Before Huawei, China tried (and failed) to make its own OS [www.abacusnews.com]
Report: ARM immediately 'suspends business' with Huawei [9to5google.com]
ARM is the latest company to cut off Huawei [www.neowin.net]
Huawei’s U.S. losses could lead to gains in China, at Apple’s expense [venturebeat.com]
Huawei may replace Google Play Store with Aptoide and AppGallery [www.xda-developers.com]
Shops are starting to decline Huawei trade-ins, because no one wants a brick [bgr.com]
Huawei Mate 20 Pro removed from Android Q Beta page [9to5google.com]
Hobbling Huawei: Inside the U.S. war on China’s tech giant [www.reuters.com]
Arm said to have suspended business with Huawei, would be a huge blow [www.androidauthority.com]
Google Android Q Beta no longer lists the Huawei Mate 20 Pro [www.talkandroid.com]
Ban against Chinese companies is not an effort to inflame a trade dispute. It is an effort to address legitimate concerns about human rights abuses & our national security.
— Marco Rubio (@marcorubio) May 22, 2019
Yes it will inflame tensions with #China but that is not why we are doing ithttps://t.co/ZkTHZNeEio
Ok, now it gets really worse for Huawei. No access to ARM platform means no more chips means no more handsets with anything close or similar to Android. #Huawei #ARM https://t.co/3bPjJXfOEk
— Arne Hess ???? (@arnehess) May 22, 2019
Just one blow after another for Huawei https://t.co/alLWAZLsve
— Zac Bowden (@zacbowden) May 22, 2019
Cyber attacks using 5G could change the nature of war, inflicting economic harm and disrupting civilian life without bullets, bombs or blockades. Read about the battle over 5G https://t.co/szX9KTABGZ pic.twitter.com/EQ3HhaDuzy
— Reuters Top News (@Reuters) May 22, 2019
To anyone in tech who feels their job is safe from Trump’s counterproductive trade war: It is not.
— Brianna Wu (@BriannaWu) May 22, 2019
It is entirely possible China will retaliate against Apple, Google, Broadcom and other American tech companies. This could seriously damage our economy. https://t.co/fK04tGwsrK
This is a big deal, but licenses are just pieces of paper - Huawei’s engineers can keep using whatever designs they want and no Chinese authority will actually stop them https://t.co/upvLnHYzEI
— nilay patel (@reckless) May 22, 2019
This... Don't pity Chinese companies.
— Catalin Cimpanu (@campuscodi) May 22, 2019
Many of you might be/already are out of jobs because the Chinese state has sabotaged or stolen competitors' IP for more than a decade.
Chinese companies have had it coming. https://t.co/kaBaVU99zX
Update: Huawei has responded to the ARM ban. "We value our close relationships with our partners, but recognise the pressure some of them are under, as a result of politically motivated decisions." Full statement here: https://t.co/vhp55Dzi5V
— Tom Warren (@tomwarren) May 22, 2019
For details of what Hikvision has been up to in Xinjiang, check out my story from last summer: https://t.co/NCYIKnM7Tr https://t.co/hCnpGyYeKz
— Ben Dooley (@BenjaminDooley) May 22, 2019
Android ban was the sledgehammer, now ARM is the dagger.
— Vlad Savov (@vladsavov) May 22, 2019
The assassination of Huawei by the coward US is happening in real time.https://t.co/Qul73Il8UD
2/ If intelligence agencies have concerns that Huawei is spying on the US, they need to show evidence.
— Brianna Wu (@BriannaWu) May 22, 2019
Huawei has said they are willing to allow their hardware and software to undergo auditing to verify that it’s free of spyware. Taking them up on this would be productive.
An exclusive from @DaveLeeBBC - UK chip designer ARM has sent a memo to its staff telling them to suspend business with Huawei in a move that could threaten the Chinese firm's ability to create its own smartphone chips https://t.co/778iE5TUnl
— Leo Kelion (@LeoKelion) May 22, 2019
Not a China fan but, frankly, there are many, many huge holes in the offensive against Huawei.
