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Huawei's Ace In the Hole: Undersea Cables (nikkei.com) 107

While the United States is banning the use of Huawei equipment from its fifth-generation infrastructure, the Chinese telecommunications company is working to expand its share in the undersea cable market, which is dominated by the U.S., Europe and Japan. Nikkei Asian Review reports: About a decade ago, Huawei entered the business by setting up a joint venture with British company Global Marine Systems. It expanded its presence by laying short links in regions like Southeast Asia and the Russian Far East. But last September, Huawei surprised industry executives in Japan, the U.S. and Europe by completing a 6,000 km trans-Atlantic cable linking Brazil with Cameroon. This showed Huawei has acquired advanced capabilities, even though it is still far behind the established players in terms of experience and cable volume.

During the 2015-2020 period, Huawei is expected to complete 20 new cables -- mostly short ones of less than 1,000 km. Even when these are finished, Huawei's market share will be less than 10%. Over the long term, however, the company could emerge as a player to be reckoned with. Huawei is estimated to be involved in around 30 undersea cable projects at the moment. It also reportedly has a hand in about 60 projects to enhance cable landing stations to boost transmission capacity. The reality is, even if the U.S. succeeds in shutting out Huawei from 5G networks in major countries, the Chinese company could still thwart American efforts to maintain leadership in handling global data traffic.
The report goes on to say that the U.S., Japan and Australia are working to address this potential threat. "Steps they are considering include banning Huawei from laying cables connected to one of the three countries, and urging other governments to prevent the company from getting involved in the construction of any major cables Informed sources."
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Huawei's Ace In the Hole: Undersea Cables

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  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @06:49PM (#58669152)

    It seems to me like a provider sending stuff over long haul networks is much less of a potential security risk than letting Huawei provide equipment to run cellular traffic.

    Traffic from cellular phones has all kinds of fun data you could capture and store and forward on to China for later use in blackmail. Long haul hardware would have to be able to decrypt http or other networking traffic to reveal much of use.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Long haul hardware would have to be able to decrypt http or other networking traffic to reveal much of use.

      If the long haul network is to/from China, the Chinese government is going to snoop it anyway, so it's a moot point.

      As for Brazil-Cameroon: the Chinese have probably already infiltrated most African countries, so again it's moot.

      * https://www.cfr.org/blog/african-union-bugged-china-cyber-espionage-evidence-strategic-shifts

    • by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @09:57PM (#58669904)

      When an NSA submarine taps a Huawei cable people will know. When it taps a Google or AT&T cable it is using prebuilt backdoors and people wont know that the cable is being tapped. Huawei laying cables makes it more difficult for the NSA to spy. Thats the problem.

      • by JP205 ( 263673 )
        I don't think the NSA needs a submarine to tap cables at Google or AT&T.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Tapping undersea cables shouldn't really matter. You can't trust anything on the internet, which is why you encrypt everything and validate everything. Assume every wire between you and the destination is untrustworthy, because it is.

    • What kind of nut believes that we have a right to dictate other nations and disallow them to do the same things that we do? The limitations on nations building rockets and nuclear weapons falls into the same pit. Does one nation have more rights than any other nation? With this sort of nonsense how can we wonder just why we are in so many wars/
    • Long haul hardware would have to be able to decrypt http or other networking traffic to reveal much of use.

      It wouldn't have to decrypt anything, they could just read the tracking headers of Verizon et al.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I think that's a potential win.

  • Pathetic (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    the U.S., Japan and Australia are working to address this potential threat. "Steps they are considering include banning Huawei from laying cables connected to one of the three countries, and urging other governments to prevent the company from getting involved in the construction of any major cables

    What's the fear here again? That they'll switch the cable off in a time of war? As opposed to just blowing the fucking thing up?
    I despise my government so much it hurts.

