uaw Samsung Tri-Fold Smartphone in Development? Patent Suggests it Will Resemble the Huawei Mate XT By www.gizbot.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 15:51:29 +0530 Samsung is reportedly working on a tri-fold smartphone, expected to arrive sometime next year. An earlier report suggested that Samsung display's partners have finished developing components for the tri-fold model. Now, the latest development reveals Samsung has already filed a patent Full Article
uaw One year after the UAW strike, Michigan is worse off By www.mackinac.org Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 05:51:00 -0500 Six weeks of labor action led to a year of job losses Full Article
uaw Apple's iPhone 16 struggles with AI features delay, increasing Huawei competition By tribune.com.pk Published On :: Tue, 10 Sep 24 19:50:16 +0500 Apple’s shares fell 1.7 per cent on Tuesday, a day after the US tech giant unveiled its new iPhones with AI Full Article Technology
uaw Attendant and entrant squawk talk By www.safetyandhealthmagazine.com Published On :: Sun, 26 Aug 2018 00:00:00 -0400 Do all confined spaces require electronic equipment for effective communication between the attendant and entrants? Full Article
uaw UAW Makes History at Tennessee Volkswagen Plant By www.yesmagazine.org Published On :: Thu, 25 Apr 2024 19:14:00 +0000 The United Auto Workers’ union victory in Tennessee was the result of strategic decisions, and could herald a bright future for organized labor in the South. Full Article Jobs Economy Social Justice Unions Labor Organizing Tennessee YES! Presents: Rising Up with Sonali United Auto Workers Organized Labor Volkwagen Labor Rights
uaw Huawei Watch GT 4 review: The smartwatch activity tracker to beat, and it looks classy too! By www.hardwarezone.com.sg Published On :: Sat, 9 Mar 2024 06:50:11 +0800 Note:This video was first published on 21 November 2023. After a long hiatus, Huawei returns with the Watch GT 4 series. It is a classy aesthetic upgrade to the GT 3, but still rocks one of the best heartrate sensors and analytics data for the price with TruSeen 5.5+ and a 2-week battery life. Find out how it compares with the last generation Watch GT 3 Pro. You can get the Huawei Watch GT 4 series starting at S$298 from Lazada and Shopee. Full Article
uaw Pre-order the Huawei MatePad 12 X from 18 November and enjoy some specials and freebies! By www.hardwarezone.com.sg Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 16:53:12 +0800 Unfortunately, the Huawei MatePad 12 X will be available with Wi-Fi only connectivity. #huawei #huaweimatepas12x Full Article Just Announced
uaw US suspects TSMC helped Huawei skirt export controls, report says By arstechnica.com Published On :: Fri, 18 Oct 2024 17:41:58 +0000 US probing whether TSMC helped Huawei make AI chips. Full Article Policy 5G AI chips apple Artificial Intelligence china tariffs Chips Act Export controls Huawei NVIDIA Qualcomm semiconductors Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company TSMC
uaw 661: The Persecution of Christians by Ummayad Caliph Muawiyy... By www.atour.com Published On :: Thu, 17 Aug 2000 03:45:00 UT 661: The Persecution of Christians by Ummayad Caliph Muawiyyah Full Article 600-699 A.D. Assyrian History
uaw U.K. To Bar British Companies From Buying 5G Equipment From Huawei By www.gpbnews.org Published On :: Tue, 14 Jul 2020 20:03:00 +0000 Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit AILSA CHANG, HOST: The United Kingdom is banning Huawei, the Chinese telecom giant, from developing Britain's 5G network. The U.S. welcomes this decision. It's just the latest move in a global struggle between the U.S. and China over technology, business and political power. As NPR's Frank Langfitt reports, it's also a sign of how China's increasingly assertive diplomacy has backfired. FRANK LANGFITT, BYLINE: The British government will forbid companies here from buying Huawei equipment for 5G beginning next year and require the removal of all Huawei equipment by 2027. The government says the decision was triggered by U.S. sanctions on Huawei suppliers that could make the company's equipment easier for China to use for spying. Oliver Dowden is the U.K.'s digital secretary. (SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING) OLIVER DOWDEN: The security and resilience of our telecoms networks is of paramount importance. We have never and will never compromise that Full Article
