Scramblejams 5 years ago

For me, the key quote:

The United States and its allies were derelict in not developing a 5G supplier, former Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said in a speech in London in March. “With the benefit of hindsight it beggars belief that the countries which pioneered wireless technology – the United States, the UK, Germany, Japan and with wifi, Australia have got to the point where none of them are able to present to one of their own telcos a national, or a Five Eyes, champion in 5G,” he said.

I would have thought Qualcomm, Cisco, Intel and the like would have been all over 5G. Why weren't they?

  • otoburb 5 years ago

    The US doesn't have large domain players in the telecom space that supply the broad spectrum of equipment that runs what is known as the 4G EPC[1] or 5G Core[2] (data & packet processing) and RAN[3] (radio access network).

    Qualcomm and Intel focus and specialize on chips. Cisco focuses on layer 2, layer 3 and partially layer 7 equipment (think: routers & switches). Cisco has some products that compete against Huawei to a certain extent, alongside a wider product suite by Ericsson and Nokia, but all three vendors are more expensive than Huawei.

    From the article:

    "But the options are limited. Huawei is one of only three major global companies that analysts say can supply a broad range of advanced mobile network equipment at scale. The other two are Ericsson and Nokia. And Huawei has a reputation among telecom operators for supplying cost-effective equipment promptly."

    As per the article, Huwaei is flat out cheaper. On top of this, they provide good-enough products (sometimes better, sometimes not) across performance, feature, stability and scale dimensions. The telecom vendor game is often one of references and precedent, especially when dealing with large telecom groups operating in multiple countries (think: Orange Group, Deutsche Telekom Group, Telefonica Group, Vodafone Group, etc.).

    [1] https://www.3gpp.org/technologies/keywords-acronyms/100-the-...

    [2] https://www.ericsson.com/en/blog/2018/5/core-network-evoluti...

    [3] https://www.3gpp.org/specifications-groups/ran-plenary

    • fmajid 5 years ago

      According to the Chief Architect of BT, Huawei's 5G technology is so far ahead of Nokia and Ericsson they are not even contenders:

      https://www.lightreading.com/mobile/5g/bts-mcrae-huawei-is-t...

      For Europeans, they have to balance the possibility of Chinese espionage against the certainty that the US and UK are already doing it:

      * https://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/jul/02/wikileaks-us-s...

      * https://theintercept.com/2014/12/13/belgacom-hack-gchq-insid...

      In that light, Huawei equipment that the Chinese government tries to make as immune to the 5 Eyes as possible may actually be preferable.

      Granted, neither Nokia nor Ericsson are US companies or subject to direct US pressure the way, say, Lucent would have been, or Cisco is, but the US has suborned equipment makers in neutral countries before, as with Crypto AG:

      https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-33676028

      • User23 5 years ago

        On the plus side, this means there's an opportunity for the US to commit some tit for tat industrial espionage to catch up.

      • parineum 5 years ago

        >In that light, Huawei equipment that the Chinese government tries to make as immune to the 5 Eyes as possible may actually be preferable.

        Unless you're contributing to or benefitting from that 5 eyes intel.

        Our governments aren't as averse to these things as you and I are.

    • beaner 5 years ago

      Wonder if someone could elaborate on the hardware or what makes cell network hardware unique? Isn't it all just chips, boards, and cables?

      • otoburb 5 years ago

        A modern wireless operator in its most simple terms is comprised of two very different networks: a radio access network of cell sites (aka RAN), and a data and packet processing network (aka Core).

        The two types of network are not heterogenous because their layer 1 characters are completely different (electromagnetic spectrum vs. wires), which has led to vendor specialization over the years as few companies are/were able to compete across the full suite of different workload characteristics demanded by data-plane and control-plane needs.

        Huawei's strength comes in their ability to provide an end-to-end turnkey solution for both types of networks at competitive prices with hardware & software that works.

        • JTon 5 years ago

          > Huawei's strength comes in their ability to provide an end-to-end turnkey solution for both types of networks at competitive prices with hardware & software that works

          Plus an army of support engineers to help you turn-up and operate your new network.

        • likeabbas 5 years ago

          Couldn’t one argue that their strength in cost efficiency was largely built on the theft of IP? Without the IP barriers western countries abide by, they were able to take the best technology from multiple companies, implement it and sell it at a fraction of the price?

