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China Security

Germany Has Proof That Huawei Worked With Chinese Intelligence: Handelsblatt (reuters.com) 172

The German government is in possession of evidence that Huawei, the leading maker of telecoms network equipment, has collaborated with Chinese intelligence, the Handelsblatt daily reported on Wednesday. Reuters: "At the end of 2019, intelligence was passed to us by the U.S., according to which Huawei is proven to have been cooperating with China's security authorities," the newspaper quoted a confidential foreign ministry document as saying. Chancellor Angela Merkel's government and her conservative ruling party are split on whether Huawei's equipment poses a security threat to Europe's largest economy, where the three mobile network operators are all customers of the Chinese firm.
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Germany Has Proof That Huawei Worked With Chinese Intelligence: Handelsblatt

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  • by jamesborr ( 876769 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2020 @09:19AM (#59667508)
    In other news, science has discovered that water is wet...
  • by should_be_linear ( 779431 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2020 @09:33AM (#59667562)
    Except that every European knows, that both USA and China obviously aggressively spy using their corporations, which really works as extended intelligence operation. Ask Snowden. And there is no other technology to use, besides US and Chinese, so... who cares..
    • One is a NATO ally, the other is neutral demonstrating occasional hostilities.

      Saying it doesn't matter is like saying there's no difference to kidding your loving wife or kissing a homophobic violent biker. You should try doing both and report back of you think it's just a kiss so who cares who is involved.

    • Re:LOL (Score:5, Informative)

      by williamyf ( 227051 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2020 @10:18AM (#59667736)

      [...] And there is no other technology to use, besides US and Chinese, so... who cares..

      For 5G You can use European technology, in the form of Ericsson (sweden) and Nokia (Finland).

      Nokia is an odd case, as is comprised of Nokia's Telecoms arm (Finland) which Borged Siemens' Telecom arm (germany), Alcatel (France) and Lucent (US), so, any USoA participation is highly diluted by now...

      • Indeed, that is the US position; we're demanding that European countries who want to continue to engage in information sharing with the US must buy European telecommunications gear.

        It is really bizarre that they're so resistant to that request. It seems like it should actually be their first preference.

    • As pointed out in other comments, everyone spies on everyone else, or at least tries to. That's not an excuse, just an observation. As someone looking to purchase equipment, the question you should be asking yourself in this respect isn't whether your data will be leaking, but rather who it might leak to, whether they'd care enough to look at it, and whether their possession of that information would harm your interests.

      If you're a government that the US government is hostile to, like Iran, it would prob
  • Of course they work with their intelligence agency. Every vendor large enough everywhere does that. The question was whether they compromise product security by adding backdoors. As far as I can tell, there is still zero evidence for that.

    • by chill ( 34294 )

      No, that isn't the question. The question is, do you want a hostile foreign power in control of your nation's critical communications infrastructure? Do you want to take the chance that, when push comes to shove, they can't introduce a "critical update" that can cause key delays and failures in critical communications?

      The lack of imagination and comprehension -- willful or otherwise -- on Slashdot has gotten to be beyond belief. Think telecom links to dams, nuclear power plants, air control towers, etc.

      • by jythie ( 914043 )
        Both China and the US are mixed bedfellows from Germany's perspective. Neither is completely friendly nor hostile, and both have deep economic entanglement with DE. But shutting down infrastructure like that? China has no more reason to attack DE than the US does, it would hurt their projects in the same way it would hurt US projects.
        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          "Both China and the US are mixed bedfellows from Germany's perspective."

          What an insane proposition. Unless your perspective is that of a Nazi or soviet sympathizer the US has saved Germany at least twice. If you are I can see why you might not be as worried about China.

          • by gweihir ( 88907 )

            This is pretty much the current public opinion in Germany. The US is regarded as not really trustworthy across the political spectrum. Read some German newspapers for a while.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        You think telcos let vendors push updates to equipment? That is not Windows 10 we are talking about here.

    • The question was whether they compromise product security by adding backdoors.

      Wrong.

      The question was if they reasonably can. And everybody seems to agree the answer is "Yes."

      That's the difference; we trust European intelligence agencies not to exercise control over European companies in a way that harms us. Maybe they can; it would be a lot harder. But they maybe could. But it wouldn't be likely to harm the US military in the same was as when it is an adversarial country that can take control of the equipment.