uaw In Reversal, U.K. Will Ban Huawei Equipment From Its 5G Network By www.gpbnews.org Published On :: Tue, 14 Jul 2020 19:14:00 +0000 Updated at 4 p.m. ET Months after approving some limited involvement by the Chinese technology giant Huawei in constructing the U.K.'s next-generation wireless data network, British regulators reversed course Tuesday. Beginning in January, U.K. regulators will implement a ban on telecom operators buying Huawei equipment. Existing Huawei 5G equipment will need to be removed from the U.K.'s 5G network by 2027. The decision comes after relations between the U.K. and China declined sharply over China's actions in Hong Kong, and in the face of a potential rebellion by parliamentarians from the U.K.'s ruling Conservative party who are concerned about the security implications of Chinese involvement in the 5G rollout. But it also follows sustained U.S. pressure on the U.K. and other European countries to exclude Huawei from 5G development. The U.S. says Huawei's equipment can be used for espionage by Beijing, and it has threatened to withhold intelligence from its allies that continued to use Full Article
uaw 406: ‘Hock TUAW’, With Christina Warren By daringfireball.net Published On :: Wed, 31 Jul 2024 23:13:31 EDT Christina Warren (a.k.a. “Mary Brown”) returns to the show. Topics include Apple’s new iOS 18.1 and MacOS 15.1 betas (featuring Apple Intelligence), a little reminiscing about Gil Amelio and Steve Jobs, and the bizarre saga of TUAW, resurrected as a zombie AI slopsite. Full Article
uaw Samsung готовит складывающийся втрое смартфон - конкурент Huawei Mate XT получил одобрение патентного бюро США By gagadget.com Published On :: Wed, 13 Nov 2024 00:14:50 +0200 Samsung получила одобрение патента на смартфон, складывающийся втрое. Этот шаг приближает компанию к выпуску смартфона, который может стать конкурентом Huawei Mate XT. Full Article
uaw News24 Business | Huawei 'super fans' annoyed at lack of supply as pricey phone hits China stores By www.news24.com Published On :: Sunday Sep 22 2024 18:30:16 Many fans of Huawei on Friday were disappointed that its much-anticipated phone, Mate XT - more than twice the price of the iPhone 16 Pro Max - was not available for walk-in customers. Full Article
uaw The UK’s Huawei Decision: Why the West is Losing the Tech Race By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 17 Jul 2020 16:36:31 +0000 17 July 2020 Dr Yu Jie Senior Research Fellow on China, Asia-Pacific Programme @yu_jiec LinkedIn Joyce Hakmeh Senior Research Fellow, International Security Programme; Co-Editor, Journal of Cyber Policy @joycehakmeh LinkedIn On 5G and the technological race, the answer is a visionary rather than a reactive approach and, so far, the West has opted for the latter. GettyImages-1140107267.jpg A pedestrian walks past a Huawei product stand at a telecommunications shop in central London on 29 April 2019. Photo: Getty Images. The UK’s decision to ban its mobile providers from buying new Huawei 5G equipment after December 2020 and removing all the company’s 5G kit from their networks by 2027 is a blow to Huawei and China, but it is one battle in a long war that the West is currently losing.5G’s significance for the next generation of technology is indisputable and so is its critical role in helping countries achieve digital transformation and economic success. Not only does it offer faster and better connection speeds and greater capacity, it also transforms the way people interact with online services. And it will allow industry to automate and optimize processes that are not possible today.Due to its transformative importance, what is in essence a technological issue has turned into a contest over global technological leadership that extends beyond the US-China rivalry and has created tensions between the US and its long-time allies. Yet 5G is just one key technology in a more expansive landscape that will underpin the future of the world’s critical infrastructure, including in areas such as quantum computing, biotechnology, artificial intelligence, the internet of things and big data.To achieve technological leadership in these domains requires governments to invest in a long-term, strategic and agile vision that is able to encompass the interdependencies between these areas and then leverage the resulting technological advances for economic progress. It also requires governments working with each other and with the private sector to support research and development and to create companies with leading-edge technologies that can compete globally.China understands this and has a national and international vision to establish itself as a technological superpower. Re-balancing from a hub of labour-intensive manufacturing to a global innovation powerhouse is the