land-based communication, with minimal loss of civilian life.

      Even if an urban area quickly reroutes their power distribution, it is still going to be local generation. Land communications will still be down, your repeaters on long stretches won't have power.

      Border clashes in India are not the same sort of war. Such reports are consistent with what you'd want your intelligence agency to say about the enemy, though, so it can't be believed at all. But if you saw it happen for yourself, it would be more clear what happened than if you're in Iraq and the war starts and your packets stop getting through.

      As for your question; Americans have a high degree of Freedom. The government isn't allowed to tell people what phones to buy. And in fact, our laws prevent the government from passing laws that discriminate based on nationality. That's why all they can do control what the government buys, and make recommendations to the people. There are various things they can do on a temporary basis, like block imports from a specific country, but those types of decisions can be reviewed by the Courts; they have to have a real reason, not just a fear. Keeping the people safe is not really a legit government interest here, the way it is in most places. It has to already be harming people before the government is allowed to do much.

      To stop regular people from using them, they'd have to instead force the corporations to stop allowing such phones on their networks, via the license needed for access to the public airwaves. That type of license, because it manages a limited shared resource, can give more consideration to general concerns about national security. But in all cases, it will still be allowed to have one of those phones, even if it doesn't work as a phone here.

      Banning things is very difficult for the US Government to achieve, and requires cooperation from all three branches of government. Regulating things at the government's point of involvement is much easier.

    4. Re: happened in India by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh?

    5. Re:happened in India by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      Yes, wars tend to antagonize the governments that fight them. News at 11.

    6. Re: happened in India by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      OP is spreading fake news.

  5. Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and it by getuid() · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. There most likely are "kill switches" in $USBRAND equipment.

    2. ... That even close inspections miss.

    3. Back doors are already being used for data snooping.

    4. The rollout of 5G wireless networks will make everything worse.

    5. US firms will ship tech to countries wherever the fuck they want regardless of anything else.

    6. $USBRAND isn't immune to US government influence, period.

    I fail to see a problem with Huawei in particular.

  6. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    pretty much, everyone in the intelligence industry worry about the stuff they are doing to other countries being done back.

    Look at what they are saying that other places are likely doing, and you get a pretty good list of what they are doing to other places.

  7. The real reason by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 5, Informative

    7. Huawei phones lack the backdoors that allow the US intelligence community to spy on its own people.

    That's it, really. They don't trust us, not at all. You really have to wonder why? Why do they feel the need to spy on us and know what we're thinking? Our elected government made this illegal, and the intelligence community promptly broke the law and lied about it.

    On March 12, 2013, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper told Congress that intel officials were not collecting mass data on tens of millions of Americans. NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden soon revealed material that proved Clapper's testimony false: The government had been gathering and storing data from ordinary Americans' phone records, email and Internet use.

    They don't feel any obligation to us at all. It's OK if they break the laws we passed with our elected government and lie to our faces - they don't feel safe if we can keep secrets from them. Fuck democracy, they have wars to start. If we all started buying Huawei they would feel very unsafe indeed.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    1. Re:The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US government's worries aren't exactly about phones, but about carrier grade equipment. Huawei got to the top market share in recent years, and keeps outpacing companies from USA and their allies.

      This is about control of networks and information gathering at the source and therefor both a question strategic and an intelligence matters

      The information gathering you mentioned, uncovered by Snowden, is mostly metadata, which happens in the datacenter, not the handset

    2. Re:The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew this could be be blamed on America somehow. Everything that happens in the world is always America's fault. All others lack agency and cannot make decisions for themselves.

    3. Re:The real reason by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I had never heard of Huawei until I moved back to Costa Rica earlier this year. I was basically GIVEN two of their phones by the local phone company - they're that cheap. And they're pretty good. I don't use them because I still have my Samsung but I had a look at them. Given what they offer (a lot) for what they cost (almost nothing), I can understand why the US cell phone market is shaking in its boots. This is not so much about spying and 100% about the oligopolies making sure they don't lose market share. Anyway, I have 2 spare phones.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    4. Re:The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, if we all started buying Huawei phones, then it would quickly dwarf the amount of money that carrier stuff costs.

      The worry is:

      a) The economy to US brands - cisco, etc, which yes, have snoop kit built in. When one gets found, an 'advisory' gets released to CERT/etc on how to patch. Pretty safe, easy plausible deniability for backdoors (excluding the actual accidental ones)
      b) The massive amount of money would stop coming in once people learned they don't actually need to buy cisco kit and nowdays a lot of non-cisco kit will work easily.
      c) Cisco/USBRAND will up it's 'breaking compatibility' with other devices to deliberately do the 'well it works with our stuff' game.
      d) US would lose it's lead in the tech industry. Newsflash: That lead is already gone.

      There's a lot of panicking being done by people high up, who have got too 'cushtie' in their jobs. Out with the old, and get fresh talent in which may not be as experienced in politics, but have a damn good idea of what's up and going on in the tech industry. That's probably the only thing that's going to pull them out of this. Stop worring about external shit as you can't control it. Start investing in your own f*ing infastructure instead of spending it *all* on defence.

    5. Re:The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say you want a revolution....

    6. Re: The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Metadata *is* data.

      That is a dodge to act like its somehow not data or second class and not useful data.

      It is data. Period. You don't get to call it metadata when we are probing you about illegal DATA collection!

    7. Re:The real reason by ZombieCatInABox · · Score: 1

      So let me get this straight: What you're basically saying is that you trust a repressive totalitarian regime more than you trust your own democratically elected governement ?

    8. Re: The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This kind of idiotic response to anything resembling criticism on the US or something in the US is a big part of why the US is such a shithole. As long as many Americans keep on believing everything in the US is perfect and they cannot learn anything from the rest of the world, nothing will ever improve.

    9. Re:The real reason by Ramze · · Score: 1

      The US intelligence community doesn't have backdoors into all phones. They have backdoors into the phone carriers for certain, though. AT&T, etc have fiber optic runs to spy closets where audio is recorded and speech-to-text tools are used to help search for key words. Snowden wasn't even the first to know about it. I remember when Shia Labeouf talked about it during an interview where he worked with the feds to prepare for a movie. He mentioned government spying, and the feds played him back a recording of a cell phone call he'd made years before to show off what they could do. This is why everyone who actually works for the government in high positions all use encryption for their calls and texts (while simultaneously fighting for backdoors for encryption) -- because those apps circumvent the carrier's recording technology.

      Phones are pretty rock solid - especially Apple iphones. I've heard from local law enforcement that there's a huge backlog of iphones and other equipment with strong encryption that the feds can't break into yet. For simple codes on Android, they use a USB that fakes a keyboard input trying all the possibilities 'til it unlocks - doesn't take long for simple numeric codes. iPhones will make you wait between tries and the wait time gets longer with each failed try. Biometric ones are easy to unlock - use a lifted print or a photo if it's a face unlock... but, they still have to unlock it b/c there's no actual backdoor.

      Verizon and some other carriers have their own OS modifications for Android, so who knows what they put on their phones when they flash the ROMs to make them work. I assume carrier unlocked factory-default phones would be free of such spyware, but simply making a call on a carrier means the carrier can listen in to the call since they make the connection.

      Any funny looking hardware would get scrutinized and would kill a phone maker's business if found, but software can be tricky. Apple is the only company I know of for certain that loads their own un-modified OS on their hardware. Verizon, Sprint, and others tend to tweak the OS and flash the ROM... they could be doing anything, really. Huawei, if it were allowed to play in the US market, would be subject to Verizon, Sprint, AT&T etc... the carriers would mandate what software was on the devices and flash their spyware if there is some there to flash. Huawei could have a super-secret hardware firmware backdoor, kill switch, or the like, but a physical rogue chip would be detected, and any malware would have to navigate through the flashed telcom firmware to operate. The minute malware is discovered, their business would be over. It'd be suicide for them to do that.

      The US is just upset that China isn't following US sanctions on other countries in addition to the current trade war. Huawei being Chinese government controlled will always be a threat to US security as at any time, Hauwei could flip a switch, flash an update, and own your device.... but, it wasn't until recently that the US told their govt contractors to ban Hauwei devices. It's all politics at this point.

    10. Re:The real reason by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      I wonder if this is a factor in their efforts to make if very hard to root their phones.

      --
      This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    11. Re:The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you're basically saying is that you trust ... you trust your own democratically elected governement ?

      Oh, you poor, innocent fool. Do you honestly believe that your government is actually elected democratically? Sweetie, that's just a show they put on for you.

    12. Re:The real reason by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The US intelligence community is not elected. They have gone rogue and are not under the control of the democratically elected government. "This is like a spy novel.".

      These are the same people who lied us into Iraq. In what possible way are they trustworthy?

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    13. Re:The real reason by dryeo · · Score: 2

      The repressive totalitarian regime can be trusted to act like a repressive totalitarian regime. Democratically elected governments change course regularly, one day you're their friend, the next they're putting tariffs on you for national security reasons while being all chummy with some of those repressive totalitarian governments.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    14. Re:The real reason by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      That sounds good, but only if you have no clue who makes the alternatives.

      For example, your Samsung isn't from the US.

    15. Re:The real reason by Aighearach · · Score: 2

      Bullshit, before the war the CIA assessment was leaked to the public.

      It was purely one of the elected branches that was lying, and they control all the parts of the intelligence community that make public statements. The actual intelligence documents are only provided to different parts of government, not to the public; and Congress leaked it so people would know the Truth. It was only because of our un-elected intelligence community that we found out the truth!

      My advice, stop reading so many spy novels, and your world will look less like one.

    16. Re:The real reason by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      The reason it was recent is that Huawei is pretty new. Their market position was developed instantly, because they're part of the Chinese government.

      Your comments about the US intelligence access at the network level are important to understanding this though.

      The US government can spy on things just fine if you have a Huawei phone. So it isn't about that.

      And it seems basically reasonable that it is a security risk for a foreign power with very very very different laws and civics to be in a position to disrupt our communication network. That's true even if we were currently getting along really well.

    17. Re: The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The OP blames America for fining VW because VW is EU, and then said the same sbit about Monsanto because they are EU owned.

      Again, we tested all cars that are imported, it seems the Germans were the only ones who got CAUGHT cheating, and then lied about said cheating.

      So again, how is that America's fault?

    18. Re: The real reason by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I checked, both Ford and General Motors were American and both of them were caught cheating with emissions.

  8. How are any of these bullet points... by h33t+l4x0r · · Score: 1

    Not true of iphones?

    1. Re:How are any of these bullet points... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Not true of iphones?

      They absolutely hold true for all the US made products as well but thats the whole point, they're making these noises to draw your attention away from that.

    2. Re:How are any of these bullet points... by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      US made products

      He asked about iPhones. You know where iPhones are made, right? Which part of the US is this place?

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  9. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly this.

    Oh, and as other commenters have already pointed out: if anyhting, then with Huawei you're less likely to spied upon as a US cizizen simply because the US government is less likely to have any backdoor inserted in Huawei equipment.
    (And no, as a random Joe American citizen you're neither interesting enough to be spied upon by the Chinese government, nor insightful enough to provide any usefuln intelligence even if they do spy on you.)

    For this reason alone I'd buy exclusively Huawei, TP-Link, Mikrotik... i.e. anything but US brands for use within the US and their first-tier influence radius.

  10. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I fail to see a problem with Huawei in particular.

    Are you American or from a country which might expect to be an American ally after then next year or two? If not then possibly no problem. US equipment will have similar trade-offs though possibly less risk. If you are American then you should understand that you are heading towards a geopolitical and possibly military clash with China. You both want to control and dominate the same ocean and you both rely on overseas resources heavily. Since you don't seem to be able to be polite to them you are unlikely to come to a stable agreement.

