US government agencies are Corruption (1983)now officially banned from purchasing or using certain telecommunications and surveillance products from Chinese tech companies like ZTE and Huawei.
Yesterday, President Donald Trump signed the John S. McCain National Defense Authorization Act into law. Along with allocating $716 billion in defense funding, the bill put restrictions on government use of products manufactured by a number of China-based technology firms.
The prohibitions on these tech companies, such as ZTE and Huawei which are specifically mentioned by name in the bill, cover any “substantial or essential component of any system, or as critical technology as part of any system.” These products included in the ban cover a range of technology from smartphones to networking devices.
Other Chinese tech companies singled out in the bill include a number of video surveillance manufacturers such as Hytera Communications Corporation, Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology Company, and Dahua Technology Company.
Lawmakers along with U.S. intelligence officials had long warned of national security issues with Huawei and ZTE. Pressure from U.S. politicians had previously ended a AT&T - Hauwei deal that was in the works to bring their products stateside.
Earlier this year, ZTE, the U.S.’s fourth largest smartphone manufacturer, halted its operations in the country. Its business was almost ended for good when the company faced fines and hit with a 7-year supplier ban after misleading the U.S. government about violating U.S. sanctions with Iran and North Korea. However, seemingly out of the blue, President Trump stepped in and his administration worked out a deal with ZTE to lift the ban and get the company back up and running in the U.S.
Politicians criticized this move by the Trump administration to effectively bail ZTE out. Congress added a bipartisan provision to the NDAA bill to reinstate the overall ban on ZTE, but Republicans, urged on by the White House, had removed it from the final version of the bill that Trump signed. As it stands, ZTE is not banned in the United States, but their products are prohibited from governmental agency use.
UPDATE: Aug. 15, 2018, 8 a.m. EDT In a statement to Mashable, a Hauwei spokesman said "Huawei supports the US government's goals for better security, but this random addition to the NDAA is ineffective, misguided, and unconstitutional. It does nothing to identify real security risks or improve supply chain security, and will only serve to stifle innovation while increasing internet costs for US consumers and businesses. We believe that the American people deserve equal access to the best possible connections and smart device options, and will keep working to make this happen."
Topics Huawei Donald Trump Politics
Amazon all set to launch Prime Video in IndiaThis is an absurdly frustrating time to buy a MacBookThese are the hottest trends for 2017 according to PinterestFighting french bulldogs can't force Yoda to surrenderAfternoon of casual golf interrupted by a massive python eating a wallabyAmazon Prime Video launched in India for just Rs 499 a yearThe 'Rogue One' review roundup: The latest postSurfing under the Northern Lights is definitely as gnarly as it soundsEdward Snowden asks Twitter CEO to bring us tweet editingMitú launches Snapchat Discover channelGoogle's Year in Search makes 2016 seem even more heartbreakingApple Watch update delayed after reports of bricked devicesFinally there's proof that Britain's 4G is as bad as you thoughtApple releases macOS Sierra 10.12.2 updateCheck out all the new 'Overwatch' Winter Wonderland hero skinsAmazon all set to launch Prime Video in India'Pokémon Go' is officially launching in India tomorrowUber expands its motorbikeAustralia's 'words of the year' prove 2016 just needs to end alreadyWatch LeBron James geek out to Kendrick Lamar in an utterly lifeless crowd Sri Lanka vs. Australia 2025 livestream: Watch 2nd Test for free Miami Heat vs. Philadelphia 76ers 2025 livestream: Watch NBA online Best robot vacuum deal: Save $120 on the iRobot Roomba Q0120 Sonos Ace noise Laifen Swift deal: Our top Dyson Supersonic dupe is on sale at Walmart Real Hope vs. Cruz Azul 2025 livestream: Watch Concacaf Champions Cup for free Researchers created an AI reasoning model on par with OpenAI's o1 for less than $50 Best Amazon deal: The Echo Glow is on sale for under $25 NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for February 7: Tips to solve Connections #137 Best Fire TV Stick 4K deal: Save $20 at Amazon Google Maps update will let some users customize their car's virtual icon Best TV deal: Save $1,200 on the Hisense 100 Best Sony earbuds deal: Save $51.99 on Sony WF Google scraps diverse hiring targets following Trump's crusade against DEI Phoenix Suns vs. Oklahoma City Thunder 2025 livestream: Watch NBA online Google had to change its Super Bowl commercial because AI got something wrong 'Kinda Pregnant' proves that Will Forte deserves his own rom Best mesh WiFi deal: Save $150 on the Amazon eero Pro 6E Best free DeepSeek courses NYT Strands hints, answers for February 6
2.0986s , 10132.6953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Corruption (1983)】,Warmth Information Network