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China Wireless Networking Technology

Huawei Secretly Helped Build North Korea's Wireless Network, Leaked Documents Suggest (cnet.com) 83

Chinese tech giant Huawei could have helped secretly build a 3G wireless network for North Korea, according to internal documents leaked by a former employee of the company. From a report: Huawei worked with another Chinese company, Panda International Information Technology, on a number of projects in the region over the course of eight years, as suggested by work orders, contracts and spreadsheets published by the Washington Post on Monday. The revelations come as the latest blow to Huawei's reputation in a series of events over the past year, a period in which the company has come under fire from the US government amid its trade war with China. In January, the US Justice Department unsealed indictments that included 23 counts pertaining to the alleged theft of intellectual property, obstruction of justice and fraud related to its alleged evasion of US sanctions against Iran. President Donald Trump has blacklisted the company as a security threat, and Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou is under house arrest in Canada awaiting extradition to the US.
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Huawei Secretly Helped Build North Korea's Wireless Network, Leaked Documents Suggest

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  • A Chineese communist party tool. But Slashdot loves communism so I will be modded to -5

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Everyone knows that the Beloved Leader designed and prototyped the raw components with his own hands.

    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      Why would he need to build prototypes? The great leader's designs don't need testing, the first version is always perfect.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Thru all those back doors that equipment has

  • Why not openly? (Score:2, Informative)

    by MS ( 18681 )

    Why shouldn't Huawei sell its products to North Korea? China is not ruled by Donald.

    • Re:Why not openly? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @02:00PM (#58967546)

      The embargo on North Korea is a UN embargo, not a US embargo.

      Theoretically, China should follow it as a member of the UN.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Just because it is Huawei equipment does not make it Huawei. They would sell to contractors in China and those contractors would do what ever they can do to make money. So likely Huawei executives were aware some of the companies they sell too, were likely, contracting to North Korea. So those companies were in contravention and not Huawei, as long as those companies contracting to North Korea are independent of Huawei. Companies do not have to track what happens to their product once it is sold, they do no

    • If there are chips in the Huawei equipment that are based on US technology, those may be subject to US export restrictions that explicitly disallow re-exporting to countries such as Iran and North Korea. Individuals who violate these restrictions risk prosecution if they set foot in the US. And companies who violate them can get in trouble as we see now.

      I work in R&D at a European employer that uses American technology that is listed as being of strategic importance. Nothing military, just equipment rel

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by stooo ( 2202012 )

        >> I work in R&D at a European employer that uses American technology that is listed as being of strategic importance.
        That is just pure bullshit
        Your company is under no obligation at all.

        • Re:Why not openly? (Score:4, Informative)

          by SlaveToTheGrind ( 546262 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @03:47PM (#58968284)

          That is just pure bullshit
          Your company is under no obligation at all.

          That's some dangerous and stunningly incorrect advice, my friend. OP was describing a textbook example of limitations on the reexport of technology subject to U.S. Export Administration Regulations. There's a plain-English overview here [doc.gov].

          Pro tip: something can still be true even if you don't think it should be.

        • >> I work in R&D at a European employer that uses American technology that is listed as being of strategic importance.
          That is just pure bullshit
          Your company is under no obligation at all.

          He is and they are if they want to do business with US companies or even trade in us dollars (as seen by the current threats against european banks who laundered money from russian oligarchs). Not to mention this was already prohibited by earlier UN resolutions.

  • No jokes about "Who cares?" or "I hope they share the results of the bugged network with us?"

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