  • by ShieldW0lf ( 601553 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @07:36PM (#58669376) Journal

    This entire article operates under the assumption that Huawei are not motivated by profit, and that they are actually motivated by espionage, for which I have seen no actual evidence.

    As a private citizen, I consider companies like Google and Facebook be far greater threats to my well being than Huawei.

    • by waspleg ( 316038 )

      The CEO of Huawei is a PLA General. There is no separation between "corporations" and gov't in China. You don't have to look hard, this information is everywhere.

      try this [youtube.com]

  • what's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by 0111 1110 ( 518466 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @07:48PM (#58669434)

    So the idea is it's easier for the Chinese to tap into an undersea cable if they are the ones laying it and even if they are doing it with UK partners? If they wanted to tap an undersea data cable surely they have the ability to do that whether a Chinese company lays the cable or not. And are we trusting that the US and UK are not tapping the cables? Really? Personally I find the US a lot more scary than China. I'd be more concerned with the NSA tapping an undersea cable, but of course there is nothing I can do about it.

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @09:20PM (#58669738) Journal
      Encrypt your data. You might not remember that the purpose of "Let's Encrypt" was to prevent China and Huawei from spying.

      Oh right, you don't remember it because the purpose of "Let's Encrypt" was to prevent the US government from spying. Whoops.
    • Of course there *is* something you can do about it. It's called encryption
      • Yes but that is not really what I meant. I mean I can't do anything about countries tapping into undersea data lines. Probably most countries do that. I'd be very surprised if the US didn't do it and I am more worried about the US government having my data than China. What is the Chinese government going to do with my data? Nothing that I care about. The US government is a different story though. If I encrypt it is to prevent them from eavesdropping.

  • I'm genuinely a bit puzzled about how the controversy with Huawei has come about.

    As far as I can see there is a suspicion that the Chinese government may be using companies like Huawei to spy, but no published specifics. The Chinese laws requiring companies to provide information to the government when warranted, but such laws don't seem unique to China, although they would vary in extent between countries.

    The claim by China that the action is politically motivated would be more convincing if it was just th

    • by CanadianMacFan ( 1900244 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @10:22PM (#58669998)

      The other countries showing concerns have only started showing concerns after the US started putting pressure on them to show concerns. The other day Trump came out and tweeted that the Huawei situation could be taken care of as part of the trade negotiations. If there were really security issues then they wouldn't be able to be dealt with through talks. The US President is using "National Security" to put a stop to free competition.

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday May 28, 2019 @09:16PM (#58669728) Journal
    From the summary:

    "which is dominated by the U.S., Europe and Japan.....Even when [their new cables] are finished, Huawei's market share will be less than 10%"

    Ah yes, the well known, terrifying "Ten Percent Monopoly" that no one has ever heard of.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      From the summary:

      "which is dominated by the U.S., Europe and Japan.....Even when [their new cables] are finished, Huawei's market share will be less than 10%"

      Ah yes, the well known, terrifying "Ten Percent Monopoly" that no one has ever heard of.

      Methinks they are running out of substance to pain Huawei as that evil monster they want us to believe.

      No matter how manipulative TFA is, it's effectively boring.

  • Make mobile phones? It's a threat. Build communications networks? It's a threat. Lay down fiber optic networks to connect continents? It's a threat. And all threats need to be addressed.

    But when America does it, it's for peace, democracy, and science. Even when they commit war crimes. Funny how media and racist shit-holes like /. spin these things.

  • Can you imagine the horror that would result if the internet connected people together from different countries?!
  • American companies, Chinese companies...
    Profit, Political gain...
    Different coins, same currency.

    What I can't believe is how may people area actually supporting Huawei.
    They are no better than say facebook or google. In fact, they ARE worse IMNSHO.
    Why? Because the Chinese government IS a murderous totalitarian government (let alone "communist") that DIRECTLY controls Chines companies.
    NSA can get access into Google, Microsoft, Facebook, etc, but they can be stopped by other branches of government; in China THE

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