absolute priority of the ruling Chinese Communist Party.China’s state-led approachIn the earlier part of this journey, commercial espionage and IP theft of western R&D were at the heart of the Chinese way of competing. Now, Beijing is cultivating national champions that can drive China’s technological innovation, with the goal of using domestic suppliers to reduce reliance on foreign technology at home as well as extending its international outreach. In the 5G area, Beijing has introduced domestically the so-called ‘New Infrastructure Investments Fund’, which earmarks special loans to boost 5G technology applications in medical devices, electric vehicles and communication platforms. This Fund constitutes a major part of the stimulus package for China’s post-COVID economic recovery.Apart from 5G, China's recent launch of a second state-funded semiconductor development fund valued at $29 billion, following an earlier $20 billion fund for the same purpose, shows the extent to which state financial resources are being utilized in China’s quest to become technologically self-sufficient.It is too early to know if the Chinese government’s industrial policies will eventually achieve the technological self-sufficiency Beijing has long desired. But its growing national capabilities have stoked serious concerns across the West and led to the current US administration’s determined effort to dismantle Chinese high-tech companies.China’s approach to macroeconomic management diverges significantly from that of the US and other market economies, particularly in its policy towards driving innovation. Due to the legacy of a state-planned economy, China is certain that simply relying on market forces is insufficient.While Beijing financially supports government-controlled technological enterprises, Washington takes a laissez-faire, light-touch approach by the state to the business sector. The US believes that a politicized process of distributing public money is inherently susceptible to rent-seeking and corruption, and gets in the way of competitive innovation. In line with most liberal economists, many Western governments believe the government should refrain from market intervention. For its part, Beijing stresses a state-dominated economy as a necessary precondition both to the future growth of the Chinese economy and to the legitimization of one-party rule. If the pro-market economists’ view is correct, the US should have little to fear from Chinese industrial innovation policy in the long-term. Let Beijing waste money and distort resource allocation, while Washington follows its private sector-led principles, confident that this approach will produce a more competitive economy in the long run.Using the leverage of technical standardsBut one area that should concern the US and that illustrates the Chinese vision for global technological dominance is technical standard setting. Technical standards determine how technologies work with each other, enabling their interoperability around the world, meaning they can function irrespective of where they are being used.The Chinese leadership has long understood the relationship between technical standards and economic power. Standards help to monetize technological innovation and research and can help shape new technologies. China has therefore been playing an increasingly active role in international standards organizations to legitimize Chinese technologies, whereas the US, which historically has been highly influential in this area, has not been participating as much or as effectively.China has also been using its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) as an opportunity to internationalize the distribution of its standards to countries signed up to the BRI. The so-called Digital Silk Road, which has been described as China’s most important global governance initiative, acts as a route to accelerate this process. Later this year, China is expected to launch its new ‘China Standards 2035’ plan, which aims to shape how the next generation of technologies will work together.China’s preferred model and its recent actions have given Western leaders much to worry about. But standing up to China’s growing global influence in high technology and re-establishing the West’s desired technological edge will take much more than achieving a common front on excluding China from their 5G networks. It requires a long-term vision built on the power of competitive markets, backed by solid investment in the next generation of technology. This will require, in turn, much greater cooperation between Western governments and between them and their private sectors.And, whilst recent protective steps taken in Washington and other Western capitals may slow down China’s trailblazing in the technology sphere, it will only hasten China's determination to become tech self-sufficient in the long term. This will increase the probability of a splintered internet, which will have negative repercussions for all. Full Article
