Huawei Ban

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by dealmaker, May 15, 2019.

  1. bone

    bone

    You need to understand that entire industry sectors in China are owned and subsidized by a totalitarian Communist government. There are truly legitimate grounds for national security concerns.

    Huawei is notorious for back dooring spyware - most notably anything that can be communicated with.

    Read this:

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/feat...ny-chip-to-infiltrate-america-s-top-companies
     
    #11     May 16, 2019
    dealmaker and dozu888 like this.
  2. dozu888

    dozu888

    I have deep ties in China and do know how they operate :)
     
    #12     May 16, 2019
    bone likes this.
  3. ironchef

    ironchef

    888 lucky #:thumbsup:
     
    #13     May 16, 2019
    dozu888 likes this.
  4. U.S. Accuses Huawei Defense Lawyer of Conflict of Interest. The Lawyer, James Coles , was the number 2 official in Department of Justice from 2011-15.

    It is an interesting development. What does he know as a former #2 in DOJ? What this news say about the information/evidence that DOJ might have uncovered from the investigation into Huawei?


    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ole-should-be-disqualified-from-case-u-s-says

    As deputy attorney general, James Cole personally supervised and participated in aspects of an investigation (presumably into Huawei) related to that caused the conflicts, the prosecutors said in the filing.

    https://www.timesheraldnews.com/wor...justice-department-poses-conflicts-oavdwd6zq0
     
    Last edited: May 19, 2019
    #14     May 19, 2019
    dealmaker likes this.
  5. kashirin

    kashirin

    the thing is american software and hardware have backdoors
    and US agencies spy everybody including US president

    now if i'm US company - is it better for me to be spied by US government or China government?
    what about ordinary person?
    as a person I would say Chinese spying is safer for me
     
    #15     May 19, 2019
    AKUMATOTENSHI likes this.
  6. userque

    userque

    It depends.

    It depends.

    The answers depend upon, generally:
    • your (and your loved ones) current location (home, abroad)
    • current political relationship between the countries.
    • your resources (currency, contacts, etc.)
    • what you're worth to either country
    • what you're up to, (profitable activities, criminal activities, etc.); and,
    • whether you (and your loved ones) plan on traveling to that foreign country.
     
    #16     May 20, 2019
  7. dealmaker

    dealmaker

    Google and Huawei

    In line with President Trump's executive order blacklisting Huawei, Google has suspended the Chinese company's access to Android updates. This is a disaster for Huawei, whose Android handsets have made it the second-biggest phone manufacturer in the world, and for existing users of those phones, who may find them getting fewer updates in future (though the Play Store and its malware-scanning functions will continue to work). U.S. chipmakers such as Qualcomm and Intel have also cut Huawei off, as has Germany's Infineon—knocking the share prices of various European chipmakers. Guardian
     
    #17     May 20, 2019
  8. ironchef

    ironchef

    I would think twice if I were you, China executed more people than the rest of the world combined.
     
    #18     May 20, 2019


  9. The flip side of the coin is that the incarceration rate in US is the highest in the world, even higher than Cuba, and four times as high as those in Canada and China.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_incarceration_rate
     
    #19     May 20, 2019
  10. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    This just stinks of market manipulation:

    https://finance.yahoo.com/news/us-e...on-chinas-huawei-morning-brief-101208528.html

    U.S. eases some restrictions on China's Huawei: Morning Brief

    U.S. eases some restrictions on China's Huawei to keep networks operating: The United States has temporarily eased trade restrictions on China's Huawei to minimize disruption for its customers, a move the founder of the world's largest telecoms equipment maker said meant little because it was already prepared for U.S. action. [Reuters]
     
    #20     May 21, 2019
    curiousGeorge8 likes this.