Huawei will consume Apple's lost Chinese smartphone market share, says JP Morgan

Posted:
in AAPL Investors edited May 2019
While Huawei is going to take a giant hit worldwide from US sanctions, Apple in China will likely see a drop in shipments for 2019, resulting in sales less than half the levels seen at its peak in 2015, says JP Morgan.




Throughout May, Huawei has been hit by a number of attacks from the U.S. government, including a sales ban that prevents it from acquiring technology from US companies without governmental permission, as well as one preventing U.S. firms from using Huawei's equipment. In a note to investors from JP Morgan seen by AppleInsider, analysts are trying to work out how this will impact the Chinese tech company in the rest of the smartphone market, as well as competitors working within China.

Citing supply chain issues where Huawei is seeing shortages in some "insignificant components," JP Morgan suggests Huawei has between 6 and 12 months of stock on hand to continue building its devices, but even that has its limitations.

There is also the issue of Huawei's global sales being affected by the U.S. ban, as it can affect elements like the availability of Google Mobile Services, a key selling point for Android devices. JP Morgan's shipment estimates were previously 120 million units for China and 130 million for the international market in 2019, but now they have been reconfigured to slip internationally to 90 million while domestic support for the company could raise shipments to 130 million.

In effect, this represents a downward estimate from 250 million units shipped in 2019 to 220 million units.

As the dominant Chinese smartphone brand internationally, JP Morgan suggests other brands could stand to benefit, but it is unclear which out of Oppo, Vivo, or Xiaomi could gain the most. Domestically, Huawei is tipped to benefit from consumer sentiment to gain market share from Apple and other international brands, but it may also affect its local competition as well.

JP Morgan's chart based on its own estimates ad IDC data for Apple and Huawei regional shipments
JP Morgan's chart based on its own estimates ad IDC data for Apple and Huawei regional shipments


Based on IDC and JP Morgan estimates, shipments for Apple in China are expected to reach 27.8 million units for 2019, down from the 36.3 million in 2018 and less than half the 58.4 million units shipped in the market in 2015. Meanwhile, Huawei's shipments for China are expected to grow to 110.1 million units in 2019, a 5 million unit year-on-year increase for the company.

JP Morgan did not pass comment in the note as to why Apple will see lower shipments in 2019, but other analysts and reports have suggested Chinese consumers and businesses may push to buy Huawei devices instead of iPhones, as a way to support the company.

The prospect of a retaliatory ban on Apple products by the Chinese government is also a possibility, one which would certainly dent Apple's sales in the region, and could cost the company up to 29 percent of its revenue if such activity took place.

Huawei founder and CEO Ren Zhengei has publicly opposed the idea of a Chinese retaliatory ban on Apple.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 19
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    AppleInsider said:
    JP Morgan did not pass comment in the note as to why Apple will see lower shipments in 2019, but other analysts and reports have suggested Chinese consumers and businesses may push to buy Huawei devices instead of iPhones, as a way to support the company.
    And I suppose it would be too much to expect Americans to support Apple the same way while this is going on. 
    firelockjony0
  • Reply 2 of 19
    maestro64maestro64 Posts: 5,043member
    Assuming Huawei is able to buy US chip technologies they use in their phone, keep in no US company including other non-Chinese company are allow to sell technology to Huawei without US government permission. Not everything in a Huawei phone is made solely by Huawei or another Chinese company. Yeah they can knock it off but that will take time, in the mean time that have to be able to make a phone to take any business loss by Apple.
  • Reply 3 of 19
    jdgazjdgaz Posts: 403member
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    jbdragon
  • Reply 4 of 19
    jbdragonjbdragon Posts: 2,305member
    maestro64 said:
    Assuming Huawei is able to buy US chip technologies they use in their phone, keep in no US company including other non-Chinese company are allow to sell technology to Huawei without US government permission. Not everything in a Huawei phone is made solely by Huawei or another Chinese company. Yeah they can knock it off but that will take time, in the mean time that have to be able to make a phone to take any business loss by Apple.
    Huawei is going to have serious issues. They can't just buy Qualcomm CPU's to throw into their phones. They currently make their own of course, based on ARM. But they also no longer have access to them, so upgrading their CPU's will become a issue in time. Corning and Gorilla Glass for the screens? They may have a lot of some parts and not much of many other parts. There are a lot of parts that go into making a phone. They are not in good shape. I don't see them effecting Apple. The Chinese people on the other hand?!?!