          • fmajid 5 years ago

            Not in the realm of 5G network equipment. As BT's McRae says, they are way ahead of their competitors, not something you can achieve by simply copying others' technology:

            https://www.lightreading.com/mobile/5g/bts-mcrae-huawei-is-t...

            The reality is that Huawei has been outspending its competitors in R&D by a wide margin for over two decades, because the latter are managed by bean counters in thrall to the stock market's short-term horizon. Eventually, the difference would show.

            One further wrinkle is that Chinese 5G uses frequencies like 3-4 GHz that are hogged by the military in the US. US carriers have to resort to millimeter wave frequencies in the 30+ GHz range that can't penetrate a door, let alone a building, and are thus mostly useless for 5G penetration outside a very few congested open-air locations, and thus their 5G technology is at a severe disadvantage over the Chinese one:

            https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/telecom/standards/how-am...

            Most countries not aligned with China or the West will prefer the Huawei technology: superior technology yet cheaper, and far less expensive to deploy and operate. Any country that doesn't puts itself at a competitive disadvantage over others that do. The US may yet convince its European allies to shun Huawei, but it will come at a severe cost.

            • navigatesol 5 years ago

              >The reality is that Huawei has been outspending its competitors in R&D by a wide margin for over two decades, because the latter are managed by bean counters in thrall to the stock market's short-term horizon.

              The idea that "the stock market" prevents companies from doing any long-term development is one of the most delusional, easy to disprove memes going. Public companies in America have been churning out game-changing technology forever. The Chinese are ahead on 5G, so suddenly the system is a failure?

              Going public is a capital raising mechanism, nothing more. And it's probably driven a few orders of magnitude more innovation than it's hindered. The disdain for public markets (or finance in general) on these boards is bizarre.

              • fmajid 5 years ago

                The failure is that we let Huawei out-invest us (as in Western telecoms network equipment firms, Ericsson, Nokia, Alcatel, Lucent, Nortel, Siemens) 2 to 1 in R&D for the last 20 years. That's because Ren Zhengfei is a visionary who was prescient enough to understand the value of R&D in gaining an edge while also ruthless enough to use industrial espionage in the short term to catch up.

                The current situation was completely predictable, but industrial policy has a bad name in rentier capitalist circles that dominate our policy apparatus.

            • jjeaff 5 years ago

              Just because their 5g tech is the best in no way prices they didn't steal ip to get where they are.

              I am not expert on networking equipment by any means. But I would assume that 5g equipment is built upon previous technology.

              It would thus follow that stealing the preceding, underlying technology and then focusing resources on building out the 5g part of the tech would be the fastest/cheapest way to become a leader in 5g.

            • kingosticks 5 years ago

              Is it public knowledge yet who Nokia used to fab their chip? I can tell you that's part of the reason they are late to market. They'll get there and it's not like BT isn't already trialling their prototype gear. Some of these customer statements sound like negotiating tactics.

              • fmajid 5 years ago

                5G is far more about software than RF chips.

                • kingosticks 5 years ago

                  If you don't have a next gen chipset you don't have a product to sell to the likes of BT. They are looking for a complete solution and for their investment to last years. That means you need both.

            • downrightmike 5 years ago

              If the Huawei tech operates on the same frequencies as US military tech, that is reason enough to see the embargo. It is one reason why LEO satellite internet has taken so long, because the plans typically get near some of the frequencies that old maritime GPS devices use and they can't be interrupted.

          • otoburb 5 years ago

            >>Couldn’t one argue that their strength in cost efficiency was largely built on the theft of IP?

            There are plenty of accusations that this was the case -- I'm not going to comment on the veracity of those accusations. However, if it were true, then that would certainly be a huge factor why Huawei was able to catch up and overtake other domain players within a relatively short period of time.

            In defense of Huawei, I would like to point out that Bunnie Huang[1] noticed a certain type of generically Chinese innovation leading him to coin the term "Gongkai"[2][3], the effects of which led to him cataloguing and writing a book[4]. I think the combination of this laissez-faire "flexibility" around WTO-mandated IP rights and a grueling and debilitating 996[5] work ethic helped Huawei, among other Chinese companies, to catch up with Western firms pretty quickly.