    In the case of a war, hot or cold, any equipment that was produced by the other side is likely to be untrustworthy. Even if there are no backdoors, they have the engineers who understand it fully and will be able to look for every weakness they need. In this case Huawei becomes a real threat to the US, the same as ZTE, Lenovo, and almost any other company most of which use Chinese components.

  11. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Indeed, you're probably seeing "projection". There is a long history of the US doing these very things, ranging from the Siberian gas pipeline explosions to the backdoor bugging of the Greek govt and, as Snowden documented, intercepting and delivering computing equipment with NSA implants. Kettle, pot...

  12. 0. They cannot be forced to snoop for us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Conveniently forgot that one, didn't you.

  13. Very telling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So this means that
    1. There are "kill switches" in Cisco equipment.
    2. ... That even close inspections miss.
    3. Back doors in Cisco equipment are used for data snooping.
    4. The rollout of 5G wireless networks will make everything worse.
    5. US firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of other countries' trade embargos.
    6. Cisco is a US government lap dog.

    It takes one to know one. The US fears that others will do to the US what the US does to them.

  14. The US still has allies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought US president Trump had made it more than clear he no longer considers any country an ally.

    1. Re:The US still has allies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You where not listening or are choosing to hear what you want to hear from CNN.

      What he actually said was "America first". Which means he will make policy choices that are based on America's interest first, THEN consider other countries who are allies.

      That's quite a bit different than what you are saying. But I'm not surprised, the media often launches into hyperbole about what Trump says and those predisposed to not like him willingly swallow without complaint.

    2. Re: The US still has allies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you mean there is a difference between what Donald Trump says and what he does? Shocking!

      Also, if you think CNN is bad, you should see some of the other US TV news channels, such as Fox News. They are even more ridiculously opinionated and filled with US propaganda and outright lies and nonsense.

    3. Re:The US still has allies? by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      When was that different before Trump? At which point in its history has the United States been altruistic? Can we see some examples, please?

  15. Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by bogaboga · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I set it's a bunch of "possibilities"...

    "Could be"..."Could" and so on...

    Chinese firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.

    Why should foreign entity obey US law is I may ask?

    . Huawei isn't as immune to Chinese government influence as it claims to be

    Let's remember we have the NSA that has done more or less the same, even in defiance of US law...

    1. Re:Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why should foreign entity obey US law is I may ask?

      Because the U.S. claim to have jurisdiction over the whole fucking world.

    2. Re:Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who gives a shit what they claim?

    3. Re:Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Chinese firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.

      Why should foreign entity obey US law is I may ask?

      They don't have to obey US law. However, the US is within its rights to say that it will not allow US trade with a firm that breaks its embargo. These days almost every non-trivial item has components that are built/designed/licenced by US firms. So you can trade with, e.g. Iran, but your firm will no longer be able to get supplies of US components, software, equipment, etc. and the US will refuse to trade with you or any of your suppliers. Which pretty much means you're screwed if you trade with a country that the US has embargoed. It's harsh but well within the norms of embargoes. (I'm from the UK and have no dog in this fight.)

    4. Re:Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Yeah, especially when it is websites in Asia doing the claiming on behalf of the US. ;)

    5. Re: Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol this.

    6. Re:Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      Except that the US isn't "refusing to trade", they are threatening with criminal prosecution and extraditions from a bunch of other countries.

    7. Re:Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who gives a shit what they claim?

      Foreign companies absolutely do give a shit, as the DOJ has over the years imposed billions of dollars of fines on some of them. The U.S. don't only "claim", they actually follow through with their threats regarding what they call "secondary sanctions".

    8. Re:Could, could be and so on is the best we have? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. Europe should stand up against US bullying and take measures to prevent it and to punish the US harshly if they continue down this path.

  16. Bit mostly because... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... it doesn't have the backdoors and kill code that Western governments put there!

  17. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    4. The rollout of 5G wireless networks will make everything worse.

    Except that US and European tech companies aren't going to roll out 5G anytime soon since they are years behind the tech which Huawei invested heavily in.

  18. None of this matters by dnaumov · · Score: 2

    Huawei / Chinese meddling is not in any way more or less suspect than Cisco / US meddling. Everybody is a suspect. Why would/should it be otherwise?

    1. Re:None of this matters by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Actually it is different. With Huawei we all instinctively know this to be the case because... China. With Cisco we've already seen proof.

    2. Re:None of this matters by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      Well, Ivan, see, it is like this; if you're smart enough not to trust anybody, then you should prefer equipment made by companies who are under the same type of government system that you are.

      Americans and Europeans have mostly compatible civics, and so if the Europeans do something really naughty to me, they risk being punished by their own government. Same in reverse; if an American company does something really naughty to Europeans, they'll get in trouble.

      If a Chinese, or Russian, company does something naughty to Americans, or Europeans, nothing bad will happen to them at all; they might even get a reward!

  19. The Only Problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HUAWEI does not implement backdoors required by Five Eyes. That's the only problem. Actually, HUAWEI does not implement any backdoors, not even chinese, but that truth is fully inverted by false western propaganda.

  20. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by getuid() · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you're the average American (or European, for that matter), you're living paycheck to paycheck, your perspective of retiring at the end of your useful shelf life (~65, give or take) is practically zero, your children's chance of a useful education is degrading (...if you're European; it's already essentially zero of you're US), and the only perspective your offspring have in their life is to live through & possibly, maybe, try to clean up the mess the big winners of your generation are creating for all of us.

    In that case, China is not your primary enemy. Your own government is, together (or better: led by?) those who Have. That's what you should be worrying about primarily.

  21. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The 'Five Eyes' may not get the access from Huawei as they are used to with US equipment.

  22. Buyers of US hardware should fear the same things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The way I see it, people should be wary of US products for points 1,2,3,6 as well.
    Maybe everyone should just make their own tech.

  23. SO LIKE WINDOWS 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Then. Only from the sub-continent.

  24. Chinese Food Security Nightmares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    1. There could be "poison" in Chinese food.
    2. ... That even close inspections miss.
    3. Chinese waiters could be used for snooping.
    4. The rollout of Chinese restaurants will make everything worse.
    5. Chinese restaurants will ship food to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.
    6. P.F. Changs isn't as immune to Chinese government influence as it claims to be.

    1. Re:Chinese Food Security Nightmares by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      This is why most Americans already switched to Thai food.

      Which is why Thai restaurants stock chopsticks. In Thailand, chopsticks are only used to eat Chinese food. But they know their American customers are switching away from Chinese food, so they stock the chopsticks.

  25. Cisco = Huawei by stooo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Cisco does exactly the same.

    --
    aaaaaaa
    1. Re:Cisco = Huawei by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was only a few months ago that a bunch of backdoors were patched, with Cisco denying any knowledge, as if anyone believes that.

  26. Summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Google abiding by Chinese government interests in China is awful.

    Huawei not abiding by US government interests in USA is awful.

    Double standards is so useful, if you care just about one's own interests and don't give a f*ck about morals (i.e. what is right and what is wrong).

    1. Re: Summary. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. One way devices are used for two way communication and undisclosed
      2. See 1
      3. See 1 ...
      6. See 1

  27. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the same thing about the dystopian Chinese social credit score policy.
    At least the Chinese are up front about it.

  28. US vs Global by Titanek · · Score: 1

    5. Chinese firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.
    Given the current POTUS I'm happy that his reach is only so far, and that it's optional for sovereign nations on whether to adhere to the US trade embargos or not.

  29. Any of that unique to Huawei? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or is the same thing able to be said about, say, gas pipeline controllers or Cisco routers, etc?

    If you're going to fuck about with being scared of these points with Huawei then you should make it so that NO COUNTRY can do them, including your own.

  30. So basically it comes down to by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "could"

    There could be all that stuff in products from other countries, too. Heck, even American products could have these things. Maybe America should just stop trading with everyone and jump incestuously in bed with itself, and hope its own manufacturers are completely honest and transparent, just as they have turned out to be so far in history...

    Could indeed... Or maybe you should do it the old fashioned way, and actually find the person guilty before executing them.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:So basically it comes down to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      >Heck, even American products could have these things.

      Have you been reading the news at all in the last 4-5 years? Because Cisco and Juniper has been proven to put backdoors in their equipment multiple times. Those news-pieces are even regurgitated here on Slashdot.

    2. Re:So basically it comes down to by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      Rhetorical device - of course I have.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  31. DIY by DaMattster · · Score: 2

    Probably the best way to keep your network security is to neither use Chinese nor US Branded equipment. Instead, employ a little do it yourself mentality. I built my own and it's powered by OpenBSD. Still no guarantee but it's a lot more secure than all of the shitty stuff out there.

    1. Re:DIY by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I presume you are using a processor without speculative execution?

      Without open software AND hardware, it's all just wishful thinking.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:DIY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How can speculative execution be exploited if 100% of the code running on the processor is vetted?

    3. Re:DIY by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      How can speculative execution be exploited if 100% of the code running on the processor is vetted?

      How can you know that 100% of the code running on the processor is vetted if you don't have open hardware and software, and/or the machine is network-accessible? There's been remote holes in both network stacks and services in the past, it is illogical to assume that there will not be any in the future.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re: DIY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A woman termed the coined open source. All is well. It'll figure itself out, because feelings.

    5. Re:DIY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're using the ARM port, soon you'll be ROP free with it as well. :) Unfortunately no such luck with the AMD64.

  32. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    3. Back doors are already being used for data snooping.

    Hell, FRONT doors are already being used for data snooping. Well you clicked "I agree", right?

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  33. Since it's Americans complaining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OF COURSE the complaining is going to be blamed on Americans. They're the ones complaining, FFS. What ISN'T being blamed on Americans is chinese putting backdoors in their stuff. What IS being blamed on Americans is both putting backdoors in THEIR stuff AND being a hypocrite about it.

    Just like YOU whinge when you're hearing complaints about Americans yet somehow not when you make complaints about, say, leftists, communists or Chinese.

    1. Re:Since it's Americans complaining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Need to separate politicians from the people. American people are actually quite nice for the most part. Their politicians/business lobying however are/is another story entirely and that's where the problem lies en-masse. Their current leader probably isn't helping any of this either

    2. Re: Since it's Americans complaining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a government of the people by the people for the people.

      What does that tell you.

  34. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And still absolutely nobody has asked themselves how Turkey happened to end up with audio recordings of the Kashoggi murder... While everyone was busy saying "oh dear that's terrible", I was thinking "lol they're going to have to change the bugs in the Saudi consulate now".

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  35. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Dunbal · · Score: 3, Interesting

    American ally

    I believe the word you are looking for is "vassal". There are no more American allies. An ally is assumed to have some degree of independence and usually has equal status. A vassal, on the other hand, is one who never disagrees and always does as they are told. Kind of like that person we all know at work who is a complete idiot and yet somehow is always the boss's favorite and always gets promoted. That isn't the boss' friend - that IS your boss and if you cross him/her/it, you will find out pretty sharpish who is going to be transferred/fired. Hint - it's not them.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  36. Cisco routers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Nuff said.

    But the USSR bought gas pipeline controller software and hardware from a US company. Apparently there were backdoors and kill switches in that.

    1. Re: Cisco routers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And why would the U.S. want shut down gas to all of Europe via a hardware back door?

      Russias safe using U.S. hardware to supply Europe. Last checked, Russia voluntarily limited gas supplies to Europe during winter.

    2. Re: Cisco routers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      To sell more liquified natural gas of course. The same reason they are trying to convince European governments to block the Nord Stream pipeline.

