The Chinese telecommunications giant, Huawei, continues to strive to regain the trust of its fans and customers, offset by security concerns and various restrictions on the company's operations by the US government.
In order to retain existing customers, and perhaps dominate countries still considering using Huawei's 5G infrastructure, the Chinese telecommunications giant has published a detailed question and answer series on its website entitled "Huawei Data".
This type of measure will continue to be taken by the Chinese firm while the US government continues to pressure its allies to prevent it from testing its 5G hardware. (Find out: Huawei offers a cybersecurity laboratory in Poland to avoid the 5G ban)
The United States, without any concrete basis, has pointed out that Huawei's equipment could be used to spy by the Chinese government. The latest move by the US is said to be an executive order banning the use of Huawei 5G equipment by US carriers. The goal of the Q&A is to salvage any public goodwill still left out for Huawei. Already the US, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Japan have blocked Huawei from providing 5G equipment. Several countries in Europe are said to be considering a similar move and are currently examining their stance.
In your questions and answers, Huawei says there has never been a major security breach in its 30 years of operationBut if evidence is presented, it will be dealt with 'directly'. The Chinese company also claims that despite numerous "inaccurate media reports," Chinese law does not require "back doors" to be installed in networks and other equipment.
The company continues to deny any adverse connection with Chinese military or security agencies. It also insists on the need for countries to recognize the importance of establishing better common standards, adopting industry best practices, and implementing risk mitigation procedures to ensure that there is an objective basis for choosing technology providers.
It is unclear if this US crackdown is an escalation of the US-China trade war or if the concerns are 100% genuine. If you want to access the brand clarification section, access here.
(Via)