It's no secret that the U.S. doesn't want Huawei or Drunken Woman Pickup Sexany other Chinese tech company selling its networking equipment in America. Now it's taking that cause beyond its borders.
The U.S. government is actively pressuring allies and telecom companies in those countries to stop them from using networking equipment from Huawei and other China-based tech companies, the Wall Street Journalis reporting. The U.S. is specifically pointing to supposed vulnerabilities inherent to 5G, the report said, in order to dissuade Huawei's partners.
One unnamed U.S. official in the report cited "additional complexities to 5G networks that make them more vulnerable to cyberattacks." In the briefings between the U.S. and its allies, a key talking point is that individual 5G cell towers will take on more "core" functions with regard to voice and data traffic, which isn't the case with current (4G LTE and older) equipment, according to the report.
The implication: An attacker would theoretically have an easier time hacking a 5G network over older networks.
SEE ALSO: Crypto exchange Coinbase is now valued at $8 billion after a big funding boostThat's not necessarily correct, however. Tim Bajarin, lead analyst for Creative Strategies says, "There is serious security built into the 5G spec and Intel and [Qualcomm] are expected to add additional sedulity to their radio's (sic) and processors. This should make it harder, not easier [to hack a 5G network]."
All of this is centered around the ongoing U.S. effort to keep Chinese-made equipment out of networks worldwide, ostensibly to reduce the risk of cyber-espionage. Huawei is the world's No. 2 manufacturer of cellphones (after Samsung) and is the No. 1 supplier of networking equipment, according to data from Dell'Oro, a research firm that analyzes telecom infrastructure.
In response to a query from Mashable, a Huawei spokesperson said, "Huawei is surprised by the behaviors of the U.S. government detailed in the article. If a government's behavior extends beyond its jurisdiction, such activity should not be encouraged."
The pushback against Huawei et al. has been intense in the last year, but it predates the Trump administration: a U.S. congressional report from 2012 stated that Huawei was a threat to national security. The chief concern is that, because it's based on China, Huawei could be compelled by the Chinese government to compromise its own hardware or software to serve Chinese intelligence directives.
If such a thing happened, it would severely compromise a company's integrity — probably to the point where it could never do business again — which is why the scenario seems unlikely. However, just such a scenario appeared to have actually happened when earlier this year Bloombergreported a so-called hardware hack: a server supplier was compelled by the Chinese armed forces to insert a tiny chip into its hardware that would allow covert access.
That report has since been credibly called into question, but the fear remains — fear that the U.S. is more than happy to take advantage of. What the Journalreport makes clear is the U.S. is even willing to undermine the integrity of 5G technology in order to sow doubt about Chinese tech companies and reduce their role in supplying equipment worldwide.
The question, however, is: Where does the concern for cybersecurity end and American protectionism begin? It's not like the U.S. and its allies don't have a dog in the 5G fight; what's bad for Chinese companies like Huawei and ZTE is generally good for Western companies like Ericsson and Nokia.
The questionable Bloombergstory notwithstanding, there's also been virtually no evidence that Huawei or any other Chinese firm has been compromised in the way the U.S. government suggests. All of this is based on potentials: IfHuawei supplies equipment, and ifthat equipment is compromised, then we're in big trouble. The conclusion: You should probably go with someone else, just in case.
Given China's record on human rights and its stated goals of being a world leader in developing emerging technologies like 5G and AI, there is comfort in subscribing to that position. However, without evidence, it's not hard to see this logic extended to any company based in a country that isn't a U.S. ally. It's possible that right call doesn't necessarily align with the most fair call.
In any case, the security of 5G networks is something that everyone has a stake in. If the U.S. wants to take the position that they're inherently less secure than older networks, that's not a comfortable place to be either.
Topics 5G Cybersecurity Huawei
Scramble to download VPN apps as they vanished from Apple's China App StoreForget fake news. Facebook needs to do something about fake adsForget fake news. Facebook needs to do something about fake adsA tale of two tacos: Does Chipotle's comeback plan involve becoming more like Taco Bell?9 of the most heartAl Gore is back in theaters, and this time, Trump is the villain'Game of Thrones': What the creepy Bran/Sansa reunion meansNo, Theresa May and her cabinet didn't pose in front of 'The Scream'Daredevils pulled off a crazy heist, stole iPhones from a moving truckWill.i.am's i.am+ fashion tech company buys Wink smart home platformThis girl loves KHow to watch the Tesla Model 3 event live tonightControversial 'House Party' sex game removed from Steam for being too steamy'Wonder Woman' wants to shatter another glass ceiling: The OscarsTesla Model 3: Everything you need to knowThe tiny detail in the 'Game of Thrones' Ep 4 trailer you may have missedMcDonald's is turning cup holders into boomboxes for your phoneEvery Tesla Model 3 review you need to see to know if this car is the futureEverything you should know about the total solar eclipse in August'Game of Thrones' Season 7 episode 4 preview: Watch The Being of the Sentence Reading the Police Blotter If I Had a Sense of Beauty At the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations An Interview with Kerri Pierce Revisited: Watership Down The Schizophrenic Sentence by Jeff Dolven Redux: Jack Kerouac, Shelly Oria, Erica Ehrenberg by The Paris Review Cocktails for Toasting the End of Patriarchy by Merrily Grashin A Very Particular Bird How A Godless Democrat Fell in Love With Cowboy Poetry Cooking with Sybille Bedford by Valerie Stivers Puerto Rico Sketchbook: There are dead in the fields Redux: James Baldwin, Raymond Carver, Dorothea Lasky by The Paris Review Tuli Kupferberg’s Yeah!: The Tiny Magazine That Captured the 1960s by Alex Zafiris Black Friday, the Poem by Sadie Stein The Inventions of Witches The Life and Afterlife of Vivian Maier by Pamela Bannos Ten of Our Top Stories from 2017 The Literary Prize for the Refusal of Literary Prizes
2.1842s , 8223.90625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Drunken Woman Pickup Sex】,Miracle Information Network