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Entries in Huawei (40)

Thursday
Dec202012

Huawei's Ren vows: 'Our gear will be the world's safest'

Huawei’s publicity-shy CEO Ren Zhengfei has made his first public remarks since a Congressional committee labeled the company a security threat.

And while he did not address the committee’s claims directly, Ren said Huawei was “determined to make internal adjustments to ensure that our equipment is the most secure, transparent, high-quality equipment in the world.”

Ren’s rare public disclosure was posted by Huawei cyber security chief John Suffolk on his personal blog following a private meeting between the two. Ren gave his permission for his comments to be published.

The 68-year-old former PLA officer has never been interviewed by the foreign media and has not talked to the Chinese press for more than a decade, although his remarks at internal staff meetings are sometimes relayed to the Chinese media.

Despite his long public silences, Ren’s role in creating China’s largest private-sector business has made him one of the country’s most feted business leaders. In contrast, his refusal to attend the recent Washington hearings sharpened the image of Huawei as a firm operating in the Chinese shadows, unwilling or unable to explain itself.

In the event, Ren did not elaborate on how the vendor would improve security, but Suffolk cited the company’s existing policies - for example, ensuring equipment is “transparent so people can inspect what is passing through,” and that hardware was interchangeable so customers can mix and match with vendor software.

Unlike his boss, Suffolk, a former UK government CIO, was not afraid to make a political point:

We hope that those who wish to close markets, stop competition and innovation under the false banner of national security will take the strategic customer focused lead of Mr Ren and pour their energies into creating a free market with substantial competition and innovation so all citizens can benefit.

 

Friday
Sep142012

Whoa, Huawei & ZTE say they're not spies

Who saw this coming? Huawei and ZTE appeared before a Congress committee and denied spying on the US.

 

Here's the money quote from Mike Rogers, chair of the House of Reps intelligence committee:

 

"Our sources overseas have told us that there is a reason to question whether the companies are tied to the Chinese government or whether their equipment is as what it appears," he said.

 

Not only does he have no specific information, he doesn't even have a specific allegation. The phrasing puts as much distance as possible between himself and an actual position. This is a guy with the world's largest intelligence-gathering machine at his disposal.

 

Wednesday
Sep052012

Huawei makes its case on security

We haven't stolen anyone's secrets, it says in white paper. Meanwhile, more hare-brained scare-mongering.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Sep042012

Huawei revisited

Not before time - Huawei getting a bit of respect.

Click to read more ...

Tuesday
Aug212012

Bids are in for China's first TD-LTE tender 

Nine vendors have submitted bids for China Mobile’s first commercial TD-LTE tender, according to Chinese press.

As well as the big five firms Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson, Huawei, Nokia Siemens and ZTE, lesser-known local players Datang, Potevio, Fiberhome and New Postcom are also taking part.

Samsung’s networks group, which had been invited to bid, did not submit a proposal by the August 16 deadline, Sina Tech reported Tuesday.

In this first stage of network rollout, China Mobile is planning to deploy 20,000 base stations in 13 cities: Beijing, Chengdu, Fuzhou, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Ningbo, Qingdao, Shanghai, Shenyang, Shenzhen, Tianjin and Xiamen.

Most of the bidders were offering their own equipment, eschewing OEM gear, Sina said.