    3. Re: Cisco routers. by vtcodger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you ask me, the Europeans would have to be crazy to allow themselves to be overly dependent on any of the US, Russia, North Africa, or the Middle East for fuel to keep warm in Winter. But they are capable of figuring that our for themselves I think.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    4. Re: Cisco routers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      LOL the USSR didn't buy that software, they stole it. And yes, the software was booby trapped by the CIA, who deliberately fed one of Russia's spies falty software, but it didn't do anything that you mention here. The software was built for industrial sabotage on a spectacular scale:

      https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/1455559/CIA-plot-led-to-huge-blast-in-Siberian-gas-pipeline.html

      The USSR was all about stolen technology, and this is just one example of them taking more than they thought they were taking. Another one I recall was plans for a nuclear bomb that wouldn't actually work.

    5. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 2

      There's no deflection here. He's merely pointing out the obvious. Your "discussion" is hinged on the childish assumption that "US has engaged in unconscionable business dealings" is somehow relevant to the discussion, as if there are other partners who don't.

      When factor exists to same or greater level for everyone else involved, it becomes largely irrelevant.

    6. Re: Cisco routers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Russia invades Europe?

    7. Re: Cisco routers. by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 2

      There is no "obvious" here. The talking point that Europe is "overly dependent" on Russian gas is just that - a talking point. The fact is that Russia is at least as much dependent on European money and tech that it gets in exchange for its gas, and that the gas trade has done much more for improving the strategic safety of Europe than, for example, the US military presence.

    8. Re: Cisco routers. by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

      That canard again. Soviet pipelines used analog control systems, not some fancy software.

      --
      "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
    9. Re: Cisco routers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Happy new year, James Bond, got any other fake news from the Brexitland tabloids that you want to sell us today?

    10. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      What "Europe" are you referring to? The German interests? Spanish? Polish? Estonian? Ukrainian? Russian?

      If you want to complain about specifics, then be specific. Interests in Europe are widely divergent, and your statement about "Europe" is patently false on the face of it, as much of Europe has a grand total of zero dependency on Russian gas, while some has a lot.

    11. Re: Cisco routers. by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      I'm talking about the same "Europe" that the GP is talking about. Strangely, you aren't complaining to him for the usage, but instead come bitching at me.

    12. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Except that, of course, his story was "European governments backing Nord Stream pipeline". Which is a very select few of European countries who stand to benefit from removal of middle men in Eastern Europe both in terms of supply security and costs.

      Whereas you chose to talk about "money flows from Europe to Russia" which is a completely different set of countries. Essentially, you're talking about a completely different "Europe".

    13. Re: Cisco routers. by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      Why do you have to lie? The real quote is, of course:

      To sell more liquified natural gas of course. The same reason they are trying to convince European governments to block the Nord Stream pipeline.

      There is no reference to the governments backing the Nord stream whatsoever.

    14. Re: Cisco routers. by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      Canada could ship to them... if it weren't for the Quebec government.

      https://globalnews.ca/news/474...

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    15. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Because it's new years, and early morning, so I typed it in instead of just copying it, and typed the wrong word in. Thanks for the correction.

      The point I made stands on the same merits as before, as your correction changed nothing of relevance to it.

    16. Re: Cisco routers. by cheesybagel · · Score: 2

      Either the Nord Stream 2 pipeline is built or the German economy will tumble. As will the economy of the Netherlands. Even the UK will be impacted. You know why? Because the natural gas wells in the Netherlands are drying up. As is North Sea gas. There will be a capacity deficit in the near future, like the next 5 years unless Nord Stream 2 is built. The alternative for the Germans, I guess, is burning coal. Since Germany has been closing all their nuclear reactors.

      If you think the Germans will take the hit and lose economic competitiveness to satisfy some nebulous USA natural gas interests they have another thing coming. Fact is the USA does not even have the capacity to supply that demand over the next 5 years. To build those facilities, even if they were financed, would take at least a decade and it would still be more expensive than Russian gas.

    17. Re: Cisco routers. by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      And what was your point, that the EU does not exist? Sober up, and accept the fact - the Russian gas trade does not create one-way "dependencies" and is a major contributing factor to European stability. The pathetic attempts of the US to disrupt it in the interest of people like Biden's family and Trump's friends are contributing to the opposite - to tension growth and conflict escalation.

    18. Re: Cisco routers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL, James Bond, what other bulllshit fakes from the Brexitland's tabloids you want to share with us today?

    19. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      My understanding is that North Sea gas is fine for decades, which is about as much as anyone searches for today. Considering the need for alternative sources, Norway and Scotland will have plenty of resources for new wells even if they are uneconomical in the immediate pricing situation. EU grants will come very quickly should they be needed.

      Nord Stream 2 isn't needed in any meaningful way right now on merits of "today", as Nord Stream 1 is underutilized. There's still plenty of capacity there. It's about future proofing and slowly and surely bypassing the middle men in Eastern Europe, some of whom are extremely opposed to Russia because of their geopolitical interests. In this regard, both Russia and Germany are very interested in Nord Stream 2, as it ensures that when Ukrainian cronies decide to grab the German money for gas and keep it on 3 month accounts in Swiss banks to accrue interest to steal, Russia won't have to cut gas due to lack of payment for months on end. Not to even mention the lesser problem of gas stealing, that is completely normal and accepted in those parts.

      As for US supplying gas, most of the shale producers have wells for "30 years of production". Why not more? Because they would have to disclose this if it was so, which automatically makes them target for hostile takeover. Natgas is the by-product of shale, that is getting increasingly captured instead of flared. So US has supplies for at least 30 years, and realistically for far longer period of time. The problem here is costs, because energy expenditures to compress the gas into liquid and transport it are just too high compared to piped gas. You're looking at about 50% price increase for someone like Germany.

    20. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, I thought I was talking to a rational individual and not just a Russian troll.

    21. Re: Cisco routers. by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      My understanding is that North Sea gas is fine for decades, which is about as much as anyone searches for today. Considering the need for alternative sources, Norway and Scotland will have plenty of resources for new wells even if they are uneconomical in the immediate pricing situation. EU grants will come very quickly should they be needed.

      Norway is not in the EU and Scotland will soon not be in the EU either. The UK currently is dismantling most of its oil rigs. Also, one reason why Russia has been pulling ahead in the segment is because they have been willing to fund most of their projects on their own dime.

      Also, with regards to the Netherlands.
      https://www.brookings.edu/blog...

      Natural gas production from the Groningen field has now roughly halved over the last three years, and will not return to previous levels. This latest decision, therefore, truly marks the end of an era for the Dutch and for Europe more broadly. (2016)

      Netherlands natural gas production in Bcm.
      https://ycharts.com/indicators...

      Finally.
      https://www.reuters.com/articl...

      Production is set for 21.6 billion cubic meters (bcm) this year, already down from a peak of 53.8 bcm in 2013, following a series of cuts as decades of extraction have led to dozens of earthquakes each year, damaging thousands of homes and buildings.

      “Our intention is (to cut production) to get towards 12 bcm in the coming four or five years, and to zero at the end of the coming decade,” Prime Minister Mark Rutte told a press conference. (2018)

      Nord Stream 2 isn't needed in any meaningful way right now on merits of "today", as Nord Stream 1 is underutilized.

      https://www.nord-stream.com/pr...

      "In 2017, the Nord Stream Pipeline delivered 51 billion cubic metres (bcm) of natural gas to consumers in the European Union. This means the pipeline system operated at 93 per cent of its annual design capacity of 55 bcm."

      That's 93 per cent capacity last year. Plus given the ramp up trends it should have reached full capacity this year.

      As for US supplying gas, most of the shale producers have wells for "30 years of production". Why not more? Because they would have to disclose this if it was so, which automatically makes them target for hostile takeover. Natgas is the by-product of shale, that is getting increasingly captured instead of flared. So US has supplies for at least 30 years, and realistically for far longer period of time. The problem here is costs, because energy expenditures to compress the gas into liquid and transport it are just too high compared to piped gas. You're looking at about 50% price increase for someone like Germany.

      Exactly. It would be a lot more expensive. It would also require large liquefaction and regasification facilities to be build. There are plenty of port facilities in Europe but there is a severe shortage of liquefaction facilities in the USA and regasification facilities in Europe. In fact Europe has been investing in ports, storage, and regasification facilities for natural gas over the past decade. However the USA can neither supply that demand nor do it cheaply. In fact the USA has been bickering already that Russia is starting to carve a chunk of the LNG sector themselves via their Yamal LNG liquefaction facilities.
      https://www.reuters.com/articl...

    22. Re: Cisco routers. by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Somehow I got the last link wrong. This should be the correct one.
      https://www.reuters.com/articl...

    23. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      First point is superbly irrelevant, as Norway and Scotland are tightly integrated into the common market for cabrohydrates and have been before EU because what it is today. Netherlands is irrelevant, as most of their gas was for domestic production for a tiny nation for quite a while. Even if they were to fully switch to Russia supplies, additional consumption would be tiny.

      On Nord Stream 1, note that not only is there still available capacity even in the numbers you quote, just as I noted, but Gazprom has already conceded that it will provide guarantees to current transit partners in exchange for required permits that gas transit over middle men like Poland will not suffer a massive reduction from Nord Stream 2. Ramp up of capacity you're talking about has been driven mostly by shift of transit from onshore transit routes, and utilized as a pressure tool on Eastern Europe.

      That's where the political opposition to Nord Stream 2 came from. Should Nord Stream 2 be actually operated at any significant capacity, there may be severe political upheaval on EU level as middle men would lose their ability to extract significant monetary compensations from Germany for their economies. Considering the way Germany has hollowed out much of infrastructure across Eastern Europe as EU economic integration proceeded, we're looking at significant risks from it being fully operational.

      As for LNG, I have some serious misgivings of suggesting that Russia has the capacity or ability to just suddenly leapfrog a supplier like US, for whom gas is effectively free by-product of shale, and who has the best maritime supply system and best ocean access of any country on the planet due to its geography. It frankly has all the same "big promise, little delivery" that anyone who has worked on Russian market knowns to be the core principle of its functionality.

      I would argue that if you want to make a point of "Russia as the future of natgas on EU territory", a far more important factor would be the current trend in Syria effectively blocking Qatar from being able to pipe its gas to European continent entirely, and making it very hard for Israel to do so with its own offshore gas.

    24. Re: Cisco routers. by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes, the universal talking point when lacking arguments, "Russian troll". Please check under your bed, maybe Putin is there.

    25. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      After you ran out of arguments, you first attempted deflection towards an irrelevant detail, then you tried to pretend that point that was already debunked wasn't. And now that you got called on your trolling, you're desperately trying to proclaim victimhood.

      Here's an advice for you. You're awful at trolling beyond the "no u" arguments. I saw through you in two posts. A half a decent troll would at least be able to string together five-seven deflectionary posts to keep me interested in the narratives. Trolling at higher level just isn't for you. Stick to "no u".

    26. Re: Cisco routers. by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      Irrelevant? The Netherlands produced over 73 bcm (that's billion cubic meter) of natural gas in the year of 2010. In 2017 their production was around 36 bcm. Their supply is going to zero in a decade. They used to export a lot of their output to Germany and the UK. They even have a pipeline to the UK to do this. Nord Stream 2 can supply 55 bcm in a year once it becomes operational at the end of next year. Nord Stream 1 is already being used at full capacity this year according to several reports.

      The Eastern European countries already get a lot of EU funds to increase their economic convergence to the EU mean.
      https://assets.kpmg/content/da...