            [2] https://www.bunniestudios.com/blog/?page_id=3107

            [3] https://www.bunniestudios.com/blog/?p=4297

            [4] https://www.bunniestudios.com/blog/?p=4605

            [5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/996_working_hour_system

            • Gibbon1 5 years ago

              > I think the combination of this laissez-faire "flexibility" around WTO-mandated IP rights and a grueling and debilitating 996[5] work ethic helped Huawei, among other Chinese companies, to catch up with Western firms pretty quickly.

              This is essentially copied from the Japanese. Japanese mega-corps far as I understand very often unofficially pooled patents and technology. That became an issue as dominance was asserted in the consumer electronics market as outsiders weren't in the club. Entry into an established market meant going up against a thicket of patents owned by multiple entities.

            • throw20102010 5 years ago

              While we don't have any real evidence (from the sources that I read) that Huawei stole 5G tech, it's plausible. They've stolen tech in other areas and then iterated the design so fast that they beat the competition to market.

              We know for (nearly) certain that Huawei stole folding screen tech from Samsung (via a supplier), and now that Samsung has reneged on it's Galaxy Fold launch the Huawei folding phone will be first to market.

              Now that they have a reputation for stealing it is hard to view their other advancements as purely the result of honest work.

          • megous 5 years ago

            One could also argue that IP hampers innovation and that this is a self-inflicted wound.

            • fmajid 5 years ago

              Huawei doesn't share its IP with others, and is a very different beast to the gongkai entrepreneurs profiled by Andrew Huang.

          • freeflight 5 years ago

            Sure one could argue that, but to do that convincingly it would probably best to bring concrete evidence of what IP was supposedly stolen to facilitate the Huawei tech.

            • trepanne 5 years ago

              Huawei's theft of Cisco's IP is common knowledge, and well documented.

              https://blogs.cisco.com/news/huawei-and-ciscos-source-code-c...

              • v-yadli 5 years ago

                yeah, STRCMP.

                And I wouldn't call it "documented", unless it provides references to the official reports. The link points to a Cisco site, and what would you expect Cisco to say?

                here's a legacy archive of the relevant articles from a Chinese third-party site: http://tech.sina.com.cn/focus/cisco_huawei/

                I'm a bit surprised it is still kept intact after some 20 years. You could see trails of history -- mind the "Google it" header at the top.

                • trepanne 5 years ago

                  Ever used one of those Huawei routers? If you had, I think you'd be in little doubt about the extensive copying of IOS. Also the documentation, CLI... the entire business model was being a cheaper Cisco clone.

                  You can pull down tons of news reports and even the court filings if you are motivated, but why? Huawei themselves publicly admitted to stealing Cisco's code, the only disagreement was about the scope. I suppose we should just accept at face value their claims, when caught, that it was just a little bit, and only by accident.

                  Cisco is the only source for any part of the actual expert opinion. Huawei naturally declined Cisco's invitation to permit publishing the entire report; one can imagine how unfavorable it would be.

                  Those published excerpts are smoking guns - concrete demonstration of wholesale cutting&pasting of Cisco source code, down to whitespace and comments, outside the scope of what Huawei was willing to admit to.

                  By that time, though, Huawei had already achieved commercial success, and could afford to start cutting fewer corners & better comply with international law. So their plan worked pretty well.

                  Huawei is right up there with semiconductor mfg as a poster child for government-condoned (even government-assisted) industrial espionage as a tool to bootstrap strategic industries.

                  I'm not convinced that Huawei will backdoor their 5G gear, but I'm definitely on board with the plan to bar them from US commerce. Why play fair with opponents who cheat?

                  • v-yadli 5 years ago

                    I don’t have much experience with consumer grade Cisco routers so there’s not much I can comment on this.

                    I do use a Huawei fiber modem+router 2-in-1 day to day. The router firmware is crap and I have to do some modifications, and effectively disable the router part. The UX is more aligned with the other cheapos in the Chinese market, I think. It’s unlikely Cisco would ship something like that.

                    I’m not sure if I’d be convinced by what Cisco says, though. The author was direcltly involved in the case two decades ago btw.

