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Huawei chief defends group against espionage concerns
by Staff Writers
Barcelona (AFP) Feb 26, 2018

The head of China's Huawei defended his company on Monday following concerns its equipment could be used for spying, saying the telecoms giant had a "very strong track record regarding security."

Huawei has reportedly lost a deal with AT&T in the United States that would have given it an improved foothold on the handset market following a report by US lawmakers expressing unease "regarding Huawei and Chinese espionage."

The founder of the group is a former engineer in China's People's Liberation Army and this has led to concerns of close links with the Chinese military and government, which Huawei has consistently denied.

US authorities have even asked the Australian government not to use Huawei equipment to deploy super-fast 5G wireless networks in the country, according to Australian media.

"We have seen concerns however no solid facts," Hu told reporters at Barcelona's Mobile World Congress, the world's largest mobile phone show, according to an English translation of his comments in Chinese.

"Discussions and debate must be based on fact, not suspicion..." he said.

"Huawei's HQ is based in China and if that's enough to be seen as a group that can't be trusted, it can be quite problematic," he added.

"We provide products for 400 operators, we have a very strong track record regarding security. Security is one of our top priorities."

Asked about the first deployments of 5G, the next generation of mobile phone technology that promise to be quick enough to download a full length film in less than a second, Hu said commercialisation was expected to begin before the end of the year.

He said Huawei has 45 signed contracts for 5G pre-commercialisation around the world, with large-scale trials in London, Vancouver, Tokyo and Seoul.

els/mbx/mck/rl

AT&T CORPORATION


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CYBER WARS
Microsoft data warrant case in top US court has global implications
Washington (AFP) Feb 26, 2018
Microsoft faces off with the US government before the Supreme Court Tuesday over a warrant for data stored abroad that has important ramifications for law enforcement in the age of global computing. The case, which dates back to 2013, involves a US warrant ordering Microsoft to turn over the contents of an email account used by a suspected drug trafficker, whose data is stored in a cloud computing center in Ireland. It has been watched closely because of its implications for privacy and surveill ... read more

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