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gonvaled | 6 years ago
US companies have now been shown for what they really are: an extension of the US government.
As such those companies can and will be used to make political points and advance US interests.
Caveat emptor: using US technology has big risks.
simonh|6 years ago
Bear in mind the US and China are currently engaged in an espionage war[1]. The US has an active network of informants in the Chinese government, while the Chinese are actively conducting espionage and counter-espionage in the US including stealing commercial secrets and suborning US intelligence operatives to undermine the CIA's Chinese network. Google and Huawei are being caught in a crush between the spy war and the trade war.
EU companies are no different. If Google was a German company and Germany decided to impose trade sanctions on a non-EU country, they would have to comply.
[1]https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-48319058
gonvaled|6 years ago
This is part of the trade war, and the fact that the US is openly lying about the motives of the ban shows how risky the position of US customers have become: there is absolutely no recourse.
And even if the security claims were true (they are not), so what? Why I, an European customer, must be affected by security concerns of a far away country? Why is Huawei in a position to be forced to let down its customers?
Non-US companies must rethink the way they rely on an increasingly isolated and belicose US.
simion314|6 years ago
But US has spies in all countries, so why is in China an espionage war?
Any idea if US wants a concrete thing? Like if China does X all is fine or is just an economic war and US is trying to weaken China and fix the trading balance ?
zamadatix|6 years ago
zamadatix|6 years ago
gonvaled|6 years ago
There are several ways to mitigate this:
- Open Source. Android itself falls into this category, and it can not be taken away. This is the best way, but let's be realistic here: it is not for everybody.
- Multiple suppliers, from multiple countries, so that we have real competition.
simion314|6 years ago
duxup|6 years ago
Using technology that might do something you don't want for any reason (government, company decisioms) and that includes any government involvement.... US, China... anyone.
Here we have an article about FOSS and folks still play these weird games where they only mention a specific government.
weliveindetail|6 years ago
Interesting. Isn't that exactly what the US is blaming Huawei for?
gonvaled|6 years ago
The US is equally eager (or more) to tamper with the free market, with the small difference that they are in a position to actually do it. From my point of view, the US is a huge problem, and is making my life difficult, but the Chinese are just another producer of cheap and good quality goods.
mschuster91|6 years ago
Not just with US companies. ZTE, Huawei and others are extensions of the Chinese government, Gazprom and the Kreml are interchangeable and the IMF is finance weaponized by the Western economies as a whole.
> Caveat emptor: using US technology has big risks.
Using and especially depending on any technology from a foreign power, especially one that may turn to an adverse power or outright enemy, is a risk. The Western countries have all, over the last decades, shifted most of their production to China - and now are surprised that China has them by the balls, literally, as many countries don't even have people with the skillset required for low level manufacturing.
tannhaeuser|6 years ago