— inday espina varona (@indayevarona) May 22, 2019
The top one is buried deep in the story: “So far, America hasn’t publicly produced hard evidence that Huawei equipment has been used for spying.” https://t.co/tQR50tpKDd
As China builds a highly intrusive surveillance state against Uighur Muslims in Xinjiang (and then elsewhere in China), the Trump administration moves to stop it from exporting this mass invasion of privacy abroad. https://t.co/K1SfQrKzs6 pic.twitter.com/Iqq9rlMAGG
— Kenneth Roth (@KenRoth) May 22, 2019
First major blow to Huawei - its phones pulled from big UK 5G launch by EE. EE boss says it's cos they're not sure they can honour long term customer contracts with Huawei phones. Ouch. https://t.co/CLnYKEj0Ha
— Adrian Weckler (@adrianweckler) May 22, 2019
ARM has halted all contracts and business with Huawei. This is a major blow to Huawei as without ARM designs it can't create its own processors. It might just be ARM being cautious, but if not then Huawei is dead and buried if US keeps this up https://t.co/vhp55Dzi5V pic.twitter.com/N6jeInfQey
— Tom Warren (@tomwarren) May 22, 2019
The Admin won't uphold the law and launch a Magnitsky Act investigation, but we are considering blacklisting a Chinese company for their role in gross human rights abuses against Muslim minorities in China? https://t.co/PEakXJlmj5 @nytimes
— Sam Vinograd (@sam_vinograd) May 22, 2019
Huawei was about trade & security, but Hikvision is about deconstructing China's in-progress mass imprisonment & social genocide programs by barring Google & Co from providing supporting tech.
— Peter Zeihan (@PeterZeihan) May 22, 2019
This cuts to the core of Beijing's political management system. https://t.co/qlUonI015R
The net effect of this wouldn’t be to weaken China. Chinese companies would simply go public in London or Hong Kong instead. https://t.co/n0INik36Ru
— Christian Vanderbrouk (@UrbanAchievr) May 22, 2019
Update — ARM has clarified the 90-day reprieve from US does *not* apply to them. Means suspension of all contact and work with Huawei/HiSilicon is ongoing. https://t.co/4Swsuhz5T7
— Dave Lee (@DaveLeeBBC) May 22, 2019
The U.S. could widen the dragnet beyond Huawei to include world leaders in video surveillance https://t.co/VSX2dnlGSE
— Bloomberg (@business) May 22, 2019
Driving Huawei out of the United States & Europe is 10 times more important than a trade deal with China, according to Steve Bannon.
— Belt and Road & Beyond (@BeltandRoadDesk) May 22, 2019
He also said he would dedicate all his time to shutting Chinese companies out of US capital markets. https://t.co/SxKenhG1OM
US: it's our way or the huawei
— Joseph Cox (@josephfcox) May 22, 2019
If Arm China is really blocked from supplying IP to Huawei then it's a death blow. Pretty much everything Huawei does runs on Arm. I currently suspect some mistake. The whole point of Arm China is to insulate mainland fablesses from US trade war stuff https://t.co/lXhoYWlbkp
— hal (@halhod) May 22, 2019
Human Rights now on White House China agenda? A shift. “The Trump administration is concerned about their role in helping Beijing repress minority Uighurs in China’s west, they said, asking not to be identified talking about private deliberations.” https://t.co/dpwkWXMFzm
— Emily Rauhala (@emilyrauhala) May 22, 2019
The Trump admin is considering putting Chinese video surveillance company Hikvision on a US blacklist, reports @ewong & @AnaSwanson
— ?Fergus Ryan (@fryan) May 22, 2019
It would mark the 1st time they've punished a Chinese company for its role in the surveillance & mass detention of Uyghurshttps://t.co/feCPJyZLBm
Huawei has lost access to ARM's license and Intel's x86 license, the only two CPU architectures that Android currently supports
— Jane Manchun Wong (@wongmjane) May 22, 2019
Even if Huawei came up with a new architecture, it won't be officially compatible with Android unless Google supports ithttps://t.co/NSDpQQmFj6
Wow this is big news and it shows the complexities Huawei will have to face even if they came up with their own OS and App Store. How many big developers will follow if they think the ban includes supplying apps designed in the US? https://t.co/Hw32AOY1V7
— Carolina Milanesi (@caro_milanesi) May 22, 2019
Even non-US companies have to comply with the American entity list rules, if the product contains “US origin technology”.