uaw Huawei unveils $2,800 trifold phone hours after iPhone 16 debut By www.thehindubusinessline.com Published On :: Tue, 10 Sep 2024 13:18:14 +0530 The so-called trifold phone from Huawei, dubbed the Mate XT and starting at 19,999 yuan ($2,800), took over five years of development and promises to fit a 10-inch tablet in a pocket Full Article Mobiles & Tablets
uaw Huawei launches GT5 smartwatch with AI-Powered sports and fitness tracking features By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2024 18:28:07 +0530 Huawei launched its GT5 smartwatch with emotional wellbeing assistant, AI-powered sports and fitness tracking Full Article Gadgets
uaw TSMC halts chip supply to customer after finding it in Huawei product, source says By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Thu, 24 Oct 2024 10:00:59 +0530 The U.S. curbed the export of advanced artificial intelligence chips to China two years ago, citing the need to limit the Chinese military's capabilities Full Article Technology
uaw Apple's Q3 China smartphone sales slip, Huawei's soar By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2024 08:39:53 +0530 Apple's iPhone sales in China slipped 0.3% while rival Huawei posted a 42% surge in the third quarter of 2024 Full Article Technology
uaw Huawei to launch Huawei Card By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 14 Apr 2020 15:33:00 +0200 Huawei has announced its own Huawei Card which will... Full Article
uaw Huawei AI: China Plans to Rule BRI on 5G with Machines, Robotics, & Drones Using an A.I. Digital Brain, Says The AI Organization By www.24-7pressrelease.com Published On :: Fri, 25 Oct 2019 07:00:00 GMT Humanity Can Be Enslaved Under a Chinese Authoritarian Artificial Intelligence Surveillance State via Drones, Robotics and Bio-Digital Social Programming, Says The AI Organization. Full Article
uaw Chinese Telecommunications Conglomerate Huawei and Subsidiaries Charged in Racketeering Conspiracy and Conspiracy to Steal Trade Secrets By www.justice.gov Published On :: Thu, 13 Feb 2020 00:00:00 -0500 A superseding indictment was returned yesterday in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, charging Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd. (Huawei), the world’s largest telecommunications equipment manufacturer, and two U.S. subsidiaries with conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). Full Article
uaw Squawkie the galah encouraged to leap after being stranded in a tree for four nights By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Wed, 30 Oct 2019 18:17:00 +1100 Pat Fuidge has been trying to coax her galah Squawkie from a tree since Saturday, a bird that became too scared to come back down. Full Article ABC Radio Adelaide adelaide Community and Society:All:All Human Interest:All:All Human Interest:Animals:All Australia:SA:Adelaide 5000 Australia:SA:All Australia:SA:Goolwa 5214
uaw Huawei is pleading with the Federal Government to allow it to be a 5G provider in Australia By www.abc.net.au Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2019 13:57:00 +1100 Chinese telco giant Huawei urges the Federal Government to reconsider its ban on the company providing equipment to Australia's 5G mobile network, describing claims it answers to Beijing as "unfounded attacks and smears". Full Article ABC Radio Canberra canberra Business Economics and Finance:Industry:Telecommunications Defence and National Security:Security Intelligence:All Government and Politics:Foreign Affairs:All Information and Communication:Wireless Technology:All Australia:ACT:Canberra 2600 China:All:All
uaw Huawei представила в Европе смартфон P Smart 2020: с сервисами Google и ценником €200 By gagadget.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 11:20:15 +0300 Благодаря чипу Kirin 710F смартфон получил предустановленные чипы Google. Full Article
uaw Pravidla pro chytré sítě 5G by v USA mohla psát i Huawei By www.idnes.cz Published On :: Thu, 07 May 2020 08:00:00 GMT Ministerstvo obchodu Spojených států připravuje nová digitální pravidla. Americké podniky by na základě nich mohly spolupracovat s čínskou firmou Huawei Technologies na stanovování norem pro mobilní sítě (5G). Agentuře Reuters to řekly zdroje obeznámené se situací. Loni touto dobou přitom USA uvalily restrikce na obchodování s Huawei. Full Article Ekonomika - Zahraniční
