It Appears U.S. Has a 'Smoking Gun' Confirming Huawei-Built Spy Backdoors https://t.co/c2RLjI33w8
— Evan Kirstel (@evankirstel) February 12, 2020
Dont worry Canada Your leader @JustinTrudeau already cashed the cheque from Pres Xi https://t.co/bZrSUuHHYy
— Suze Michelini (@emilia_suze) February 12, 2020
Exclusive: @Huawei can covertly access mobile networks through back doors meant for law enforcement, U.S. tells allies in bid to show firm poses security threat. My report via @WSJ https://t.co/NtrGHdRVvN
— Bojan Pancevski (@bopanc) February 11, 2020
More evidence why #Huawei is bad news.https://t.co/tNSKrGFlTW
— Bob Seely MP (@IoWBobSeely) February 11, 2020
US officials publicly confirm #Huawei can spy on phones w/ secret backdoors. The intel was highly classified until last yr, "when U.S. officials provided details to allies including the U.K. & Germany."
— Jim Banks (@RepJimBanks) February 12, 2020
U.K.'s Huawei decision looks more foolish than everhttps://t.co/65Bl46LGrN
LR @RepMcCaul: “Huawei uses built in “back doors” to access network data for the #CCP’s gain. Countries considering #Huawei should understand what’s on the line: the privacy of their citizens & the security of their future economic infrastructure.” #nahwei https://t.co/6daiSS5pND
— House Foreign Affairs GOP (@HouseForeignGOP) February 12, 2020
Voila the “smoking gun” that the US sent to the German Foreign Office back in December: U.S. Officials Say #Huawei Can Covertly Access Telecom Networks | #5G ? https://t.co/6WJ4BqV9Pn
— VKJudit (@VKJudit) February 11, 2020
This seems to be the evidence that the U.S. has been holding onto. Feds say that Huawei can access cell networks through (what sounds like) CALEA-like lawful intercept points — which no device maker is supposed to be able to access.https://t.co/sg3yEnpNYt
— Zack Whittaker (@zackwhittaker) February 11, 2020
@Stratfor @fred_burton This is pretty interesting because I sat in a presentation Friday by Huawei CSO Andy Purdy, an American, former DHS and NSC official, who said this was not the case. https://t.co/rl0uK8X5Pn
— Jim Casey (@Jim_Casey_) February 12, 2020
Breaking: U.S. officials say Huawei Technologies Co. can covertly access mobile-phone networks around the world through "back doors" designed for use by law enforcement. Wall Street Journal exclusive: https://t.co/g3l0v0zu7p
— Steven Chase (@stevenchase) February 11, 2020
US says it can prove Huawei has backdoor access to mobile-phone networks | Ars Technica https://t.co/e9MZZMNfAX
— D.K.R. Boyd (@ReflectingMan) February 12, 2020
Maybe it's just me, but the story about Huawei ability to secretly abuse legally-mandated backdoors says more about legally-mandated backdoors than about Huawei in this case. Context: https://t.co/LaNWPbXMSw
— Ginny Caughey (@gcaughey) February 12, 2020
US can “prove” Huawei has backdoor access to mobile-phone networkhttps://t.co/qRn61DCTOj
— Kenneth Geers (@KennethGeers) February 12, 2020
Note to U.S. government and other law enforcement. If you demand back doors be placed into telecom equipment it is absolutely inevitable that others will have like access. What part of this don't you understand? https://t.co/wdQ9GkX1mM
— Dennis Wingo (@wingod) February 12, 2020
It Appears U.S. Has a 'Smoking Gun' Confirming Huawei-Built Spy Backdoors #SmartNews https://t.co/Q3iHHQsUoI
— ❌Joe FreedomLover❌?????? (@JoeFreedomLove) February 13, 2020
WPがアメリカ政府が各国の情報を抜いていたという記事を出したら、WSJはファーウェイの危険を煽る記事を出した。代理戦争みたいな感じすら漂う。 / WSJ News Exclusive (WSJ) #NewsPicks https://t.co/eirt0eJVfh
— Kazuto Suzuki (@KS_1013) February 13, 2020
THIS is why you don't let law enforcement agencies build digital backdoors into consumer technology. Are you listening, @TheJusticeDept?
— Fight for the Future (@fightfortheftr) February 13, 2020
(Of course you are, whether we @ you or not.)https://t.co/g6tj3COW0Q
"We have evidence that Huawei has the capability secretly to access sensitive and personal information in systems it maintains and sells around the world."@WHNSC made it clear - Huawei cannot be trusted to respect digital sovereignty. Read more here ⬇️⬇️ https://t.co/KyzfPFQlyn
— 5G Action Now (@5GActionNow) February 12, 2020
US says it can prove #Huawei has backdoor access to mobile-phone networks https://t.co/wzSmNg2e5G
— 9DASHLINE 九段线 (@9DashLine) February 12, 2020
US Says It Can Prove Huawei Has Backdoor Access To Mobile Phone Networks https://t.co/pgma9NbMc8
— Nicolas Krassas (@Dinosn) February 13, 2020
US officials say that Huawei has violated these laws, which are enforced in multiple countrieshttps://t.co/UHtx4bCZlq
— Kek_Magician (@Keque_Mage) February 12, 2020
US says it can prove Huawei has backdoor access to mobile-phone networks | Ars Technica https://t.co/IIAnMCMSwD
— The Wanted Emcees (@TheWantedEmcees) February 12, 2020
US says it can prove Huawei has backdoor access to mobile-phone networks – Ars Technica https://t.co/W0O47hqaBA US officials say they have evidence that Huawei has backdoor access to mobile-phone networks around the world. #Huawei #huawei5gmobilewifi #ITSecurity pic.twitter.com/dDEyozXkHG
— Igor Os (@igor_os777) February 13, 2020
ブログ: 米国は、ファーウェイが携帯電話ネットワークへのバックドアアクセスを持っていることを証明できると言うhttps://t.co/NbNPamDnpA
— yomoyomo (@yomoyomo) February 12, 2020
US says it can prove Huawei has backdoor access to mobile-phone networks | Ars Technicahttps://t.co/isJn56Hqwm
Dear US of A, let's talk about #CryptoAG ...https://t.co/ltzGCzxIO0
— Martin Leyrer (@leyrer) February 12, 2020
Gee. It's like backdoors for law enforcement are a bad idea or something. It's not like people have been saying that for decades or anything. https://t.co/vuOM5psIq7
— Knarphie (@knarphie) February 13, 2020
this is a good take: https://t.co/Y8RKTaFIji
— Luke Larsen (@lalarsen11) February 12, 2020