The U.S. reaches for the technology jugular [www.axios.com]
Huawei and US tech companies continue business as usual through technical loophole [www.onmsft.com]
Micron resumes some chip shipments to Huawei, boosting stock [www.reuters.com]
Are you a robot? [www.bloomberg.com]
An international trade lawyer explains just how far reaching the Huawei ban really is [www.androidcentral.com]
US tech firms defy Huawei ban to keep trading [mspoweruser.com]
With US Firms Skirting Ban, Huawei Exec Sees Business as Usual [www.lightreading.com]
Loopholes open in the Huawei ban, 11 things you need to know in tech today [www.androidauthority.com]
US tech companies reportedly exploit loopholes to work with Huawei [telecoms.com]
The electronics supply chain is hard to control and easy to distort. America’s largest chipmakers continue to sell to Huawei despite the US ban, using overseas production and other workarounds. Some worry they could move R&D permanently overseas to adapt. https://t.co/jihUWfiF14
— Paul Mozur (@paulmozur) June 26, 2019
Are U.S. companies really threatening to move their high-level tech development work out of America so they can sell to China? https://t.co/kMq3u0rpPS pic.twitter.com/wVsU5PIgMb
— Matt Stoller (@matthewstoller) June 26, 2019
NYT: American companies continue to sell parts to Huawei, despite a ban on sales to the Chinese telecom giant. The White House isn't sure how to respond.https://t.co/6HNlKY1HPd @ceciliakang @paulmozur pic.twitter.com/poQ60Jtki7
— David S. Joachim (@davidjoachim) June 25, 2019
Intel, Micron and others finding loopholes to sell components to Huawei. ? Apparently, if products are made outside the US, they will not be considered “American.” https://t.co/GlEUeNEUUX
— Economics Geopolitics Tech (@EconGeopolTech) June 25, 2019
So the trade war is causing Chinese companies to relocate to Vietnam to keep selling to US without high tariffs
— Shaun Rein (@shaunrein) June 26, 2019
And US companies are moving production outside the US to keep selling to Huawei & China
*Trade wars don't solve anything* https://t.co/BCNpBfKIE1
U.S. components began to flow to Huawei about three weeks ago. Goods produced by American companies overseas are not always considered American-made, and the suppliers are taking advantage of this. https://t.co/M43Lge7zWx pic.twitter.com/zNYUl5nUln
— NYT Business (@nytimesbusiness) June 26, 2019
Call me cynical, but the President did run for office on a platform that suggested that business needed freedom from pesky government oversight and regulations. https://t.co/lQQuc1SO9R
— Are we there yet? (@msbshoshani) June 25, 2019
If Trump continues to do technology export restrictions UNILATERALLY, without getting buy-in from economic allies like Japan, Europe and South Korea...
— Chad P. Bown (@ChadBown) June 26, 2019
“Some of the big winners might be other countries”@ChorzempaMartin with @PaulMozur & @CeciliaKang https://t.co/qxhJbKZXTZ
Ahead of their meeting this Saturday, Trump is reaching for Xi's technology jugular. https://t.co/h4J2xSvna6
— Steve LeVine (@stevelevine) June 26, 2019
With the hope of extending its tenure as the world's sole superpower, the U.S. is reaching for its international rivals' economic jugular, squeezing them using American technological superiority. https://t.co/8Kl7LQxakl
— Axios (@axios) June 26, 2019
The U.S. reaches for the technology jugular: Ahead of a high-stakes meeting Saturday with Chinese President Xi Jinping, President Trump has expanded a new battle front with Beijing and other leading U.S. foes:… https://t.co/5N7ArKG9iW #TheResistance #ImpeachTrump #NotMyPresident pic.twitter.com/ULz4aJ6P5R
— Patrick (@cahulaan) June 26, 2019
Micron revenue & profit beats, sees signs of improving demand https://t.co/aeknuyRUIg pic.twitter.com/ixjJNbAwkE
— Reuters Business (@ReutersBiz) June 25, 2019
Remember the famous Karl Marx's predictions?:
— WinstonCovfefe (@winstonCovfefe) June 26, 2019
"The last capitalist we hang shall be the one who sold us the rope."
This is exactly what today's businesses like @MicronTech, @intel and #TSMC are doing ??#loopholeshttps://t.co/HZXbb5Vsck
Will be interesting to see how the White House deals with this. Considering they have been steadily expanding the blacklist over the past couple of weeks, some American companies could be in some serious trouble. https://t.co/qQOdpi7FyN
— Peter Zeihan (@PeterZeihan) June 26, 2019
Lawyers are making bank helping companies get around Trump’s trade restrictions and tariffs. https://t.co/2IHyjCj0sF
— Lisa Abramowicz (@lisaabramowicz1) June 26, 2019
トランプの対Huawei輸出規制は、アメリカ製品やアメリカの技術を25%以上含んだものを対象としているが、Micronは「このコンポーネントは弊社の海外子会社の製品であり、アメリカ製ではない」という理屈で規制を回避可能と判断、Huaweiへの輸出を再開へhttps://t.co/xAWWH1c3TM
— ultraviolet (@raurublock) June 27, 2019
Companies aren’t violating the export ban; they can legally ship some foreign-made products that don’t meet 25% US origin threshold. National security hawks say they’re violating the spirit of the export ban. But hawks didn’t understand the existing rules. https://t.co/IWtEgFZp79
— Jenny Leonard (@jendeben) June 26, 2019