Huawei Commits To Bringing Its Products To the US Despite Government Security Concerns (phonedog.com) 40
Within the last few months, AT&T and Verizon have reportedly decided not to sell Huawei's flagship smartphone due to pressure from the U.S. government, with Best Buy opting to stop offering all Huawei products. Despite all of this, though, the company isn't giving up its U.S. ambitions. PhoneDog reports: Richard Yu, CEO of Huawei's consumer business group, says that Huawei will continue working to establish itself in the U.S. and earn consumers' trust. Yu's statement to CNET: "We are committed to the U.S. market and to earning the trust of U.S. consumers by staying focused on delivering world-class products and innovation. We would never compromise that trust." Yu went on to say that the security concerns that the U.S. government has about Huawei are "based on groundless suspicions and are quite frankly unfair." He added that Huawei is open having a discussion with the heads of the CIA, FBI, and NSA so long as it is based on facts.
Only the US (Score:1)
Gets to spy on all your communications.
Re: Only the US (Score:1)
I'd rather be spied on foreignly than domestic any day.
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Re: Only the US (Score:1)
Agreed. Foreign won't prosecute my curiosity and thought crimes, but domestic might.
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A Country That Doesn't Trust Its Own Citizens... (Score:3)
Re:A Country That Doesn't Trust Its Own Citizens.. (Score:5, Insightful)
A country that Doesn't Trust its own Citizens..
Are you talking about the US or China here?
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the US and many other governments have proven repeatedly that they do EXACTLY what you are now worried that the Chinese government "might" do.
And the reason you know about it is because we live in the US and not China.
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Are you kidding, your joking, you absolutely must, perhaps you don't recognise your own satire. Free journalism, that must be the kind where the journalism is not paid for by advertising dollars, that control that journalism. Even the most honest journalism is driven by charity and the need to serve those willing to fund that charity because of the protections it provides by trying to tell the truth.
US corporate journalism free, who is kidding who, it is bought and paid for corporate propaganda and complet
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an OPEN DOOR policy where you can walk the fuck out if you can't accept things the way they are.
Don't spy on me! (Score:2)
Unless you want to sell my information for marketing research and advertisement, then that's OK. (apparently)
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Their first step should be a requirement to have an American company be their partner in order to do business here. This includes manufacturing the product here as well.
What domestic brand even makes their phone here? They can just have a US subsidiary based here and they'd really be no different from Apple or Samsung.
It doesn't matter if you trust Huawei (Score:3)
As long as the people who run the company are subject to the laws of China, they will do what the government of China tells them to. This includes updates that spy on users, and lying about it.
And the government of China cannot be trusted.
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>And the government of China cannot be trusted.
Does it really matter that China's government can't be trusted, if our own is in that same basket of deplorables?
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>And the government of China cannot be trusted.
Does it really matter that China's government can't be trusted, if our own is in that same basket of deplorables?
Yes, because it all comes down to where you live and whether you mind them spying on you.
I don't work on anything sensitive, so I'd rather the Chinese spy on me than my own agencies.
Let's just hope that this isn't a setup for Huawei to sign spying agreements with our agencies.
Huawei is Ericsson's Nemesis (Score:2)