                    Huawei admitted the usage of Cisco code, and promised to remove that part. Case closed. However the article is referring to other parts (strcmp and the like). We have limited neutral information, and in this case, I think, should remain in doubt.

      • vageli 5 years ago

        "Just" chips? The amount of research and development that goes into designing and fabricating chips used for wireless radio technologies is not so easily written off with a "just".

        • beaner 5 years ago

          I was hoping I could get away with an honest simple question without having to qualify all the assumptions and naïvities in it.

          • vageli 5 years ago

            I mean, aren't chips just electrons, protons and neutrons? :) More seriously, the 5g spec is a complicated and long document. Implementing 5g functionality in silicon is not a weekend project and implementations tend to be protected by NDAs and kept as trade secrets, etc. Ultimately the rationale is that development of these technologies is a complex, non-open-source, and costly endeavor. The nuances of _why_ this is the status quo are more human than technical in nature.

  • ralph84 5 years ago

    This goes back to Carly Fiorina gutting Lucent (Western Electric and Bell Labs) before she gutted HP. Quite a career to set up the decline of two of the most iconic US tech companies.

    • DEADBEEFC0FFEE 5 years ago

      Let that animosity flow to the shareholders too.

  • adventured 5 years ago

    I think there was substantial skepticism among those nations and those companies that anybody was going to beat them to the punch, specifically that China would present such a credible offering. China went from barely having any tech in 1999, to showing up for the race by 2009, to competing to lead in 5G by 2019. If you asked Intel, Cisco, Qualcomm, or the European suppliers, about that in 2005 or 2010, they would have never believed it. Simply put, I think they all believed they could take their time and that the market was theirs (resting on one's laurels). They underestimated China's determination. We'll see if they keep making that mistake.

    • DEADBEEFC0FFEE 5 years ago

      Absolutely right. Look at the profits if the incumbents over the last 20 years. Look at the huge number of vulnerabilities for Cisco alone and in many cases the ridiculousness of them (passwords, keys, backdoors). They largely became a licensing, consulting and training company.

    • fmajid 5 years ago

      There was no doubt. Even 20 years ago when I worked for France Telecom it was clear Huawei was going to eat Western telecom equipment manufacturers' lunch. They were outspending them 2:1.

  • gok 5 years ago

    Qualcomm, Cisco and Intel left the base station business a long time ago or were never in it. Samsung, Ericsson, Nokia all have 5G equipment, some of it semi-widely deployed already. None of the countries he mentioned had any 4G business to speak of either.

  • femto 5 years ago

    And is the Huawei ban also about giving the competition a chance to catch up?

craigsmansion 5 years ago

Looks like the new cold war has found its money-pit. At least it's not nuclear this time.

> agents of the Australian Signals Directorate, the nation’s top-secret eavesdropping agency

Straight from the geniuses that outlawed mathematics.

I'm sure not all of the "cyber security" people are complete idiots, but how many can resist an offer of unlimited funding, and all you have to do say things are terrible and very scary without ever being caught out, since it's all about national security, and your boss doesn't really care because more bad things mean infinite budget.

"Cyber" really has stopped being a useful word in as far as it's ever been one, and has been relegated to politics, scaring the population, and fleecing people and institutions in the name of "security".

1.) 5G is a mobile network that lets people watch really high- resolution cat videos really fast.

2.) Your country is not under "cyber attack" or "cyber threat".

History tells us most of the threats and developments in Cold War I were posturing and positioning. Of course Blackbird planes are really cool, but do we really have to go through the rest of all that bullshit again? Can't we all just, you know, grow the f* up?

  • jarfil 5 years ago

    In practice, 5G is less about speed and more about massive IoT deployments, which could lead to massive surveillance. It's no surprise that those in the surveillance business are wary of foreign actors.

  • eaim 5 years ago

    Good commentary, well & clearly stated!

thommark 5 years ago

I'm from Netherlands, and My country recently found some backdoors in Huawei equipments. This might be why the US/EU is actively blocking Huawei:

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-netherlands-huawei-tech/d...

  • takamh 5 years ago

    "Citing unidentified intelligence sources"

    An option would be to confidentially share with UK or German intelligence agencies and verify, but they chose instead to publish a vague article. Seems doubtful this will result in anything concrete.