      Even if Nord Stream 2 would not be built what will happen is the Russians will export more LNG from Yamal. They already have plans to double their production capacity. Another thing they might do is shift exports to China if Europe stops buying their gas. Then what would happen is Germany and most central europe would get more expensive natural gas only decreasing their own competitive advantage versus the Asian markets.

      US gas would be competitive in places like Western Europe. In there it competes with both Nigerian and Algerian natural gas. But what has happened in practice is the US has sold most of its gas in Asian markets, namely China, which can pay more. Their LNG gasification capabilities are about the same as Russia. They might have a lot of gas but they neither have the gasification facilities nor the tankers to move the gas. Those would take a decade to build.

    27. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      There were many things that were done decade past that aren't relevant any more. Shocking, I know.

      As for the rest, you appear to be missing the entire current trend, where "economic convergence" resulted in economic divergence of massive proportions. Infrastructure is being relocated from surrounding states to Germany at breakneck pace by standards of such movement. Movement of young people of these nations is following suit.

      Anyway, I think we're done here. You're clearly here to sell me an idea assuming my ignorance on the topic. My inside knowledge on the topic largely inoculates me against such grand salesman proclamations. The whole "but we're going to sell to Asia" narrative has been the favourite Gazprom idea since it's predecessors, for at least half a century if not more. It has never materialized, and is unlikely to ever materialize. Not only are Russian elites simply too burned on the whole Asian connection over decades and culturally highly inclined toward European direction instead, but Asian states are far poorer and as a result drive a far harder bargain on pricing. Not to even mention the geopolitical instability of the region.

      Which is why all those best laid plans, major promises, and grand proclamations, which were far greater than your proclamations and came from much more authoritative sources never materialized into any kind of meaningful results.

    28. Re: Cisco routers. by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      No, after I made a valid, fact-supported point, you tried to strawman me with a lie, and when you got caught, called me a "Russian troll" just because you have nothing to argue against my position.

      A bit of advice for you - you're stupid, uninformed and lacking the capacity to argue a point, but very, very loud - so just like your president.

      Go back under your bridge and say hi to your mother.

    29. Re: Cisco routers. by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      It has never materialized huh? I guess you never heard of these.
      http://www.gazprom.com/project...
      http://www.gazprom.com/project...

      Or more even more relevant.
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Also the natural gas prices are higher in the Asian than European markets. Why do you think the US is mostly selling its LNG to China when the liquefaction facilities are in the Gulf of Mexico?

    30. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I've heard of all of them. None of them materialized as meaningful so far, and where they have materialized, economic realities suggest that lines will fall far behind what was being promised, both in terms of volume and profitability.

      You can keep skirting around this particular issue as much as you want, but anyone who worked on Russian market knows that big promises and little deliveries on major projects are a norm. Gasprom isn't different here. Which is why so many companies get burned badly on that market, as they assume that big promises and great looking brochures will be actually followed on in full, as if they're operating in Western Europe or US.

    31. Re: Cisco routers. by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I'd ask you how weather is in St. Petersburg, but I can just look it up. It's awful, just like you are at trolling.

    32. Re: Cisco routers. by Mr.+Dollar+Ton · · Score: 1

      Your talking points are so 2015 that you must be 30 years retarded in real life.

  37. Or dominates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Huawei domination of telecom would allow China, naturally and rightfully if Huawei leads, a big economic benefit slowly eroding competition from democracies. So the other threats can be rationales to push back. Unfortunately this could cost with less competition and trade friction / conflict. Seems pragmatic to allow some competition but fair trade is a theoretical fantasy all around.

  38. The golden age of espionage by Artem+S.+Tashkinov · · Score: 2

    When you think about it, nowadays you cannot trust any high-tech gadget/piece of equipment unless you 100% control each step of its development and production which is quite expensive and complicated for companies/governments however if you are an end user you have to treat everything as compromised by default and work from there. You might feel quite unnerving and powerless but that's what it is.

    1. Re:The golden age of espionage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good luck boot strapping your own compiler on your own kernel on your own hardware.

    2. Re:The golden age of espionage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or you just packet sniff and block and bad outbound traffic.

      It's simple really.

    3. Re:The golden age of espionage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You needed to add 'armchair' just after 'of' in that title to make it perfect

    4. Re: The golden age of espionage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm, the original computer scientist did just that.

  39. Features v Correctness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Perhaps if computer designers in the United States focussed more on correctness than a combinatorial explosion of rarely-used features we could criticize others for our vulnerabilities.

  40. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Speaking as someone from western Europe, the problem with Huawei is that in geopolitical terms China is not an ally by any stretch of the imagination. The USA are. If there's any serious trouble, we do not have to worry about the USA shutting us off unless they decide at some point that we are no longer allies. The biggest worry is that equipment from the US has some backdoor (installed on behest of the government or whatever) that the Chinese can exploit.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  41. Worst of all by yanestra · · Score: 1

    Somebody discovered a small plate at Donald Trump's hip. According to it, was produced by Huawei.

  42. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Sique · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Don't know about you, but here around (Austria), the news were full of speculation that Turkey hesitated to publish said recordings because it would give away the places of the turkish bugs in the Saudi Arabian embassy.

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  43. Slashdot becoming a US propaganda outlet? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > 1. There could be "kill switches" in Huawei equipment.

    There _could be_ a miniature explosive device too. I _could_ win the lottery tomorrow. It's not impossible. But is there evidence? Naah, that's such a passe concept in this day and age.

    > 2. ... That even close inspections miss.

    Inspections are even more likely to miss the kill switches if they don't exist. Those nefarious Chinese!

    > 3. Back doors could be used for data snooping.

    Yes, and the US government is really keen on protecting people's privacy. It's dead-set against the use of technology for government data snooping.

    > 4. The rollout of 5G wireless networks will make everything worse.

    Why, is there something wrong with the 5G wireless standard? Or has the US become Ludditic suddenly? ... or is it the fact that Huawei is spearheading 5G technologies?

    > 5. Chinese firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.

    And that is a problem because... ?

    > 6. Huawei isn't as immune to Chinese government influence as it claims to be.

    This is true. However, it is much more immune to US government influence. If I were in China, I'd think that's a problematic trade-off, but outside China, especially in the US and Europe, I think that's reasonable.

    Bottom line: Unfalsifiable conspiracy theory + US nationalism. Bogus.

  44. Time for open source hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's impossible to prove that Huawei (or any vendor's) equipment are malware free. But then again, it's also possible that Cisco equipment has had its firmware replaced in the factory (Chinese even) or en-route to you with "evil" firmware. But Huawei has had far more scutiny over the past few years than other network vendors. And while not "open-source" (I wish), they've had their source code more closely investigated by well-resourced, motivated and independent white-hats than other vendors over the past decade. It wouldn't surprise me if Huawei equipment is much more secure after this added scrutiny (it's much easier to detect/fix bugs with source code than without).

    Frankly, if the Chinese government wanted to exploit Huawei equipment, they'd be stupid to ship modified firmware which would be easily detectable. Rather, they'd take advantage of zero-day attacks and/or other in-memory only attacks which leaves no trace. Something the NSA/GCHQ also can do (and according to Edward Snowden, has done). As an aside, that's why the now discredited Bloomberg article on hardware backdoors in Supermicro motherboards was so ridiculous. Not that it couldn't be done, but no government capable of doing so, would use such a primitive mechanism when there are other, lower-cost attacks with a lower-chance of detection and plausible-deniability.

    Saying Huawei is a National Security issue because it's an economic threat to Cisco is on par with Trump alleging that steel imports from Canada is a National Security issue. Which is to say that anything can be a National Security issue if you try hard enough.

    Nonetheless, the US government (and their Five-Eyes allies) has rights as a sovereign country to ban Huawei equipment and spread propaganda. It'd be surprising if they acted any differently. Cisco equipment (5 backdoors discovered in 2018 alone) has given the NSA the ability to spy on countless world leaders over the past few decades and losing that access is likely the real National Security issue.

    Five-Eyes members will buy US equipment by virtue of being Five-Eyes member. For other countries, they shouldn't blindly trust Huawei. Insist from all vendors that they share their source code as well as the chain from source-code to firmware. And don't just limit to network equipment. Ask the same of your CPU/chipset vendors. Do you know what your Intel-ME/AMD-PSP is doing right now?

    I look forward to having open-source firmware and hardware to complement open-source software. Sure, I can't (personally) make my own CPU, but it'll significantly reduce the barriers to entry and enable greater market competition by allowing multiple fabs to manufacture the same chip. Yay for market competition. For those worried about dominance of Shenzhen, China in the electronic industry. Open-source hardware would be a positive step in the right direction. It'll take decades, but we'll get there.

    1. Re: Time for open source hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is plenty of info online talking about how many times devices phone home.

      For things like Google services people allow it, even though it's insanely intrusive.

      Here:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8n6ubzCzZ5I

  45. Why can't human made mechienes be tested by humans by jellomizer · · Score: 2

    There seems to be a lack of interest in actually testing systems to see if the meet national security guidelines. Believe it or not these things are not black-boxes if people open up the cases, put them in Faraday cages. Monitor what its out put it, and traffic to see where things go, what ports are open....
    You can take the chips off the board and be sure they are doing what the specs say they should be doing.
    In case of Flash software, you can demand the source review it, and compile it at your country and flash it onto a device.

    I know policy makers don't want to use specialists because they are these crazy egg heads who think they know it all, and will often go against their best instincts. But for national security, you probably should trust those people who have studied this stuff and understand the going on. Vs saying it it too technical let ban it.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  46. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is only one company in the world that is terrified of Huawei and thats apple. They are most likely behind all this banning

  47. 6 reasons? by Daralantan · · Score: 2

    Why are 1 and 2 the same reason broken up into two? And 4 doesn't really have anything to do with Huawei.

    1. Re:6 reasons? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Chinese firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.

      And the 5 has nothing to do with security reasons. #VenezuelaThemAll

  48. New "RED DANGER"! by fbobraga · · Score: 1

    Commies! (Cold War feelings...)

    1. Re:New "RED DANGER"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Commies! (Cold War feelings...)

      Yeah, we don't have anything to worry about. It's not like they threaten other countries with their borders or disputes, or Tiawan, or the US, or force companies to be half owned by the CCCP, or kill their own people and harvest organs, or any other number of bad behavior! Yeah, they're mostly harmless so don't panic.

    2. Re:New "RED DANGER"! by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      What a relief, since we all know there was no danger at all during the Cold War, and nothing bad happened to anybody. [/s]

    3. Re: New "RED DANGER"! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does any of that interfere with the USA? It doesn't? Then we don't give a fuck.

  49. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by j35ter · · Score: 1

    This Oida!!!
    As someone who works in the Telecom supplier market, I can assure you that all Telcos provide governments with wiretaping capabilities of their customers and that workers dedicated to this task are under strict confidentiality contracts.

    Same vendors sell their equipment in Turkey too. No need for physical bugs anymore :)

    --
    Delta-Mike November Bravo Tango
  50. Re: Why can't human made mechienes be tested by hu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It all started in the same literally cancerous smoke filled back room

  51. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by getuid() · · Score: 1, Insightful

    From a western European perspective, neither is the US.

    They've repeatedly attacked Europe economically - there's ample example, like the VW scandal (draconian fees & punishment against management by the US, but investigations are still sparse with respect to US manufacturers) and Monsanto/Bayer (funny how Monsanto's biochemistry suddenly became a problem, but only after they were bought up by a European company). Not to defend these companies, they fully deserve what befalls then; but the unilaterallity with which US authorities deal out punishment against foreign entities, opposed to domestic ones, is striking.