      It's only been a few decades since US and Chinese infantry were shoot

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Anybody that produces software can do this. Cisco, for example, has been doing this for ages, camouflaged as implementation mistakes. Alternatively, they are so extremely incompetent that you should stay far, far away from their products.

        The question whether anybody can add backdoors to their product is completely meaningless. The only meaningful question is whether they are doing it or not.

        • You missed the whole point. You missed the whole point. Try again, but slow down. Read the words slowly and carefully, don't just skim them and spew.

  • "which Huawei is proven to have been cooperating with China's security authorities,"

    Like Apple and Google and Amazon and ....

  • by alexhs ( 877055 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2020 @09:59AM (#59667654) Homepage Journal

    Germany Has Proof That Huawei Worked With Chinese Intelligence

    At the end of 2019, intelligence was passed to us by the U.S

    It reminds me when the UK had proof that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction, intelligence passed to them by the U.S...

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      Yeah.. the US was founded on the idea that lies and breaking your word are morally acceptable as long as you win. Never completely trust US institutions, agencies, or private companies.
    • Well, considering that Iraq *did*, does that change the character of the discussion?

      a) Iraq technically have weapons of mass destruction (chemical weapons - they'd even used them previously) (of course, when this is explained, people of a certain political side immediately dismiss chemical weapons as 'adequately' mass destructive - so if you mean nukes, say nukes) and
      b) at the very least, it appears that even Saddam Hussein believed he had a functional, progressing nuclear weapons development program includ

      • by imgod2u ( 812837 )

        Complete and utter BS.

        1) After the invasion, even chemical weapons weren't found in Iraq. They used it prior to the first Gulf War -- that's why we had the first Gulf War. They were then sanctioned with inspectors going into their country on a regular basis.

        2) [citation needed]

        Chemicals found in Syria and used by Assad. COULD IT HAVE COME FROM GHOST SADDAM??????

  • ... should just welcome them to the club [theguardian.com].

  • The Chinese government shills come out.

    • So ... everyone then?

      Because call me when you EVER see anyone critizizing you imerialost warmongerong fascist-libertarian Fourth Reich God state, and you NOT call him a Chinese/Russian/$insertBigBad shill.

      I just wanna see that, even ONCE.

      Because like this, it's you too, who looks like a shill/drone.

  • While spying on you noticed you were spying on me. How dare you. We do not know how extensive. A few well placed bribes can get someone to spy in many places. Snowden report on US not inconceivable to occur elsewhere even The China.
  • by BAReFO0t ( 6240524 ) on Wednesday January 29, 2020 @11:47AM (#59668054)

    They are a mouthpiece of financial-libertarian extremists. Don't trust them even if they tell you the sun is round.

    Oh, in the EUSA I'd buy Huawei *because* of that. Just like in China, I'd buy *everyone fucking else, because they are all under NSA control.
    Never buy devices in control of the cuntry that has power over you.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • CB, now you have to earn your money and claim that the krauts, like us Yankees, are also liars and that you Chinese would NEVER work with MSS.
    Oh, and continue lying about your making your yuen from MSS as well.
  • ...be a shame if anything happened to it...

    This is what Huawei/Germany dustup revolves around now. Germany can give Huawei a big slice of the 5G pie (and probably lobby its EU neighbors to do the same) or it can start having troubles with its auto industry in the Chinese market.

    I mean its almost a literal quid pro quo, and I can't say I really blame the Chinese for using this kind of leverage, since it all kind of boils down to who gets to do business in the other's nation.

    The bummer for Germany is that the

  • A comment about Huawei 5G systems being implemented by the British from a discussion on PBS Newshour. US is against it but Brits think it is fine for lowrisk systems. What stuck in my mind was European countries looking at this situation and they want to use Huawei equipment for 5G. If UK goes ahead then other countries will say "If UK can get away with it over US objections, so can we."

    Why the U.S. doesn't want Huawei building 5G networks
    https://www.pbs.org/video/batt... [pbs.org]

  • Modern culture has come up with a term that more accurately captures international relationships.

    Guess what, it's not a zero sum game. That is, there is no such thing as one nation winning it all, or one nation losing it all. We all happen to co-exist on this planet together, like it or not, and the resources are finite, believe it or not. And there is no nation that is totally self-sufficient as far as I know.

    Thus, we might want to more accurately term the Chinese as our competitors. Calling them an enemy

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