uaw German Cybersecurity Chief: Threats Posed by Huawei Are Manageable By www.spiegel.de Published On :: Fri, 26 Jul 2019 09:43:27 +0200 In an interview, Arne Schönbohm, 49, the head of Germany's Federal Office for Information Security, discusses the potential danger posed by Huawei, why he thinks it is "manageable" and the general state of IT threats in Germany. Full Article
uaw Huawei: Boom time in China By www.bbc.co.uk Published On :: Tue, 26 Nov 2019 00:06:32 GMT While Huawei tech is blocked in the US, it is helping build one of the world biggest 5G networks at home. Full Article
uaw Fin24.com | WATCH: Documents show Huawei role in shipping prohibited US gear to Iran By www.fin24.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Mar 2020 11:09:30 +0200 China’s Huawei, which for years has denied violating American trade sanctions on Iran, produced internal company records in 2010 that show it was directly involved in sending prohibited US computer equipment to Iran’s largest mobile-phone operator. Full Article
uaw Who’s Afraid of Huawei? Understanding the 5G Security Concerns By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Sep 2019 09:55:03 +0000 9 September 2019 Emily Taylor Associate Fellow, International Security Programme @etaylaw LinkedIn Emily Taylor examines the controversy around the Chinese tech giant’s mobile broadband equipment and the different approaches taken by Western countries. 2019-09-06-Huawei.jpg Huawei's Ox Horn campus in Dongguan, China. Photo: Getty Images. As countries move towards the fifth generation of mobile broadband, 5G, the United States has been loudly calling out Huawei as a security threat. It has employed alarmist rhetoric and threatened to limit trade and intelligence sharing with close allies that use Huawei in their 5G infrastructure.While some countries such as Australia have adopted a hard line against Huawei, others like the UK have been more circumspect, arguing that the risks of using the firm’s technology can be mitigated without forgoing the benefits.So, who is right, and why have these close allies taken such different approaches?The risksLong-standing concerns relating to Huawei are plausible. There are credible allegations that it has benefitted from stolen intellectual property, and that it could not thrive without a close relationship with the Chinese state.Huawei hotly denies allegations that users are at risk of its technology being used for state espionage, and says it would resist any order to share information with the Chinese government. But there are questions over whether it could really resist China’s stringent domestic legislation, which compels companies to share data with the government. And given China’s track record of using cyberattacks to conduct intellectual property theft, there may be added risks of embedding a Chinese provider into critical communications infrastructure.In addition, China’s rise as a global technological superpower has been boosted by the flow of financial capital through government subsidies, venture and private equity, which reveal murky boundaries between the state and private sector for domestic darlings. Meanwhile, the Belt and Road initiative has seen generous investment by China in technology infrastructure across Africa, South America and Asia.There’s no such thing as a free lunch or a free network – as Sri Lanka discovered when China assumed shares in a strategic port in return for debt forgiveness; or Mexico when a 1% interest loan for its 4G network came on the condition that 80% of the funding was spent with Huawei.Aside from intelligence and geopolitical concerns, the quality of Huawei’s products represents a significant cyber risk, one that has received less attention than it deserves.On top of that, 5G by itself will significantly increase the threat landscape from a cybersecurity perspective. The network layer will be more intelligent and adaptable through the use of software and cloud services. The number of network antennae will increase by a factor of 20, and many will be poorly secured ‘things’; there is no need for a backdoor if you have any number of ‘bug doors’.Finally, the US is threatening to limit intelligence sharing with its closest allies if they adopt Huawei. So why would any country even consider using Huawei in their 5G infrastructure?Different situationsThe truth is that not every country is free to manoeuvre; 5G technology will sit on top of existing mobile infrastructure.Australia and the US