— Zhaoyin Feng 馮兆音 (@ZhaoyinFeng) May 22, 2019
UK’s ARM memo tells staff to stop working with China’s tech giant https://t.co/rnaGfUFKSw
Chinese companies have tried to replace a Western OS before. And they’ve failed https://t.co/osmJ6bMluS
— Abacus (@AbacusNews) May 22, 2019
Before #Huawei, #China tried (and failed) to make its own OS https://t.co/osmJ6bMluS
— Abacus (@AbacusNews) May 22, 2019
After the Google-Huawei affair, Huawei has announced his own OS to be released this fall. But replacing Android is not so easy. In fact, China tried (and failed) to make its own OS beforehttps://t.co/96g4ka2h1w
— Jana Rodriguez Hertz 汉娜 (@janarhertz) May 22, 2019
ARM is the latest company to cut off Huawei #ARM #Huawei https://t.co/9KGerU42Ps pic.twitter.com/cj5EZjx1Ku
— Neowin (@NeowinFeed) May 22, 2019
Huawei what are you doing
— Younes (@YounesLayachi) May 22, 2019
This is worse than the previous newshttps://t.co/L1LxOVB4bY
Well... Huawei Mate 20 Pro has been removed from Google's Android Q Beta page https://t.co/T4FPI0AYMk
— Andreas Proschofsky (@suka_hiroaki) May 21, 2019
Hobbling Huawei: How America woke up to the threat from 5G https://t.co/w4Ic3NB8AG
— Adam Segal (@adschina) May 21, 2019
'If Huawei gains a foothold in global 5G networks, Washington fears this will give Beijing an unprecedented opportunity to attack critical infrastructure and compromise intelligence sharing with key allies.' https://t.co/KDgxXdHPqn
— Jesse Felder (@jessefelder) May 22, 2019
This is a hilarious anecdote from this @Reuters story showing how Huawei tries to redirect espionage fears back on the Americans.
— Dustin Volz (@dnvolz) May 21, 2019
“Prism, Prism on the wall. Who’s the most trustworthy of them all?”
Prism is an NSA surveillance program leaked by Snowden.https://t.co/LdRKWghrKU pic.twitter.com/gJS1uOYKuQ
Is the U.S. government painting Huawei as a security threat because it wants American companies to win the race to 5G? https://t.co/08xR8dxLxm
— Matthew Keys (@MatthewKeysLive) May 21, 2019
Hobbling Huawei: How America woke up to the threat from 5G https://t.co/8LNghyKXMn via @SpecialReports
— Jennifer Ablan (@jennablan) May 21, 2019
The U.S. is widely seen as leading the global campaign against Huawei, but @Reuters reporting shows Australia led the way in pressing for action on 5G threats https://t.co/e0naGGki8S pic.twitter.com/Sz603mzMSv
— Reuters Investigates (@specialreports) May 21, 2019
Here's our story on how the U.S. campaign against Huawei and its hold on 5G evolved. A key moment was a destructive digital war game conducted by a team of Australian government hackers. @CassellBryanLow @Colpackham @DavidLague3 @stecklow @jc_stubbs https://t.co/iXpkxgT35v pic.twitter.com/XcEs4w7PT7
— Peter Hirschberg (@phirschberg1) May 22, 2019
さすがにAndroid Beta ProgramはAOSPではないから当然かなー>Huawei Mate 20 Pro removed from Android Q Beta page - 9to5Google https://t.co/RWQiCNHhdf
— memn0ck (@memn0ck) May 22, 2019
Hobbling Huawei: Inside the U.S. war on China’s tech giant https://t.co/7TFgWSiOag Here my tiny little contribution to "The China challenge" series via @specialreports - @Reuters #Huawei pic.twitter.com/W3VSt6osj1
— Marco Hernandez (@TmarcoH) May 23, 2019
Hobbling Huawei: Inside the U.S. war on China’s tech giant https://t.co/LWwIQaLkLF
— Howard French (@hofrench) May 21, 2019
Australian spies ran a war game in early 2018 about the damage a 5G hack could do. The results were so bad that now a bunch of countries have followed Australia's lead and banned Huawei from their 5G network rollouts https://t.co/0upvmfLq2N
— Angus Livingston (@anguslivingston) May 23, 2019
Interesting how it started in Australia. Hobbling Huawei: Inside the U.S. war on China’s tech giant https://t.co/8iuo4uNmjO
— Dave Babulak (@DaveBabulak) May 22, 2019