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Huawei - leaked report shows no evidence of spying

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A US government security review has found no evidence telecoms equipment firm Huawei Technology spies for China.

The 18-month review, details of which were leaked to the Reuters news agency, suggests security vulnerabilities posed a greater threat than any links between the firm and the Chinese government.

Last week a US congressional report warned against allowing Chinese companies Huawei and ZTE Corp to supply critical telecom infrastructure.

The firms have always denied espionage.

The classified inquiry was a thorough review of how Huawei worked, involving nearly 1,000 telecom equipment buyers.

One of the government employees involved with the inquiry told Reuters: "We knew certain parts of government really wanted evidence of active spying. We would have found it if it were there."

Huawei spokesman Bill Plummer said: "Huawei is not familiar with the review, but we are not surprised to hear that the White House has concluded there is no evidence of any Huawei involvement with any espionage or other non-commercial activities.

"Huawei is a $32bn [£19bn] independent multinational that would not jeopardise its success or the integrity of its customers' networks for any government or third party - ever," he added
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ZTE's senior vice president of Europe and North America, Zhu Jiny, told the BBC: "The security issues should not be focused on the Chinese companies. These are problems of the world situation. It's not only Chinese companies - it's a global issue."

Sloppy code

Last week at a conference in Malaysia, Felix Lindner, an expert in network equipment security, said he had discovered multiple vulnerabilities in Huawei's routers.

"I'd say it was five times easier to find one in a Huawei router than in a Cisco one," he said.

He blamed sloppy coding rather than any deliberate attempt to leave backdoors open for spying purposes.

Questions about the relationship between Huawei, ZTC and the Chinese government circulated last week following a report from the US House Intelligence Committee.

While the report did not present concrete evidence that either Huawei or ZTE had stolen US data, it said had classified information that provided "significantly more information adding to the committee's concerns" about the risk to the United States.

It also criticised Huawei for failing to provide details about its relationship with the Chinese government.

Attitudes about Huawei differ from nation to nation.

Canada said last week that the firm could not bid to help build a secure national network. In Britain, however, a spokesman for the Cabinet Office said Huawei's products were fully vetted and did not represent a security concern.

BBC News - Huawei - leaked report shows no evidence of spying
 
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sloppy coding still makes for an unsafe network, especially considering increasing industrial espionage and cyber-attacks. buyer beware
 
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Huawei has killed Motorola, surpassed Ericsson, and now going for Cisco. And the US is doing whatever it can to protect Cisco.
How ZTE, Huawei are hitting European rivals hard in India

I think Huawei has already driven the Cisco routers out of business. Correct me if I am wrong on this.

All haters and cheerleaders should rest in peace once we fix the coding stuff!

Here we come again usa, canada, uk ...

HUAWEI NUMBER ONE!
 
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I think Huawei has already driven the Cisco routers out of business. Correct me if I am wrong on this.

All haters and cheerleaders should rest in peace once we fix the coding stuff!

Here we come again usa, canada, uk ...

HUAWEI NUMBER ONE!

Probably not routers. Huawei's current leading market share are their telecommunication gears, the stuffs mobile companies uses on their towers that our cell phones connects to, such as T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, ect. Same goes to internet service providers.
 
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Probably not routers. Huawei's current leading market share are their telecommunication gears, the stuffs mobile companies uses on their towers that our cell phones connects to, such as T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon, Sprint, ect. Same goes to internet service providers.

Yup! Cisco is still the dominant leader in respect of router sales.

Here a chart:

Infonetics-Chart-s_5.jpg


cisco-still-no-1-in-router-market-huawei-2nd
 
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If Huawei can take the market share from being more competitive than its peers and stay there, it'll end out on top in the long run.

In a few decades, Huawei can benefit from its established market presence in developing countries as they become richer, offering an alternative to the European or North American market.
 
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India investigates report of Huawei hacking state carrier’s network – The Express Tribune

NEW DELHI: India on Thursday launched an investigation after a media report alleged that Chinese telecoms company Huawei had hacked into state-run telecoms carrier Bharat Sanchar Nigam, a senior government official said.

“An incident about the alleged hacking of Bharat Sanchar Nigam Ltd (BSNL) network by M/S Huawei … has come to notice,” Killi Kruparani, junior minister for communications and information technology, said in a written reply to a question from a member of parliament.

“The government has constituted an inter-ministerial committee to investigate the matter,” the minister said on Wednesday, without giving details.

A senior government official said the decision to investigate came after a media report said Huawei had hacked a BSNL mobile base station controller. The official declined to be identified due to the sensitivity of the issue.

BSNL declined to comment beyond the minister’s statement. A spokesperson for the communications and information technology ministry said he did not have details of the allegation.

A spokesperson for Huawei India denied any hacking.

“Huawei India denies such alleged hacking and continues to work closely with customers and governments in India to address any network security issue that may arise in technical and business operations,” spokesperosn Suresh Vaidyanathan said in a statement.

Vaidyanathan said Huawei, founded by a former officer of China’s People’s Liberation Army, fully complied with network security norms and regulations.

The Indian government has launched investigations in the past based on media reports.

Neighbors India and China fought a war more than 50 years ago and have a disagreement over their border. This is not the first time Huawei is facing scrutiny in India.

In 2010, India blocked for several months domestic carriers’ imports of Chinese telecoms equipment over suspicions that it might have spying technology embedded to intercept sensitive conversations and government communications.

The unofficial ban was lifted after the Chinese makers, who had said their equipment was safe, agreed to new equipment rules with tougher checks.

The United States has also flagged Chinese telecoms equipment as a potential security risk.

In 2012, a US panel urged American companies to stop doing business with Huawei and ZTE warning that China could use firms’ equipment to spy on certain communications and threaten vital systems through computerised links.
 
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