can afford to take a hard line: their national infrastructure has been largely Huawei-free since 2012. However, the Chinese firm is deeply embedded in other countries’ existing structures – for example, in the UK, Huawei has provided telecommunications infrastructure since 2005. Even if the UK decided tomorrow to ditch Huawei, it cannot just rip up existing 4G infrastructure. To do so would cost a fortune, risk years of delay in the adoption of 5G and limit competition in 5G provisioning.As a result, the UK has adopted a pragmatic approach resulting from years of oversight and analysis of Huawei equipment, during which it has never found evidence of malicious Chinese state cyber activity through Huawei.At the heart of this process is the Huawei Cyber Security Evaluation Centre, which was founded in 2010 as a confidence-building measure. Originally criticized for ‘effectively policing itself’, as it was run and staffed entirely by Huawei, the governance has now been strengthened, with the National Cyber Security Centre chairing its oversight board.The board’s 2019 report makes grim reading, highlighting ‘serious and system defects in Huawei’s software engineering and cyber security competence’. But it does not accuse the company of serving as a platform for state-sponsored surveillance.Similar evidence-based policy approaches are emerging in other countries like Norway and Italy. They offer flexibility for governments, for example by limiting access to some contract competition through legitimate and transparent means, such as security reviews during procurement. The approaches also raise security concerns (both national and cyber) to a primary issue when awarding contracts – something that was not always done in the past, when price was the key driver.The UK is also stressing the need to manage risk and increase vendor diversity in the ecosystem to avoid single points of failure. A further approach that is beginning to emerge is to draw a line between network ‘core’ and ‘periphery’ components, excluding some providers from the more sensitive ‘core’. The limited rollouts of 5G in the UK so far have adopted multi-provider strategies, and only one has reportedly not included Huawei kit.Managing the risks to cyber security and national security will become more complex in a 5G environment. In global supply chains, bans based on the nationality of the provider offer little assurance. For countries that have already committed to Huawei in the past, and who may not wish to be drawn into an outright trade war with China, these moderate approaches offer a potential way forward. Full Article
uaw Episode Nine - The Internet of Li-Fi in Dubai-Fi (IoLFiDF) Huawei, Whatsapp, Panama Papers and Li-Fi By play.acast.com Published On :: Fri, 08 Apr 2016 09:20:42 GMT This week host Matt Egan kicks things off by chatting to staff writer Lewis Painter about the (genuinely) impressive Huawei P9 phone release. Then, acting editor at Macworld.co.uk David Price jumps in to discuss Whatsapp encryption (12:30) and the Panama Papers. Finally, Christina Mercer, online editor at Techworld.com, introduces you to the wonderful world of Li-Fi (24:30). See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Full Article
uaw Episode 86 - The Internet of Education (IoE) New iPads for schools and the Huawei P20 By play.acast.com Published On :: Thu, 29 Mar 2018 15:36:05 GMT Sheriff Scott Carey rounds up his two deputies in David Price and Henry Burrell for a quick-fire two topic pod. Apple launched a new cheaper iPad this week based around its education play - but can schools afford them and are Chromebooks a better option?Then we discuss the new Huawei P20 and P20 Pro. Notches, three cameras but competitive pricing make the new Android flagship an interesting option. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. Full Article
uaw Britain Walks Post-Brexit Tightrope With Huawei Decision By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Tue, 04 Feb 2020 13:28:57 +0000 4 February 2020 Dr Leslie Vinjamuri Dean, Queen Elizabeth II Academy for Leadership in International Affairs; Director, US and the Americas Programme @londonvinjamuri Google Scholar The UK government seems to have balanced competing interests of the economy, national security and relations with America. But the full US response remains to be seen. 2020-02-04-JohnsonPompeo.jpg Mike Pompeo meets Boris Johnson in London on 30 January. Photo: Getty Images. In the face of multiple competing pressures, most especially intense pressure by the US president and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, the UK