    • eaim 5 years ago

      All is vagueness. It’s popular! Why bother with evidence when agencies / governments / media can simply make vague statements about threats & security? Oh & of course we can’t supply evidence because that would threaten our security also. Circulus In probando

      • thommark 5 years ago

        I wouldn't call it vagueness, investigation takes time. Plus, our largest telecom, KPN, already announced they were not going to use Huawei in core-5G - the first EU telecom to do so, last month. I am sure the intelligence report had something to do with it.

        https://www.reuters.com/article/us-kpn-huawei-5g/dutch-telec...

        • takamh 5 years ago

          What is the technical definition of core-5G? A lot of these announcements are filled with political double-speak.

          • eaim 5 years ago

            Yes they certainly are.

        • eaim 5 years ago

          “Investigation takes time” They have been “investigating” for a decade. It’s simply spy vs spy & that's it. If that sounds skeptical, fine. Nothing wrong with with skepticism. It’s healthy.

    • likeabbas 5 years ago

      Reuters has proven to be a trustworthy news organization. It’s understandable that Intelligence services don’t want to go on the record for having an ongoing investigation into a Chinese telecom

      • eaim 5 years ago

        Their reputation notwithstanding, it makes little difference if all they are doing is taking notes or passing along statements, rather than digging & getting answers. That’s the forgotten duty of true reportage & journalism.

        They don’t get a free pass as a “trustworthy news organisation” just because what they report isn’t wrong, if they also aren’t reporting anything useful.

ETHisso2017 5 years ago

If this is a war, then did Google, Broadcom, Microsoft, the rest of the US tech sector, and the worldwide Android community just get forcibly conscripted into service by the US government?

  • throw20102010 5 years ago

    Every American company is at the beck and call of the US government at all times, with their existence in peril if they disobey. The US government has been regulating trade like this since before we were born, and most of the time we don't even notice. This is not the first time that Silicon Valley had to obey US government regulations. Notice that there are hardly any Iranian or North Korean tech companies doing business around the world- any US company that transfers technology to a hostile country gets shut down and people go to jail, and it's not even controversial.

    The only thing that's unique with this case is that it's rare for the US government to be so openly hostile toward a major trade partner.

    • ETHisso2017 5 years ago

      So why does the US government accuse Huawei of being a risk for being at the beck and call of the Chinese government?

      • lwf 5 years ago

        The lever here is export control, e.g. "you can't export this tech to these people, countries, vendors" etc, rather than a request to perform some affirmative action at the behest of a government. ( a "writ", if you will; c.f. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_Writs_Act#Application_to_e... )

        So the USG can tell a company "you cannot transfer this controlled material to these people, 'cause NatSec", but (probably) can't compel a company "build a tool for us that does X".

      • throw20102010 5 years ago

        Not doing something about national security because the US might look hypocritical is not a concern to those making the decision. Countries spy on each other while complaining about the other spies. The US tried to stop North Korea from getting nukes while holding the world’s largest stockpile of nukes. The US has put multiple countries on blast for human rights violations while also being allies with Saudi Arabia.

        The fact that Google and affiliates are being used in a similar manner that we’re accusing Huawei probably makes the people in charge laugh even harder.

        The real question should be that if Chinese government policy creates a security risk for the US, why are they only going after Huawei? Why not a blanket ban on all sophisticated Chinese electronics? Lenovo has been caught before putting spyware on computers, but somehow the US government still buys Lenovo laptops...

  • lern_too_spel 5 years ago

    Huawei can still use Android. They just can't install Google apps on their devices, like Amazon.

  • jostmey 5 years ago

    Corporations are people too! So yes, I guess they can be consrcipted

  • geowwy 5 years ago

    Those companies have been actively cooperating with US intelligence since forever. No news here really.

  • sonnyblarney 5 years ago

    The 'trade war' has been going on for 30 years, we just didn't care that China was doing certain things until it hit home.

    It was arguably beneficial to not worry about China's IP issues, foreign ownership, capital controls etc. in the 1990's because a growing China was good for everyone.

    Now it's not, so there's a realignment.

    There's cynicism here, but both issues are perfectly credible: trade/technology and security.