    Then there are also a number of unequivocal statements from US administration, Trump for example, regarding "trade war with Europe".

    So no, the US are definitely no more allies of Europe than China is.

    And beyond ecinomics... well, if you're European, it's not like China is out to burn your home, rape your wife, kill your dog. They're on a different hemisphere for chrissake, there's noting to gain for them from indaving another, regardless of whether that's Europe or US. (FWIW, the only country that has a habit of doing that post-WW2, regularly, is the US.)

    If you're the average west European, the only[*] thing China fights for is to sell you more stuff, cheaper than the rest (US or Europe). The only way you could equate this to a direct threat is if you still believe in trickle-down economy. And in that case, you're not only beyond any hope being saved; you also deserve the misery that comes your way.

    --
    [*] That, and to buy massive amounts of land all over Africa and eastern Europe away from local population. But that's not a problem that's (a) limited to China, (b) attributed to technological or military superiority, and (c) not easily fixable by a simple law of local government authorities, if you can convince your government that it's a problem.

  52. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Huawei 'borrowed' their 5G tech from European companies...

  53. fear of.... who by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would you be more afraid of a foreign government snooping on you than you would be of your own government?

    Your own government can do way more damage and more easily abuse you even if you've done nothing wrong.

    The ideal solution would be no snooping. But now that the USA has given up on being the good guy all bets are off.

  54. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boo hoo. If you think Cisco has back doors go find them your damn selves instead of runormongering and pretending you are at the mercy of the US

  55. Not found yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A long game for Huawei and / or China is to provide equip / Sw without backdoors to keep their equipment in the supply chain and know the capabilities of West using same. Economic dominance is desired so China has control of its supply chain vs some of the restrictions in place now.

  56. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You honestly believe the US will still be our ally when their interests do not align with ours? Considering how aggressive the US already is towards its 'allies', including large-scale industrial espionage and wiretapping our governments, as well as the number of backdoors already found in US equipment, trusting US equipment for critical network infrastructure is incredibly naïve. I don't trust China either, but the US has shown time and again they cannot be trusted.

  57. Paranoia run amok by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A post such as this is nothing but fear mongering. Until some solid evidence comes about, stop it. That goes in any direction, btw...I have little doubt that other governments have similar reach as would the US or the UK.

  58. If you were the prior AC, you first by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The AC I replied to did not make any such distinction. So why the fuck should I? And why did I get your demand to do so and not the OP, if you are not the OP anon coward?

  59. Re: So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Wrong... US law applies only in the US and it's territories.

    If you buy a Russian domain from a Russian registrar and host it on Russian servers in Russia ... Russian law applies, obviously.

    Do any of that in the US because you're careless and the US govt can touch THAT part to enforce US law.

    I bet you run red lights in front of the police and wonder why YOU get tickets while your friends don't.

  60. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    https://www.tomshardware.com/news/cisco-backdoor-hardcoded-accounts-software,37480.html

    Kinda says it all...

  61. Re:Why can't human made mechienes be tested by hum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Blackbox inspection is impossible because the exponential function is a bitch. There are 2^12000 possible Ethernet frames of 1500 bytes. That's more than a 1 followed by 3600 zeros. It is trivially easy to make hardware that only does some nefarious thing (e.g. flip a killswitch) when one specific 1500 byte frame comes along. It is impossible to test even a tiny fraction of all possible inputs. To give you an idea how big a number a 1 with 3600 zeros is: The universe is roughly 100000000000000000 seconds old.

  62. This list doesn't surprise me by jonwil · · Score: 1

    We already know from the Snowden leaks that the US government has the capabilities to do most of the things on that list for network gear from the likes of Cisco, HP, Juniper and other US manufacturers. And given how much more power the Chinese have over Chinese companies and their employees (unlike the US, the Chinese government has no problems telling people "do what we want or your family will be executed") its logical to assume China can do everything the US can and more.

    That said, what the hell are governments and big corporations and others doing on these networks (internet, cellular etc) whereby a compromised bit of network gear is even able to steal valuable data and why aren't they encrypting anything that the Chinese (or anyone else) might want to steal?

  63. Apple "borrowed" from others by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and gave it to Intel so that Apple could play off competitors that patent and copyright laws, laws Apple rely on for their profits, forbids.

  64. Replace China and Huawei with U.S. Cisco/Juniper by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and you have an article that is definitely true, because here's the thing: there has never been any proof whatsoever that Huawei do the things they are being accused of.

    The U.S. is worried because its own Juniper and Cisco spyware is losing market fast to Huawei and ZTE, and this is what it's all about. Money, market, and the ability to spy on even your allies.

  65. Re:Why can't human made mechienes be tested by hum by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    A kill switch is actually the least of our worries. All that would do it let people know that there is one. The biggest risk is having an IC integrated in a diode casing (often overlooked because they are normally there for simple surge protection). Or an extra radio broadcaster that you don't know what it is for. These things can bet tested. You don't need to brute force all the methods, if you know what each component suppose to do.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  66. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Talla · · Score: 4, Informative

    So no, the US are definitely no more allies of Europe than China is.

    You have no sense of proportion. China lives by completely different rules. They have no respect for freedom of speech or democracy, quite the opposite, and they don't care if other countries do. The US has its flaws, but I'll take a flawed democracy over an oppressing dictatorship any day.

    And beyond ecinomics... well, if you're European, it's not like China is out to burn your home, rape your wife, kill your dog. They're on a different hemisphere for chrissake, there's noting to gain for them from indaving another, regardless of whether that's Europe or US. (FWIW, the only country that has a habit of doing that post-WW2, regularly, is the US.)

    No, maybe they'll just destroy all your infrastructure that's connected to the internet, including telecommuncations, power supply, and everything else that's needed in a modern society. Japan's being in a different hemisphere didn't stop them from starting an all out war with the US. If the western countries tries to do the right thing and stop China from taking areas from smaller countries in Asia then a war is not an impossibility. I assume you know that China is already doing that by creating artificial islands with military bases.

  67. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by ffkom · · Score: 3, Insightful

    it's not like China is out to burn your home, rape your wife, kill your dog. They're on a different hemisphere for chrissake, there's noting to gain for them from indaving another, regardless of whether that's Europe or US. (FWIW, the only country that has a habit of doing that post-WW2, regularly, is the US.)

    While I agree with your statement that the US has a nasty habit of invading foreign countries, China did a similar thing to Tibet "post-WW2".

    Also, Russia shares the US habit of invading foreign countries, as demonstrated for example in Afghanistan and the Ukraine.

    So, the basic lesson is: Don't trust any equipment that was manufactured or shipped through one of these aggressive nations.

  68. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Sique · · Score: 2

    Are you talking about User ID 14 in the Hicom 300/HiPath 4000? ;)

    --
    .sig: Sique *sigh*
  69. Trump got rid of allies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, that was Obama saying he would restrict trade agreements with the UK if they voted yes on Brexit.
    Or was it Obama when he told Israel they were terrorist for attacking those sending missiles/explosives into preschools with little kids.
    No, I know, it was Obama when he targeted Kaddafi in Libya to be killed and refused to answer questions from Congress.
    Oh wait, it was Hillary Clinton saying Russia is our enemy for saying they got Trump elected without proof.
    Maybe it was Yemen when Obama started killing their people by the hundreds with drone strikes.
    Oh wait, it was Syria when Obama started a new war in their country trying to antagonize the Russians there.

    Nevermind, I suddenly realized you are a liberal and mass murder and killings by the thousands or millions are acceptable to the left as long as people who don't agree with you are the ones being killed. (According to liberals posting to /. last week defending the killing of 40 Million Ukrainians as "acceptable" to put Communism into place)

    1. Re: Trump got rid of allies? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LUL.

      Says all that but ignores everything before and after Obama. How convenient you cuck.

  70. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by j35ter · · Score: 1

    :P

    --
    Delta-Mike November Bravo Tango
  71. Re:Why can't human made mechienes be tested by hum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The killswitch is just an example. If the unwanted behavior is triggered by one specific Ethernet frame, it will not be detected in any kind of black box testing. You would have to reverse engineer the whole thing down to the individual gate in the chips. Processors consist of billions of transistors nowadays, so even whitebox inspection is extremely challenging, even before the manufacturer starts obfuscating things on purpose. And if you've cleared (and in the process destroyed) one device, you still don't know anything about the thousands of devices deployed in your network.

  72. Re:More reasons - sale of personal data by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Information for sale - who is absolute low bidder?
    A private corporation might be tempted to sell to anybody willing to pay the 'right' price (Facebook sold to the USSR - what about Intel, etc?)

  73. Why Huawei? by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

    Since Huawei makes so much telecom equipment it makes a kind of sense to be leery of that, but why all the attention given to the phones? There are dozens of other Chinese phone makers, and none of those are mentioned.

    --
    This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
  74. nonsense by anonieuweling · · Score: 1

    The main fear is that Chinese equipment lacks NSA backdoors.

  75. Guilty until proven innocent by l3v1 · · Score: 1

    From the article: "In its defense, Huawei can point to the fact that no security researchers have found back doors in its products. âoeThereâ(TM)s all this concern, but thereâ(TM)s never been a smoking gun,â says Paul Triolo of the Eurasia Group. While thatâ(TM)s true, it wonâ(TM)t change the view of the US, which is stepping up its efforts to persuade its allies to keep Huawei out of all their networks."

    I don't want to defend Huawei, I couldn't care less, however, this whole thing actually seems to be a baseless discrimination. Until someone can actually prove any of this, we all should call it as it is: total bullsh*t.

    Some say that, well, they don't tell us, but they probably have a good reason to do this. I don't believe that, why should I, how can they demand trust without earning it first? To put it plainly, "show me the money" (Jerry Maguire), the we can talk.

    --
    I am putting myself to the fullest possible use, which is all I can think that any conscious entity can ever hope to do.
  76. now point at USA software and say by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. There could are "kill switches" in USA equipment.
    2. ... That even close inspections miss.
    3. Back doors could be used for data snooping.
    4. The rollout of 5G wireless networks will make everything worse.

  77. There's Deauthorization on Windows, Too. by BrendaEM · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I am not making excuses for Huawei, and we shouldn't make them for Microsoft, either. A few months ago, my computer was one of the many that de-authorized by Microsoft because of the bug in their servers, only for a day, but Windows 10 appears to have a kill switch.

    --
    https://www.youtube.com/c/BrendaEM
    1. Re:There's Deauthorization on Windows, Too. by Aighearach · · Score: 1

      All software-as-a-service has an inherent "kill-switch" type of functionality, even when not intended.

      Why would an OS-as-a-service be an exception?

  78. Huawei by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's not Huawei they "might" steal IP. They do.

    By the time I had my hands on Huawei Session Border Controller documentation, the Cisco case was already well known. Cisco had accused Huawei of cloning its gear. As I read documentation for Huawei's equipment, I found the screenshots containing *Motorola*, not Huawei, quite jarring. For me it was proof. Did an editor simply search and replace, not thinking that the images would not be treated as text?

    Working with a Huawei engineer, I sought to validate that standards-based network flows were implemented as specified (this was important in the context). The engineer explained that he had a tool to generate the captures. I asked him for PCAP captures, but he refused, making only the "generated" captures available. I asked what Linux distribution they were using; surely it would have tcpdump. "Huawei Linux" he said. "Of course, but what distribution is it based on? Red Hat? Debian? Slackware? RPath? Gentoo?" "No, it's just Huawei Linux." Strangely, concern over accusations of copying IP had translated into fear of being known to copy when copying was a perfectly acceptable, and even necessary, practice. I never got my captures.

