FCC says Huawei and ZTE are national security threats
The FCC wants to make it patently obvious that Huawei and
ZTE are personas non grata in American telecom networks. The regulator has
formally labeled Huawei and ZTE as “national security threats,” finally barring
carriers from using their Universal Service Fund money to buy or maintain any
products from the two Chinese companies.
The move is partly symbolic when the
US government’s blacklisting makes the hardware difficult to buy regardless,
but it does further close a door that was very nearly shut.
FCC Chairman Ajit Pai said the order stemmed from an
“overwhelming weight of evidence,” pointing to reportedly close ties to China’s
government and their requirement to honor Chinese laws requiring they cooperate
with spy services.
There hasn’t been much in the way of technical evidence to
support the claims, however. US officials have largely remained tight-lipped on
what (if anything) Huawei and ZTE have done. Reports emerged in February that
Huawei could allegedly access carrier backdoors, but the company rejected that
claim by noting that any access was tightly regulated.
As with the FCC’s original order in November, the security
threat label isn’t great news for smaller telecoms that bought Huawei or ZTE
gear to save money and now face the prospect of replacing the hardware with
offerings from other countries. The FCC hopes to reimburse those providers, but
it’s still a pain if they built significant portions of their network with
Chinese equipment.
Comments
Post a Comment