    There are a ton of externalizations that enable China to provide, especially 'services' so cheaply. Those externalizations matter in trade, and probably should be capture in some form of tariff.

    i.e. it's not actually 'cheaper' for Sweden to buy stuff from China, if all things otherwise equal the only difference is the manufacturer in China doesn't have to pay for carbon taxes or something like that. It's just moving deck chairs around.

  • cfarm 5 years ago

    More like governments are at "war" and all the big corporations caught in the middle of trade are the "weapons".

chrischen 5 years ago

Has it occurred that the US opposition to using telecom equipment from Huawei might be because they can't send them a national security letter or otherwise force them to make a backdoor (kind of like how Apple resisted) for domestic spying?

I feel like if China were to backdoor 5G equipment deployed to the US it'd be relatively trivial to detect by operators, and absolutely crippling to the market share of Huawei if they were found to compromise their equipment.

  • geowwy 5 years ago

    I think it's partly that, and partly just that having other countries rely on you for their infrastructure gives you more political leverage. US wants to deny political leverage to China and take it for itself.

    • chrischen 5 years ago

      The world would be a better place if people just came out straight to the point like that.

dirkg 5 years ago

Hypocrisy and arrogance at its finest - its ok for us to engage in illegal spying but not other countries. US leads the world in illegal activities and spying/stealing from foreign nations.

  • TomVDB 5 years ago

    > US leads the world in illegal activities and spying/stealing from foreign nations.

    That's one of those empty, non-falsifiable statements that don't do anything to further a discussion. Spying and illegal activities are by definition supposed to be secret.

    But it also doesn't matter. Because...

    > Hypocrisy and arrogance at its finest

    ... as a matter of general principle: it's in the best interest of a country to know what other countries are doing and to protect its own assets. There is no contradiction in doing both at the same time.

    If a country suspects that one of the cornerstones of its communication infrastructure is at risk of being infiltrated by a foreign power, it makes sense to take steps to avoid that.

    I'll leave it to others to judge whether or not that principle applies to the Huawei case.

  • adventured 5 years ago

    It's not hypocrisy or arrogance in any regard.

    The US does not view China as an ally, it's a competitor that the US sometimes cooperates with economically.

    The US and its allies are saying they prefer to keep the spying inside their own allied domain. That's not only entirely rational, it obviously makes perfect sense from a national self-interest standpoint.

    As an American, if I get to choose, I'm buying my 5G tech from European or Asian allies. I'll happily pay more for it.

    The US isn't saying China can't spy, it's universally understood that China is spying and will keep trying to, just as the US will. The US is basically openly saying it's going to attempt to counter or limit that spying, because China is a global rival in all regards. Just as China will always attempt to limit the ability of the US to spy on China and its interests. The same goes for Russia and its spying, going all the way back to the early days of the USSR.

    • cfarm 5 years ago

      China can distribute its goods to the world, but the world cannot distribute its goods to it. I think this is part of the issue. i.e. Huawei can sell its tech to the US, but Google/Amazon/FB is more or less blocked in China. Countries obviously understand that they all spy on each other, maybe this is US' way of making sure tactics are "fair"?

  • zwaps 5 years ago

    The whataboutism quickly falls apart. Yes, the US does bad things, but it is the devil we know very well by now.

    Indeed the US is a largely free society. I travel there often without issues.

    China, on the other hand, would probably throw me into a concentration camp the minute I arrive.

    For me, personally, and my family, and almost everyone I know, Chinas authocratic imperialism is much less desireable than the economic imperialism of the US.

    I am literally scared of China gaining power in the world. I certainly have distaste for many things the US has done as well, but not to that degree.

    In the end, every country should be free to decide where they stand. There are certainly countries who view the divide between US and China differently, but I think that is merely because they are not yet involved with China.

femto 5 years ago

This strikes me as a brilliant opportunity to push for a complete Free Software stack for a phone.

There will soon be a heap of 5G phone hardware going cheap. Software support will be lacking. The hardware manufacturer may well be open to publicly releasing the information independent third party developers will require to write software for their otherwise useless phones. If you're reading this Huawei, why not dump all the required information on your web site right now?

  • 0815test 5 years ago

    Huawei is not known as an open company, if anything they're the very opposite. They stopped providing unlock ability for their mobile devices some time back, and even before that they were known for having by far the hardest system to work with for phone "modders" - bricked hardware was exceedingly common, and zero outside support was provided. That's incredibly harsh even by CN standards.