    In the OS scenario, Huawei was using a platform known for its openness and creating a closed one. Why would a firm go through the trouble of re-implementing network flow capture? Presumably, the operators would be prevented from using the standard tools, since they would not be installed and their Huawei replacements would be the best alternatives. Licensing and support agreements would further obscure the prevent inspection of the system; it's not the rarest of practices, but awkward for a linux-based solution.

    While the story above is entirely anecdotal, it gives me everything I need to have a qualified security point of view - Huawei shouldn't get through the front door. Add to that the partial nationalization and the geopolitical concerns that any informed person should have, and it just makes the risks too high.

  79. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by szabo.m.peter · · Score: 1

    Even if you are really mainly exploited by the ones "who Have", there is an important choice that you should make: Do you prefer to be an average citizen in the western world, or your preference goes somewhere along the lines of China, Russia, Turkey, Azerbajan, Türkmenistan? Do you support the "dying liberal democracies", or the emerging fresh charismatic dictators who kill and enprison their opponents?

    I think already made my mind.

    Based on this, I can make my decision what *countries* I support. Then, -as a separate issue- we can push for a more equal society in our own respective countries.

  80. You want to live in China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure we spy as do the communist. The big difference is whether you will support the Communist or a free country. If you don't think the US is free then

    1) Move to China
    2) Try criticizing Xi Jinping

    The issue is BIGGER than trusting a Chinese tech company. China has over a 1,000,000 Muslims in "reeducation camps". Organ harvesting of political and religious prisoners still continues. The Communist are an aggressive competitor to a free country.

    Finally if China is such a wonderful country why are all the rich and politically powerful communist illegally smuggling money out of China and buying property in the US and Canada?

  81. Still the USA did it earlier. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They stole copyrighted works until their homegrown authors were prevalent enough, and even then did not implement acceptance of foreign copyrights. They stole computer tech from the UK during and after the war, they stole science secrets from Russia as well as Germany. Hollywood is based on stealing patents from the East Coast Edison company then folding after making enough money from that theft. Apple steals from Samsung and the US president supports their defence.

    The only thing China doesn't do is try to fuck over foreigners, only their own people (and those in territories they consider historically theirs).

    1. Re: Still the USA did it earlier. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whataboutism is rampant today. Go choke on a dick you cuckboy

  82. Easy fix. by Dusanyu · · Score: 1

    Only use Data Handling equipment produced in the country you reside in than the only government you have to worry about is your own.

  83. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you support the "dying liberal democracies", or the emerging fresh charismatic dictators who kill and enprison their opponents?

    Wonderful false opposition there. I just got back from visiting Hungary, which has an "illiberal" democracy according to those who charge Orban with authoritarianism, a democracy that actually responds to the will of the common people (thus, "populist" in newspeak, for those who don't understand that demos in Greek is simply populus in Latin) and offers nice living conditions (as long as you aren't stuck in a commieblock leftover from the days of the real dictators) and, to judge from not only the academics but also the ordinary people I met there, great education. Plenty of western demagogues refer to Orban as a fresh charismatic dictator, but the lies of the "dying liberal democracies" run very thin when you actually visit one of the "authoritarian" lands. Sure, you'll run into trouble if you start agitating for mass migration and the replacement of the native population, but only in the "dying liberal democracies" would anyone think that anything but a terrible idea.

  84. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nah if they had any sense they just used the backdoors in the amerkin made kit

  85. seems like FUD, but only because by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a list that could easily go both ways, as America doesn't have the best track record in terms of installing hardcoded backdoors into products and then sending them out.

  86. Re: So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Go tell that to Kim Dot Com.

    Whether you hate the guy or love him, his case is a chilling example of US over-reach.

  87. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Considering that US does not sell 5G equipment, but it comes mostly from China and Europe, I would have to guess that you are just one of the common Russian or Chinese trolls trying to stir things up with your lies and false logic. You wankers are in full force here on this posting.

  88. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The US can just get the fuck out of SE Asia and then there won't be any clash with China will there?

  89. Alternatives by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As an EU citizen, where should we buy? Ericson? Please list alternatives including with country of origin and ownership.

  90. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like Australia backing the Israeli consolute move. Can only imagine what bullshit backroom deal the US struck with the Aussies over that one. Vassel is being too kind. I'd rather say slave but don't want to trigger anyone.

  91. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I am sorry, but I fail to see how destroying the independence of courts and eliminating independent media is in the interest of the common people. These things only serve the interests of Orbén and his friends, including their foreign backers who are out to disrupt and damage European countries.

    Additionally, Viktor Orbén is many things, but he is most definitely not charismatic. Even his staunchest supporters will probably admit as much.

  92. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oops, I mean Orbn of course. The joys of HTML and non-ASCII characters...

  93. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    Negative. Vassals pay their liege lord for protection. What America has is precisely the opposite: allies that only ally with us because the US government pays them massive bribes in the form of aid, free military protection, unfair trade agreements, etc. I don't know what the word for that is but it certainly isn't vassal.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  94. hmmm... by SuperDre · · Score: 1

    And none of the accusations has been proved, whereas with american made hardware it has already been proved to contain killswitches and backdoors.. So stop pointing fingers to others if you do it yourself even worse..

  95. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1, Insightful

    They have no respect for freedom of speech

    Neither does Europe.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  96. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

    What is the purpose of your saying this? If it's to claim that it's all perfectly okay and no one should give a damn, then you can get fucked.

  97. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Rick+Schumann · · Score: 1

    Again: If your intention here is to say "anything China or a Chinese company does is okay because XYZ does the same things" then you can get fucked. Wrong is wrong no matter who does it. Invading people's privacy is always wrong.

  98. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    While it would be better if the US and China had better relations, there are strategic differences:

    The US wants to remain free and democratic (or at least somewhat so)

    China wants to remain under the totalitarian control of the Communist Party.

    These two objectives don't need to clash, but if either system is much more "successful" at producing a higher quality of life and greater economic prosperity, then it could prove a direct or indirect threat to the other.

    And it does seem that both governments have developed a capability to control their telecom and telecom equipment providers. In China the capability should be assumed, while in the US we have had glimpses of the capability and it remains an open secret.

    At this point it would be monumentally foolish for the US to rely on any Chinese made complex electronics... yet we do and the reverse is becoming less true which puts the US at a strategic disadvantage.

  99. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You are either one fucked up individual or working for Russia/China.

    America DID look into American companies for diesel-gate. Not really here. Why? Because American cars are based mostly on gasoline. Very little diesel.
    OTOH, VW and European cars were heavily into diesels. Now, VW was hit with a 2.8B by America for doing criminal actions. However, Germany also hit them with a fine and imprisoned a number of VW employees on this. Why? Because they were CRIMINAL.
    Now, Western Europe is hitting up Google, FB, Apple and Microsoft for massive amounts of taxes and fines. Yet, all of these companies were legal with regard to their taxes. Noting was criminal. They followed the laws as the west has laid out. They have also hit these companies up for billions on actions that either were legal, but declared criminal(such as 5B against Google for supposed android monopoly), or were illegal (FB). The list goes on and on and on. Just in the last 5 years, America tech companies have been hit with something like 15B in taxes and fines, and in many cases, you did not and still do not, have laws that made them illegal.

    And if you think that China is not to destroy you, then why did they dump Solar, Wind, LED/Lighting, Tires, etc on you? Why are they attempting to dump Vehicles on you, while blocking your exports to them?
    And have you been paying attention to belts/roads? Yes, they will LEND you money to build infrastructure. However, you have to use Chinese companies for building the infrastructure, Chinese labor (that you must allow in and allow them to remain later), small Chinese support companies, like restaurants, shopping, etc, that supply the local economy with Chinese products. EXCLUSIVELY. In addition, the borrower must back the loans with some form of resources. For example, Ecuador #1 source of money was oil. Now, because of borrowing money from China to build a hydro dam, that was built by china and failed badly, Ecuador now GIVES 80% of their oil to China. Sri Lanka and Pakistan have give up land to China for them to build bases on because they way over-borrowed.
    Oddly, you should recognize that if you are from Western Europe and have any sort of history at all. It is what Europe did for 400 years all over the globe. And America did it for about 30-40 years before we realized that it was a no-win situation. We have not been doing that since the 70's.

    And America is NOT an ally? Obama did NOT want to attack Libya or any other location. France, Italy and Germany pulled the NATO card to get America to join them in the invasion. Yes America was the spearhead for this, but not by choice. It was because Europe demanded it. Sadly, that compounded middle east problems that Bush-2 had created.

    Either you need to re-think your logic, or just come up with a better way of representing your gov (either Russia or China).

  100. All the more reason ... by PPH · · Score: 1

    ... to push for a secure phone architecture. Isolate the baseband h/w from the memory and CPU in a phone. I don't trust Chinese, American or Swedish networks. Treat your cellular provider like the suspect WiFi in a coffee shop.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  101. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by getuid() · · Score: 2

    The US has secret courts, gag orders, national security letters, prison camps outside of court's reach, and the largest per-person incarceration rate in the world.

    Go on, make my day, tell me more about Hungary. I've been there. Recently.

  102. Ask the USA why they did it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because they DID shut down Siberian gas.

  103. Re: So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Exterior of course they part where Kim dotcom used American banks.

  104. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    higher quality of life and greater economic prosperity

    for whom? the answer is different depending on what caste you're part of.

  105. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by getuid() · · Score: 1, Interesting

    China lives by completely different rules. They have no respect for freedom of speech or democracy, quite the opposite, and they don't care if other countries do

    You're cherry picking.

    There's no intrinsic value in the word "democracy" alone, it's value lies in what it entails: the fact that everyone gets to have their say in important decisions concerning the very fabric of their lives. If democracy is flawed to the point where unless you're rich, you've essentially been tricked out of your right to participate (as is the case for the US for example), then whatever value you had goes out the window.

    Don't talk to me about "Freedom of speech" while you have people like Assange bullied and prosecuted for what they said. Taking dirty about government in a pub at the corner isn't that much of an achievement; that's something you can do in Russia or China, too, easily enough. It's when you're actually starting to reach somebody with your talk that you're in trouble - in China, Russia, and USA.

    But I'm getting carried away.

    More to the point, China tries, and in large parts succeeds better that the West, to not leave people behind to poverty, distress, hunger, cold. This is amazing given the situation they are in (far ovet 1bn people, most of them rural, all about to finally claim their due piece of modern age just about these years). The have different methods, many of those methods do suck. But at least they're succeeding in their goal.

    Our methods suck no less, but we're failing big time, even at the easier goal of preserving a modern way of life.

  106. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by AndrewFlagg · · Score: 1

    so true. for everything, we are either in the front end, somewhere in the middle, or back end... true or false or none of the above. pick a lane, zig when most zag. creators create. that's me, maintainers maintain.. that's me too..somewhere in between... we ebb and flow.... where is that darn flux capacitor when you need one. then we die. who has fire insurance? moi!

  107. Corporate Big Brother or Government Big Brother? by hyades1 · · Score: 1

    The underlying problem remains: average people in the US and China have been painstakingly prepared to accept as a given that their personal information has no real value. So when they learn about this kind of grotesque invasion of privacy, their usual response is to shrug and say something like, "Who cares? The government has better things to do than check out my porn collection". That's a dangerously naive view, but it is a popular one.

    It means arguments about how one side's communications tech is just as invasive as the other side's really miss the point. We are being groomed to accept the idea that it's no big deal for those in positions of power to know virtually everything about everybody.