government has carved out an independent choice on the role that Huawei will play in its 5G mobile networks. Announced just days before the UK exited the European Union, a move designed to allow the UK to reclaim its sovereignty, this was a model example of a sovereign decision, but one that carries risk and will create ongoing uncertainty.The government’s assessment is that this will bolster Britain’s economic competitiveness through a rapid rollout of its 5G mobile network while staving off pressure from the United States and economic retaliation from China.Britain’s decision treads a cautious line. The effort to balance the drive for competitiveness, the imperatives of national security and, especially, to appease while not appearing to appease America, has meant that the UK faces multiple pressures just as it seeks to forge an independent political future. So far, the UK government has handled these pressures artfully.After months of intense scrutiny that at times looked like prevarication, and at other times looked a lot more contentious, the UK has decided to restrict Huawei’s access to a maximum of 35% of the market share of what it argues is the non-core part of its 5G mobile networks, and to enforce a total ban on Huawei’s access to the core. But no one should rest easy with the current choice. The UK has been divided internally on this decision, even among those on its National Security Council who have had privileged access to the intelligence offered by GCHQ. As the UK’s decision loomed, Tom Tugendhat, chair of the House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, cited Huawei’s connection to China’s intelligence services and its police state in Xinjiang and asked ‘is the risk worth it?’.This division created latitude for the Johnson government to stake out its own position. But it also suggests that when it comes to national security, the case is not clear. The US response is more puzzling. Donald Trump and Pompeo have been coming down hard on the UK. But in the lead up to the UK’s decision, US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin struck a much more nuanced tone, at least on the public record.Despite weeks of pressure by Trump and Pompeo leading up to the announcement, the UK’s Huawei decision has so far failed to make headlines in the US, or garner much of an official response.In an oped published in the Financial Times just days after the UK’s decision, acting US Assistant Secretary of Defense David Helvey took a strong line on China, calling for transatlantic unity and stressing the comprehensive nature of the competition that China presents. But he refrained from any specific mention of the UK’s announced decision. Given the previous US threat that allowing Huawei access would compromise future US–UK intelligence sharing and undermine the prospect for a free trade deal, this relatively muted response is surprising. Few among US national security experts have diverged from the view that Huawei presents a singular threat to national security.This suggests one of two things: either that, even among those in the US who agree about the threat that Huawei presents for national security, opinion differs on how to deal with this threat; or, that America has conceded to the UK’s choice, even if it is a different position to its own.What comes next is less certain. Now that Boris Johnson’s decision has been announced, the US has good reason to lay low. Restricting US–UK intelligence is a hollow threat: the US is a major beneficiary of this relationship and any attempt to unravel it would be costly for both parties.The same is true of a future US–UK free trade deal, from which the US will most certainly reap substantial benefits, politically as well as economically.The risk for the United States, of course, is that if it does not follow through, future threats to retaliate against the UK’s sovereign choices will become increasingly meaningless. And President Trump is not just any president. The current quiet could quickly be reversed if he sees a reason to make an example of the UK to signal to other countries currently debating their position on Huawei that proceeding will carry significant penalties.The question remains whether in forging ahead, but with elements of caution, Britain has made the right decision. If the measure of success is political independence befitting the moment of Britain’s historic exit from the European Union, then the answer would appear to be yes. National security is an entirely different matter, and on this the debate is not over. Full Article
