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Huawei Laptop 'Backdoor' Flaw Raises Concerns (bbc.com)

A flaw in Huawei Matebook laptops, found by Microsoft researchers, could have been used to take control of machines. From a report: The "sophisticated flaw" had probably been introduced at the manufacturing stage, one expert told BBC News. Huawei is under increasing scrutiny around the world over how closely it is tied to the Chinese government. The company, which denies any collusion with Beijing, corrected the flaw after it was notified about it in January. Prof Alan Woodward, a computer security expert based at Surrey University, told BBC News the flaw had the hallmarks of a "backdoor" created by the US's National Security Agency to spy on the computers of targets. That tool was leaked online and has been used by a wide variety of hackers, including those who are state-sponsored and criminal gangs. "It was introduced at the manufacture stage but the path by which it came to be there is unknown and the fact that it looks like an exploit that is linked to the NSA doesn't mean anything," Prof Woodward said.

2 of 95 comments (clear)

  1. Because they have done nothing wrong and are #1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Because they are the most popular and growing server, smartphone, and network infrastructure company in the world, with the best engineering in the world, and they have never had a provable security issue. I trust them to be 100% secure, because every allegation at them always has a [citation needed] by it.

  2. Let me guess by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Funny

    A flaw in Huawei Matebook laptops, found by Microsoft researchers, could have been used to take control of machines.

    Windows 10?

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"