    A good farmer keeps his sheep fat and happy right up to the moment they are rounded up and sent to be sheared or butchered...or both. And yes, there are far too many average folks...sheeple...who continue to be blissfully unaware that the unprecedented scale of data collection is going to make it more and more difficult to pry our rulers out of their seats when they rewrite laws and alter social norms to suit themselves.

    --
    I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
  108. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I assumed that somehow the body double who posed as Kashoggi by wearing his clothing, also wore his apple watch which synced to his phone, which his wife was holding outside the conciliate.

  109. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by rilister · · Score: 2

    "isn't immune to US government influence" is a gross understatement (I assume you were being ironic!). We know that US companies up and down the stack have been clandestinely legally compelled to compromise user security in favor of national security goals.

    Software: NSA-designed Ecliptic Curve encryption algorithm adopted by companies (RSA, Microsoft, Cisco) despite widespread suspicion that they were designed with backdoors: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... ...and then all the stuff Snowden exposed. Heck, even all of these 'transparency reports' are admissions that the government is forcing US companies to do things that they would prefer not too.

    Meanwhile, the US have quite a history of computer hardware sabotage:
    Deliberately faulty processors designed to destroy oil pipeline, resulting in huge explosion:
    https://www.wired.com/2004/03/...
    "Every microchip they stole would run fine for 10 million cycles, and then it would go into some other mode. It wouldn't break down, it would start delivering false signals and go to a different logic... It was a huge explosion. The Air Force thought it was a 3-kiloton blast."

    so, yes, we should assume that Huawei is just as vulnerable to state manipulation and exploitation as any similar US company.

    --
    'This writing business. Pencils and what-not. Over-rated if you ask me. Silly stuff. Nothing in it' - Eeyore
  110. You don't understand the levels involved by SuperKendall · · Score: 0

    Every point made here is just as true from the other side too. I know China is investing heavily in developing high-end microprocessor designs and manufacturing capability, but shouldn't it make strategic sense for them to also spend as much money as it takes to purge their country of Microsoft?

    I'm sure the U.S. plays some games like this also.

    However the U.S. is not at the same level of China. There's a huge difference between getting a private company in the U.S. to stealthily embed spying related aspects in hardware, and getting Chinesew companies to do so...

    In a U.S. company, you not only have to convince a company to even let you do anything, you also have to keep the number of people involved in the addition very small lest something leak.

    Contrast that with a Chinese company. If there is something the government wants to to do to your product, there is no pushback. If you did push back very likely you'd be sent for education, your family killed, or disappeared. There is no need to work about how many employees are involved in embedded malware or spyware modules because they know if they leak, they will all face similar fates if caught - and because of pervasive government monitoring way being what the NSA does, they WOUDL be caught.

    If I were China I would indeed push to get rid of Microsoft related products, but there's simply not the same level of danger.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  111. GCSB by Maelwryth · · Score: 1

    Please remember that when they mention New Zealand they actually mean the GCSB which has these legal objectives.

    Objective of Bureau

    The objective of the Bureau, in performing its functions, is to contribute toâ"
    (a)
    the national security of New Zealand; and
    (b)
    the international relations and well-being of New Zealand; and
    (c)
    the economic well-being of New Zealand.

    Our security sevices now deal in corporate welfare as well as national security. Perhaps they always did but since snowden they have highered better publisicts.

    --
    I reserve the write to mangle english.
  112. This is what you get... by Chas · · Score: 1

    When you basically export your company's entire business overseas.

    Especially to a hostile nation...

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  113. Re: So? by reanjr · · Score: 0

    As an American, I am not subject to Russian law even if I use a Russian bank. The legal reach of the American banking system gives us a unique and global authority unparalleled in the world. We are the primal authority and the rest of the world is largely subject to our dictates.

  114. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    By definition, vassals send tribute and provide military assets.

    The US accepts no tribute, and receives none. And even pays for most of the NATO military defense.

    Find a book, learn you some history. "Vassal" doesn't mean, "has an ally that is larger."

  115. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    That only describes the non-European allies. Sure, allies like Egypt and Pakistan receive aid payments to keep them on our "side."

    But our European allies are true friends, with a bond forged in blood and fortified with blood numerous times.

    I know that really torques the Anti-Americans in Europe, and the Anti-Europeans in America, but it is still true, it is still the prevailing consensus on both sides.

  116. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    The hilarious part is that the US doesn't go off invading anybody without having our European allies at our side.

    France opposed the Iraq War because they didn't think that the US was sending enough troops to occupy and maintain order; they didn't want to help unless it was done right! Can't blame them, a lot of Americans felt the same way about it.

    Then all these French leftists get online and are all like, "schna, schna, schna" with their noses at the clouds gargling wine while feeling self-important, with no clue at all what their country's foreign policies are.

    It isn't hard to find a German who is willing to say something bad about the US, but if we threaten to reduce the number troops we station there, they line the streets in protest! It is hilarious.

    But the good news, the US isn't trying to sell this equipment, the goal is to get Americans and Allies to use equipment made by any of our European allies. If Europeans are selling it to the US and then buying it back, that sounds silly, and easy for them to solve. We're not asking the Allies to trust us, we're asking the Allies to trust themselves.

  117. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 0

    Uh, we pay the Euros $150 billion a year in unfair trade agreements, defend them for free with NATO, and provide free protection for their exports with the US Navy. Without these their cushy welfare states would collapse.

    Forged in blood? That sounds volksich to me. Europeans hate being shackled to racists like Americans. They wish to be free and chart their own course in the world.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  118. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    USA doesn't need that, they have lawful interception...

  119. "China isn't perfect . . ." by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

    You raving lunatics who say this are the same types who supported the Nazis and Hitler's Third Reich!!!! Forced organ harvesing of political prisoners and religious prisoners, disappeared human rights attorneys and pro-democracy activists, etc., etc., ad nauseum. "China isn't perfect . . ." Are you completely insane??? http://www.filmsforfreedom.com...

    1. Re: "China isn't perfect . . ." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are not the world police. China has not started a war, therefore like Russia, we keep them at a distance.

      I take it, you've never heard the saying "keep your friends close and your enemies closer"

  120. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

    In exchange we formed the EU and are killing ourselves.

  121. Re: THERE ARE ALWAYS CONSEQUENCES NAZI FAG KEN DOL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have been saying this for a year now and I have yet to see any consequences. So stfu or do something faggot.

  122. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, it's not like the US would ship tech or arms to countries with blatant human rights abuses (or that even funded attacks on the US) .. you know, countries like Saudi Arabia. Right? Right?

  123. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    Speaking as someone from western Europe, the problem with Huawei is that in geopolitical terms China is not an ally by any stretch of the imagination. The USA are. If there's any serious trouble

    Was it China or that "ally" who was tapping the German Chancellor's phone calls?

  124. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    Define freedom of speech. If you're going to go with the US constitutional version then pretty much no other country does does that.

  125. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by Talla · · Score: 2

    Don't talk to me about "Freedom of speech" while you have people like Assange bullied and prosecuted for what they said.

    Again, no sense of proportions. You have Assange, I raise you one million Chinese Uyghurs being incarcerated in "re-education camps" in China for their religious beliefs.

  126. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by divide+overflow · · Score: 1

    More to the point, China tries, and in large parts succeeds better that the West, to not leave people behind to poverty, distress, hunger, cold.

    Except for the Uyghurs, who live in a "fully-fledged police state" and are detained in mass detention camps.

  127. What the USA fears by AHuxley · · Score: 1

    Its the new made in China network the phone/computer/cell phone is connected to at a national level.
    China sets the costs and the design. The support for any nations police force.
    Thats the part the NSA and GCHQ enjoyed supporting all other nations with for decades.
    Low cost from China. That was once EU and US brands product to sell internationally at any price.
    China gives hardware and software that nations police/mil like at a new low price.
    No questions, no need for US and UK experts later.
    No more US and UK oversight on what a nation police and mil want to do on their own networks in their own nation.
    China gives them all the full network control at a low price. Telcos and security services are happy to have the keys to their own nations infrastructure.
    No more having to ask the NSA/GCHQ/MI6/CIA for expert advice to track any groups in your own nation.
    To get US and UK technical and political approval for each police mission. China is more understanding of any internal police matter.
    Thats a lack of meetings with staff from the USA/UK with another nations telco and security forces over decades.
    What was once a lot of meetings and contact with the CIA/NSA/GCHQ is now just an export deal with China.
    Hardware from China is ready for all markets and all governments with none of the past UK/US police/mil support problems.
    The US and UK become just another nation entering a nations telco network rather than the direct owners of every nations telco networks.
    Trusted 5 eyes brands have lost their telco spy code monopoly.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  128. One of these murders millions of its own people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just because the US might be doing it
    Does not justify the Chinese government doing the same.

  129. The real reason is #6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If a Taiwanese company is doing the same, the world wouldn't even blink an eye.

    Don't throw me any racist crap, Taiwanese and PRC people are both ethnical Chinese and they even speak the same language.
    Discriminating against a government is not the same as discriminating against an ethnic group.

  130. EXACTLY by p51d007 · · Score: 1

    That's what I've been saying for a few years. My last 3 phones were Huawei. Never had an issue, phones were great, good value, great battery life, but, living in the USA, they getting kicked out, getting one that works in the USA might be an issue going forward, and, getting updates (Huawei isn't known for pushing out updates quickly LOL), I had to give up and get something else. "But Huawei spies for the Chinese government". Yeah, and Google, Apple, Samsung, LG, HTC and others don't spy? The golden egg right now is DATA. You'd have to be an idiot not to think the U.S. government doesn't spy. FBI, NSA, CIA and other alphabet agencies. When they started blocking Huawei, my FIRST thought was the Apple/Samsung bunch paid a TON of money to keep them out. Think about it. For better/worse, most consumers in the USA STILL BUY their phones from "carriers" or retail carrier sites. People in the USA, since the explosion of mobile phones are "use" to paying cheap for phones, over time. With phones in the 600-1200 dollar range, people opt to get a carrier phone, no interest, spread out over time. Carrier branding makes it much easier for Apple & Samsung (and a couple smaller players) to maintain a very high retail price, spread it out over time, plus a win for the carriers to keep people "locked in". You think they wouldn't pay a little money under the table to keep things the way they are? They probably got scared when at&t and then Best Buy said they were going to carry the Huawei brand, given how popular it is elsewhere in the world.

  131. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

    Oh yes, the chancellor who was probably totally ok with the total surveillance her constituents were already subject to, perhaps a little jealous of the capability of various other nations on that score, but who got rather pissy when she herself was spied upon. Ms. Merkel can seriously go suck an egg, and have a bite of the same shit sandwich we’re having.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  132. Doh! In a communist country... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    there is no such thing as a non-government "business". In order to pretend to be a business, one must be a member of the ruling party and must obey the ruling party in all things, which means your "business" is just another tentacle of the ruling party, which is the same thing as the government and its military and police.

    Huawei is not a "business" at all, it never has been and can never be as long as China is a communist nation.

    Huawei would be failing in its duty to The Party and to The State is if did not install kill switches and backdoors, and the party and the state would in-turn not allow Huawei to operate in such a state of rebellion against the Communist Revolution.

    Certainly, the companies in ANY nation can be forced by their governments into spying on people BUT in Western democracies this would require lawsuits, warrants, etc and there are generally Constitutional or other limits imposed upon government. In communist China there are NO safeguards for the individual, and there is NO competing political party to keep the ruling party in check. There is NO separation between the military and police and courts, and the ruling political party.

  133. Chinese firms will ship tech to countries ... by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

    Chinese firms will ship tech to countries in defiance of a US trade embargo.

    It's almost as if they are from a country that isn't the United States! How dare a company in another country not follow an American law. It's unfathomable!

