Article 49XS6 UK Suggests US Worries About Huawei Spying Are Being Overblown

UK Suggests US Worries About Huawei Spying Are Being Overblown

by
Karl Bode
from Techdirt on (#49XS6)
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So, while there's really no denying that Chinese smartphone and network gearmaker Huawei engages in some clearly sketchy behavior, it's not anything that can't be matched by our own, home-grown sketchy telecom companies. And while the Trump administration has been engaged in a widespread effort to blackball Huawei gear from the American market based on allegations of spying on Americans, nobody's been able to provide a shred of public evidence that this actually occurs. At the same time, we tend to ignore the fact that the United States broke into Huawei to steal code and implant backdoors as early as 2007.

In short, this subject is more complicated that the blindly-nationalistic U.S. press coverage tends to indicate, and a not-insubstantial portion of this hand-wringing is driven by good old-fashioned protectionism.

Throughout this whole thing, Huawei executives have been right to note that in the decade-plus of these allegations and hand-wringing, you'd think some security researcher would have been able to prove that Huawei gear is spying on Americans wholesale. And last week, as news emerged that the Trump administration was finally considering a full domestic ban on using Huawei gear, our closest surveillance allies in the UK made it clear that the Huawei threat is likely being overstated by the United States:

The United Kingdom could undermine an American-led campaign to keep Chinese tech company Huawei out of super-fast 5G mobile networks around the world. The National Cyber Security Centre, part of the UK intelligence service, has concluded that there are ways to limit the risks of using Huawei to build next-generation wireless networks, according to a report by the Financial Times.

The report reiterated past concerns that while some Huwei gear may pose a security threat, it's likely because the products can sometimes be shitty, but not because they're being intentionally backdoored by the Chinese government:

If anybody knows just how Huawei works and the threat it might pose to the UK's security, it is the National Cyber Security Centre.

This arm of GCHQ has been in charge of an annual examination of the Chinese telecoms giant's equipment, and expressed concerns in its most recent report - not about secret backdoors, but sloppy cyber-security practices.

That's of course pretty common with most hardware coming out of China (especially in the internet of things space), which sort of makes the point that the Chinese don't need backdoors in Huawei gear to spy on Americans, since we're willfully putting a wide variety of shitty, half-baked IOT gear on our networks, providing industrious hackers and intelligence agencies an entire universe of attack vectors into millions of U.S. homes and businesses. Still, the solution for this is to only install gear you know to be secure, not by banning an entire company from doing business (something we aren't all that keen on when it happens to us).

If you've paid attention, U.S. gearmakers have been ginning up Huawei security fears for years, simply because they don't want to have to compete with cheaper gear. The Trump administration appears pretty happy to play along, dressing up simple protectionism as national security. And because the U.S. tech press often can't see past its own patriotism, it's coming along for the ride. Again, none of this is to say that Huawei doesn't engage in sketchy shit, just that if we're going to blackball a company for spying--providing some actual evidence of said spying is a pretty important first step.



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