    • mycall 5 years ago

      My Nexus 6P was made by Huawei and was very unlockable. Did I know if Huawei had a backdoor in the radio bin? idk.

    • femto 5 years ago

      And now it will be possible to get one's hands on truckloads of potential bricks for almost nothing. If the community makes enough bricks it will eventually learn how not to make bricks. Those lessons can then be applied to other phones with similar architectures.

sunstone 5 years ago

Hey China has worked to exclude or minimize US tech companies from China so turn about is fair play. In fact the US would be well within their (tit for tat) rights to exclude a few more Chinese tech companies.

  • m-p-3 5 years ago

    Looks like China is getting a taste of its own protectionist measures.

Leary 5 years ago

I hope the US and Europe can advance 5G so that it does not need to rely on Huawei. If there are true security threats, it's fine to not use Huawei, but we shouldn't use excessive export bans that damage American chip manufacturers and normal consumers who are just using their cell phones.

luka-birsa 5 years ago

Can somebody TLDR; why 5G is so much more dangerous (security wise) vs 4G?

Plus I do like the two-facedness - nobody should spy unless it's us.

  • holy_city 5 years ago

    It's not more dangerous, it's that the existing infrastructure is not (as) compromised as new infrastructure to be built with Huawei goods.

    It should be self evident that turning over domestic communications infrastructure to a global rival with the largest military on the planet, nuclear first strike capability, a history of violence, newly minted dictator, and global ambitions is a terrible idea.

    Also, the US government isn't stealing US IP and giving it to Chinese businesses. The PLA is, and their ties to Huawei run deep.

    • freeflight 5 years ago

      > Also, the US government isn't stealing US IP and giving it to Chinese businesses. The PLA is, and their ties to Huawei run deep.

      No, it's stealing "allies" IP and giving it to US businesses [0] while subsidizing Intel to the tune of billions [1].

      Still, nobody writes headlines along the lines of "State-sponsored Intel processors come with ME backdoor for government spying." instead we get, super trustworthy, articles how the NSA totally helped with disabling the backdoor [2], because a sucker is born every minute.

      The absurdity of it all is immense, yet still seems to elude most US Americans.

      [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECHELON#Examples_of_industrial...

      [1] https://subsidytracker.goodjobsfirst.org/parent/intel

      [2] https://www.csoonline.com/article/3220476/researchers-say-no...

      • holy_city 5 years ago

        >while subsidizing Intel to the tune of billions

        According to your source the US government is subsidizing Intel to the tune of $228,154,638, $141mm of which are loans. The lions share of those billions are incentives from Oregon and New Mexico to keep Intel manufacturing in their states.

        >The absurdity of it all is immense, yet still seems to elude most US Americans.

        What seems absurd in my opinion, is the idea it's a bad idea to prevent an unfriendly foreign power from gaining more access to your communication infrastructure. That's not hypocritical, it's pragmatic national security policy...

      • eaim 5 years ago

        Well said!

    • zaro 5 years ago

      > the largest military on the planet, nuclear first strike capability, a history of violence, newly minted dictator,

      When you say it like that it's not quite clear whether you are referring to China or the US.

      • jimclegg 5 years ago

        This part, "history of violence", makes it clear we talk of the US.

      • Barrin92 5 years ago

        and also funnily enough everyone else in the world, no matter how adversely positioned to the United States, still uses US goods. Is everyone in china throwing their iphone away or stopped watching hollywood movies because the US is "the enemy"? No, of course not.

        I don't know if there's a name for this but I'd call it "top dog syndrome", this is possibly the first time the US witnesses another player rising up to status and they don't seem to take it well.

      • eaim 5 years ago

        Precisely!

  • mzkply 5 years ago

    Doesn't seem more dangerous due to the tech but due to the fact that no one from Western countries has actually built hardware that we can buy.

    • nixpulvis 5 years ago

      Well ignoring security for a minute, I have issues with anything that makes it easier for telecoms to charge for and provide different tiers of service for limited parts of the internet (net neutrality), and as I see it, pushing services towards the edge can't possibly work without some degree of opt in. Then there becomes a fundamental issue with the telecoms wanting things hosted on their nodes for performance, and small scale sites being to little to for the telecoms to care.