  134. Re: So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Bullshit. Every country had at least one bank. Kim dotcom was not forced to commit bank fraud. The Chinese princess was not forced to commit bank fraud. The both choose to use American banks.

  135. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That may be the case for a few Middle Eastern dictatorships, but the US's allies in Europe, Asia and Oceania pay vast amounts of protection money in terms of trade arrangements that strongly favour the US. They also subsidise the US defence industry by paying through the nose for overpriced US military equipment that is likely to contain kill switches and backdoors.

  136. CHINA provides SPECTRUM users backdoor? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See subject & imo (in modems w/ a login screen yet no routing (logon to WHAT is the question, right?)).

    I did as in years past & requested a modem w/ routing (for creating firewalling, port filtering, DNS change etc.).

    Got CANCELLED by policy @ warehouse level!

    AFTER I went to Spectrum local outlets asking for a NEW modem w/ more than 1 port WHICH I DID IN THE PAST no problem & got before.

    They had no NEW DOCSIS 3.1 COMPLIANT MODEMS w/ more than 1 port @ LOCAL outlets (thus request to their warehouse THEIR PEOPLE DID 4 ME).

    I'm 'stuck' unless I buy a firewall router to bridge w/ a NO SECURITY "dumb brick" - I DON'T TRUST THIS THING & I'd rather BUY an "ALL IN 1" cablemodem!

    I need DNS change/portfilter/firewalling in a MODEM/ROUTER to AVOID a China TECHNICOLOR REBRAND modem that "ODDLY" has a LOGON SCREEN NOBODY CAN ACCESS: Not EVEN the ISP despite sending a bin config file & WHY A LOGON TO A MACID IN A NIC (dumb passthru)

    I had to RIG MY HOSTS FILE JUST TO SEE A LOGON SCREEN!

    (In other routing featuring modems they gave me in the past I never had THAT issue)

    Their techs @ ALL LEVELS SEE it on their private WAN they peer up to other networks (& THEY CAN' LOGON EITHER).

    QUESTION - WHY INSERT LOGON CODE INTO A DUMB MODEM?

    SCREAMS "bad" imo like a NETWORK OF ATTACK BOTS in remotely compromisable 'modems'!

    APK

    P.S.=> Correct me IF I'm wrong (/. or whipslash keep deleting this - prove me wrong (I hope I am off/wrong in fact)

  137. Re: So? by Zehsi · · Score: 1

    ugh wat there are non-american banks, I live in the eu and I know this for sure. kim dotcom was conducting business in the usa, hence the extradition request.

  138. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hungary is rapidly going in the same direction. That is the problem.

  139. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Tom · · Score: 1

    The problem with your thinking is that you are caught in a "with us or against us" mindset.

    They both have their own agendas and are friends or enemies of Europe as it fits them. That includes the famous "american friendship" that was cultivated as a tool against communism and is now being kept for economic reasons.

    Don't for a moment think that the USA is a friend or ally. They've done their share to prevent Europe from rising to a global power, they've started countless wars and left Europe to pay the bills or the rebuilding of what they destroyed, they're not unhappy about the refugee crisis and they even managed to shift most of the burden of the financial crisis to us.

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  140. Re:Why can't human made mechienes be tested by hum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    To paraphrase Edsger W. Dijkstra, "Testing reveals the presence of backdoors, never their absence."

  141. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by thegarbz · · Score: 1

    Oh yes, the chancellor who was probably totally ok with the total surveillance her constituents were already subject to

    We call that a strawman, something completely irrelevant to the discussion. Ms Merkel can go suck eggs for a lot of reasons, but what has any of that got to do with the USA being a hostile ally?

  142. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by getuid() · · Score: 1

    US has Guantanamo, and a couple of similar smaller camps all around the world (Romania for example). Counting all together, how much do you think we're falling behind that million? (And what if we add the wrongfully imprisoned into private penitentiaries by a broken plea-bargain justice system, are we getting close yet?...)

    No?

    So, according to the sense-of-proportion argument then, we're safe. Right? It is ok to run around incarcerating people, holding them as modern-age slaves, or torturing them, executing them without judicial oversight, as long as the other guys are doing it to even more people, right?

    Not to excuse China here - I dont like what they're doing. But we're not the ones to hold them moral lessons about it, we're doing the same. If the west holds itself to a higher standard, it should actually try to meet that standard, but this is not how you do it.

    This was the core of my argument: that China is the same villain as the US, and numbers nitpicking can't disarm that as long as the west is willfully, systematically and knowingly making the same principle mistakes.

  143. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by szabo.m.peter · · Score: 1

    In Turkey, you can be in-prisoned as a citizen for speaking up against the president. Does this happen in the US? In Hungary you can loose your job or loose your small enterprise for not supporting the current government. Does that happen in the US? In Russia you can suffer an unfortunate accident if you are a journalist, and get shot on the birthday of the president if you dig too deep. Does that happen in the US? In China Winnie-the-Pooh is banned as someone started a meme representing the president as Winnie.

    My point, is that there is a HUGE difference between different systems, especially in how they treat THEIR OWN citizens.

  144. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    'lawful'.

  145. NO $USBRAND supplies 5G by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no $USBRAND equipment to use in this space. NONE.

    There are two brand in this space, Ericsson and Nokia. Neither are American.

  146. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It isn't hard to find a German who is willing to say something bad about the US, but if we threaten to reduce the number troops we station there, they line the streets in protest!

    This hasn't actually happened.

  147. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by Talla · · Score: 1

    US has Guantanamo, and a couple of similar smaller camps all around the world (Romania for example). Counting all together, how much do you think we're falling behind that million? (And what if we add the wrongfully imprisoned into private penitentiaries by a broken plea-bargain justice system, are we getting close yet?...)

    No, you're not getting anywhere near close. There are currently about 55 people imprisoned in Guantanamo, captured under very different circumstances. The number of wrongfully imprisoned in China is probably also higher, considering they have a 99.9% conviction rate.

  148. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yeah... Hungary has its problems, but it also has a future as Hungary. Not so sure about some of its neighbors. The border controls were minimal when I crossed from Austria - wife and I were required to stop, but as we were in a German-registered car and visibly of European descent, they didn’t even ask us to roll the windows down. If that’s the new face of totalitarianism, I can live with it. Let’s not forget that Hungary was strident in opposition to the USSR and was the first state east of the Iron Curtain to open borders to the West.

  149. The people control the government by Immerial · · Score: 1

    The US intelligence community is not elected but they ARE under the control of the democratically elected government. It's just that many US citizens have been neglect in their duties to vote. If the people wanted to they could completely change who was running the US intelligence community, besides many other tools like cut off funding for operations that aren't supported or have laws passed to reduce the amount/types of spying allowed or have more oversight. Those things are currently not possible in Russia and China.

    1. Re:The people control the government by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      No, the elected government has no control over them. They are career federal employees. They can't be fired. Truman complained he couldn't do anything about them, and every president since. JFK wanted to disband the CIA and wound up dead for his trouble.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    2. Re:The people control the government by Immerial · · Score: 1

      federal employees = government employees.
      government = elected government.
      Therefore, elected government has control.*

      *Now I did qualify if people don't vote then they are giving up their control. ;)

      Truman complained he couldn't do anything about them, and every president since. JFK wanted to disband the CIA and wound up dead for his trouble.

      Yea, well Trump isn't like those Presidents. I'm sure he could bring total chaos to the CIA. He could make Steven Seagal the Director of National Intelligence in a single tweet. :D

  150. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh, we pay the Euros $150 billion a year in unfair trade agreements

    Trade agreements favour the US heavily, not the other way around.

    defend them for free with NATO

    NATO is an alliance. It is not unidirectional. Every member both provides and receives collecitve defence. It isn't free either. The US pays less than its fair share in NATO contributions and it coerces NATO allies into participating in its wars and into buying overpriced US military equipment. European countries also tend to carry far more of the burden of the consequences of US warmongering than the US itself.

    Without these their cushy welfare states would collapse.

    Even if your fantasies were true, the total purported benefits would be tiny compared to the cost of a wellfare state. Moreover, two of the European countries with the most extensive wellfare states are not even NATO members.

  151. Speaking of kill switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My i5 machine had a kill switch, some weird online script or probably MS Windows 7 disabled some of my keys on my laptop keyboard. How do i know? Both these keys was also disabled on my friends i5 machine. Even a BSD or a Linux or a fresh Win7 reinstall cannot return the keys.

    Fuck'n KILL SWITCH planted by intel.

    1. Re:Speaking of kill switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wanted me to buy another quad core machine by destroying this powerful yet old laptop.

  152. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Aighearach · · Score: 1

    Can you read?

    Are you sure?

    Completely sure, or do you merely suspect it is true?

    Maybe you were simply told "good job" by a teacher once, and believed in meant you're literate?

  153. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    unfair trade agreements, etc.

    Not sure why we remain allies because of being treated unfairly by the USA in trade agreements.

  154. Surely the NSA has the answers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Surely the US should know if there are any backdoors in Huawei devices after the NSA hacked into Huawei in the past surely they can just do it again. Hell while they're at it plant some backdoors of their own. I mean there's no hypocrisy there at all right.

  155. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA a by getuid() · · Score: 1

    Cool, now how many do we still need before Right becomes Wrong? Do we need to match the full million? Or maybe just about 150k, given that there are only 1/4 bn people in the US, give or take? (Maybe we could throw in a few targeted killings in the middle east, just for good measure? And a few more collateral killings, caused by the non-UN-sanctioned invasion of foreign states, like Iraq?)

    How about we keep it at 1?

    I'm not talking about 1 accidentally incarcerated person in a random prison, I'm talking about 1 willfully locked up person by a government that knows it shouldn't, because it's wrong by its own standards to do so. Otherwise our western "civilsation" isn't worth much more than the fancy toilet paper we use instead of leaves and sand.

    Concerning the wrongfully imprisoned: USA has the highest rate in the world of people in jail, period. Now either China has more *wrongfully* imprisoned people, meaning most people in US prisons deserve to be locked up. This would mean USA produces the highest rate of crooks in the world. Or China and USA have just about the same rate of crooks as everywhere else, in which case USA has more wrongfully imprisoned people.

    Not sure which interpretation you'd prefer.

  156. Re: Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA an by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    that part about invading afghanistan is not exactly true. same as with syria, russia was in afghanistan on a request of the government.

  157. Re:Why [cisco|intel|...$USBRAND] gives $NOTUSA and by sad_ · · Score: 1

    you can't expect backdoors to be secret (forever).
    the backdoors will be found by grey/blackhats or stolen by spies.
    than basically everybody has access, and at that point, all bets are off.
    backdoors, no matter who put them in, or for whatever reason, are never a good idea.

    --
    On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.
  158. Influx of ACs by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    I find it very interesting the increased number of ACs that show up whenever there's anything controversial about China. Not to mention that many of them are clearly not native English speaking posts.

    For this reason, I don't respond to or mod up any AC posts.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  159. White America kill competition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you guys do know this isn’t new. You don’t know about the other thing that white America does to kill competition.

    Foreign aid.

    Yeah, seems ironic, but foreign aid from America, although pitched as some sort of helpful outreach to poor countries like those in Africa are peppered with stipulations that bar its recipient from using it to build infrastructure or grow their economy which assures dependency and failure.

    This is probably more obvious now that China’s rise has improved many African countries infrastructure. When white people on their poverty tourism were busy digging wells and taking pictures with malnourished African children, the Chinese actually built them a hydroelectric plant. Wow, so all that time the US could’ve been doing that instead of raising money to preserve some apes in a mountain?