uaw Huawei Sues Verizon Over 12 Patent Violations By www.pcmag.com Published On :: Verizon reportedly used Huawei technology in computer networking, download security, and video communications, with the Chinese company seeking compensation and royalties. Full Article
uaw Report: Huawei Allegedly Built North Korea's 3G Network By www.pcmag.com Published On :: The Washington Post report may force the White House to reconsider relaxing trade restrictions on Huawei, which is currently blacklisted from sourcing components from US technology suppliers. Full Article
uaw Report: Huawei Will Have Access to the UK's 5G Network By www.pcmag.com Published On :: Prime Minister Boris Johnson will reportedly announce the news before year's end, in a move that could disrupt relationships between the UK and US government. Full Article
uaw UK to Work With Huawei on 5G, Despite Security Concerns Abroad By www.pcmag.com Published On :: The choice to let Huawei access non-core parts of the country's networks could place strain on the UK's relationship with the US. But with Brexit looming, the cost of cutting Huawei out could be too great. Full Article
uaw US Rule May Allow Huawei and US Firms to Work Together on 5G Standards By gadgets.ndtv.com Published On :: Sat, 09 May 2020 10:15:16 +0530 The US Department of Commerce is close to signing off on a new rule that would allow US companies to work with China's Huawei Technologies on setting standards for next generation 5G networks, people... Full Article Telecom
uaw Huawei P30 Pro Unboxing, Camera Samples & First Impressions | Digit.in By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-04-04T21:23:41+05:30 Full Article
uaw Samsung wants to launch its own debit card…just like Apple, Google, and Huawei By phandroid.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 12:30:02 +0000 It’s starting to look like more tech companies are hopping on board the fintech bandwagon as Samsung has announced their plans to launch their own payments card. Full Article Industry News Samsung Samsung Pay
uaw Huawei Africa Spying Claims Denied By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Fri, 16 Aug 2019 16:22:30 GMT Full Article headline government china africa spyware facebook
uaw Huawei Rejects Australia Security Concerns By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Mon, 18 Jun 2018 16:07:15 GMT Full Article headline government australia china flaw cyberwar backdoor
uaw Huawei HG255 Directory Traversal By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Wed, 15 Jan 2020 17:20:10 GMT This Metasploit module exploits a directory traversal in Huawei HG255. Full Article
uaw Huawei HG630 2 Router Authentication Bypass By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Mon, 13 Apr 2020 10:11:11 GMT Huawei HG630 2 Router suffers from an authentication bypass vulnerability. Full Article
uaw US Says It Can Prove Huawei Has Backdoor Access To Mobile Phone Networks By packetstormsecurity.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Feb 2020 18:13:47 GMT Full Article headline government usa phone china cyberwar backdoor
uaw 5G: Is the U.S. easing up on Huawei? By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 09:36:27 -0400 The U.S. Department of Commerce is close to signing off on a new rule that would allow U.S. companies to work with China’s Huawei Technologies on setting standards for next generation 5G networks, people familiar with the matter said. Full Article
uaw UK government approves Huawei 5G deal despite security fears By www.newscientist.com Published On :: Tue, 28 Jan 2020 13:33:05 +0000 Chinese telecomms firm Huawei will be allowed to provide technology for key parts of the UK's super-fast 5G infrastructure, prime minister Boris Johnson has said, despite opposition from the US Full Article
uaw Exclusive: U.S. drafts rule to allow Huawei and U.S. firms to work together on 5G standards - sources By feeds.reuters.com Published On :: Fri, 08 May 2020 10:34:06 -0400 The U.S. Department of Commerce is close to signing off on a new rule that would allow U.S. companies to work with China's Huawei Technologies on setting standards for next generation 5G networks, people familiar with the matter said. Full Article technologyNews
uaw Huawei defends role in UK's 5G network and warns against U-turn after pandemic By www.standard.co.uk Published On :: 2020-04-13T13:26:15Z Chinese telecoms company Huawei has defended its role in the development of 5G in the UK and said disrupting its involvement would "do Britain a disservice". Full Article
uaw Huawei races to debut HiCar connected-car tech this year By asia.nikkei.com Published On :: Full Article