      This is all still very speculative, but there isn't a telecom out there I'd trust to run my servers.

      I agree we could use nice ways to serve content more locally, and there's already some solutions here, but I'm struggling to see how it works as part of a cell network protocol without redefining a lot of how we expect the internet to work.

  • eaim 5 years ago

    Haha! “Nobody can spy unless it’s us.” Touché! (Best uttered while spying on the world through a prism.)

  • 123tqtqetrqgasd 5 years ago

    Many reasons, you name it:

    - Almost any existent device will likely be connected to the Internet through 5G almost as fast as it became available

    - Access probably will be a LOT cheaper than 4G, will get there a lot faster (months not years), so everybody will be onboard ASAP

    - 5G network could easily replace many fiber optic deployments currently used by telecommunication companies big clients (so if you breach the 5G infrastructure, you're reaching internal networks in banks, trust funds, government sensitive information offices, whatever fancy dangerous stuff not suitable for public access)

    - 5G is REALLY FAST and RELIABLE, (very hight bandwith plus very, very low latency), so if you hack into something, or if you deploy malware, it will spread faster than the Thanos snap. The data exfiltration - taking your stolen data out to your infrastructure - could take a LOT less than now, this probably means the bad guys could hack out a lot more data than now, also probably using a "raw" approach: if you get in, just transfer everything you can access, right now

    - The massive (freaking massive) traffic you're going to see into the network monitoring infrastructure will probably be very similar to what Five Eyes currently sees for entire countries, but in city per city base (NY, Boston, DC, Berlin, Barcelona, etc.), so initially very few players will be able to get out something meaningful from the monitoring stuff, but what devices failed: more bad guys oportunities.

    Finally.

    - Whoever makes the hardware has the upper hand, you - whoever you are - go behind them, in almost any security scenario.

    So yeah, we need to have this stuff under some serious control.

    Trump is almost certainly right in his attemp to make what he's doing.

    • nixpulvis 5 years ago

      So it's fast, and therefore bad things happen faster? Bullshit.

      Also I want to say that wireless communication will never be technically superior to something shielded in some way, and if you can afford it, and you don't need to move around, it will always be a better choice. The fact some ISPs can compete with cable using wireless modems is more a statement about wire ownership laws than anything else.

    • TomVDB 5 years ago

      What is it that makes 5G cheaper than 4G?

      In the past, faster almost always mean a denser network of costly towers. Is that different for 5G?

      • otoburb 5 years ago

        There are two ways to answer that question:

        1) In order to stimulate (or meet, depending on which side of the supply-demand equation you represent) demand for 5G, wireless operators will most likely need to increase data caps (e.g. Canada) and keep the same prices, because 5G speeds are much faster than 4G. This means that "wireless access" denominated in "$/MB" will likely drop.

        2) 5G equipment is not necessarily cheaper than 4G. Depending on the spectrum bands used, 5G may in fact be more expensive. A recent April 2019 Wapo article[1] kind of speaks to some of the issues with the US settling on 24-300Ghz vs. rest of the world settling on sub-6Ghz bands. But the answer from a wireless operator point of view is that 5G is probably much more expensive than 4G, not less.

        [1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/global-opinions/on-5...

themark 5 years ago

"The chance of a vulnerability with a Huawei piece of kit is much higher than other vendors,"

Is this British slang or a typo ?

assblaster 5 years ago

I truly am worried that Huawei technology is compromised. Why? I owned a Nexus 6p, made by Huawei, which was found to have a suspicious hardware "bug" where the battery's level is measured as higher than what is reported by the device itself.

Huawei maintains that it is not a hardware issue, while Google says that it is a hardware problem. A class action lawsuit was just settled because of this.

My suspicion: Huawei surreptitiously collected data, using up CPU threads, and core Android software did not detect this hardware usage.

I know many many owners of the Nexus 6p that had this problem, and it was only this Nexus which had it, the only one made by Huawei.

  • Topgamer7 5 years ago

    Didn't know there was a class action. Mine used to die randomly all the time until I replaced the battery. I'm contemplating getting a new phone because a good portion of the time it's still slow AF

  • chenster 5 years ago

    Got creditable source?