    ZTE and other Chinese brands that are NOT banned, they could gain more sales and take some of Apple's.
    edited May 2019
  • Reply 5 of 19
    avon b7avon b7 Posts: 7,621member
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
  • Reply 6 of 19
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,309member
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    StrangeDays
  • Reply 7 of 19
    avon b7avon b7 Posts: 7,621member
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
  • Reply 8 of 19
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,309member
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    edited May 2019 StrangeDays
  • Reply 9 of 19
    sflocalsflocal Posts: 6,092member
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    You show us any neutral 3rd party report that shows how the U.S. has stolen Chinese IP and then you might have something shaky to stand on.  

    I've lost track over the years (decades) the number of articles and news reports (not from our government) that specifically talked about how Huawei blatantly steals other's tech and thinks it's no problem to do so.  Sure, you can attempt to distract by questioning the motives of all those incidents, but truth doesn't care whether you think it's a lie or not.

    And don't get me started about Chinese nationals coming to our country, learning at our universities, and getting caught and arrested for attempting to smuggle company secrets back to the homeland.  

    But sure.. go right ahead and find incidents of the U.S. doing it on anywhere near the level of what China does.  I'll wait... laughing.
    StrangeDays
  • Reply 10 of 19
    avon b7avon b7 Posts: 7,621member
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    I don't normally go sifting through links for things I've already posted in the past so this is simply the first result from Google:

    https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2014/03/nsa_hacks_huawe.html

    Of course, Snowden and Huawei themselves have since mentioned illicit US government activity.
  • Reply 11 of 19
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,309member
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    I don't normally go sifting through links for things I've already posted in the past so this is simply the first result from Google:

    https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2014/03/nsa_hacks_huawe.html

    Of course, Snowden and Huawei themselves have since mentioned illicit US government activity.
    So, they hacked Huawei. BFD. That's what National Security Agencies do, whatever the country. China does exactly the same to the U.S. and other countries, and have certainly gained a hell of a lot of IP from that venture.

    Did the U.S. steal any Huawei IP?

    No. 
  • Reply 12 of 19
    suddenly newtonsuddenly newton Posts: 13,819member

    JP Morgan did not pass comment in the note as to why Apple will see lower shipments in 2019

    So they just assert that it will?
  • Reply 13 of 19
    StrangeDaysStrangeDays Posts: 12,834member
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    I don't normally go sifting through links for things I've already posted in the past so this is simply the first result from Google:

    https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2014/03/nsa_hacks_huawe.html

    Of course, Snowden and Huawei themselves have since mentioned illicit US government activity.
    The NSA spying isn’t IP theft. Your knockoff hero has earned itself a reputation for ripping people off. When confronted with proof of plagiarism of Cisco materials containing the same exact typos, comrade Ren said it was “coincidence”.

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/huaweis-yearslong-rise-is-littered-with-accusations-of-theft-and-dubious-ethics-11558756858

    Your boy steals. 
    edited May 2019 tmay
  • Reply 14 of 19
    avon b7avon b7 Posts: 7,621member
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    I don't normally go sifting through links for things I've already posted in the past so this is simply the first result from Google:

    https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2014/03/nsa_hacks_huawe.html

    Of course, Snowden and Huawei themselves have since mentioned illicit US government activity.
    So, they hacked Huawei. BFD. That's what National Security Agencies do, whatever the country. China does exactly the same to the U.S. and other countries, and have certainly gained a hell of a lot of IP from that venture.

    Did the U.S. steal any Huawei IP?

    No. 
    How could you possibly know they didn't?

    But from the link:

    "getting copies of the company's products' source code"

    IP you say?

    Also from the linked article:

    "The Huawei revelations are devastating rebuttals to hypocritical U.S. complaints about Chinese penetration of U.S. networks, and also make USG protestations about not stealing intellectual property to help U.S. firms' competitiveness seem like the self-serving hairsplitting that it is. (I have elaborated on these points many times and will not repeat them here.) "The irony is that exactly what they are doing to us is what they have always charged that the Chinese are doing through us," says a Huawei Executive."

    What we see here is "we can spy on you and that's ok". On top of that though we have: "although we have the right to do it - you don't, and although we spent the best part of a decade trying to find evidence to support our national security accusations against Huawei but came up largely empty handed (in spite of the hacked info!), couldn't convince our allies to ban them without said evidence and even put US bans in place, we still want to do everything possible to make sure the company doesn't progress further and extend its tech lead and will order foreign companies to obey us to reach our goals."

    The US says Huawei is 'dangerous'. No sir. It is the US government that is dangerous.

    China has just complained to the WTO about Trump's actions. It also brought up the issue of Australia earlier on:

    https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d414d78517a4d34457a6333566d54/index.html
    edited May 2019
  • Reply 15 of 19
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,309member
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    I don't normally go sifting through links for things I've already posted in the past so this is simply the first result from Google:

    https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2014/03/nsa_hacks_huawe.html

    Of course, Snowden and Huawei themselves have since mentioned illicit US government activity.
    So, they hacked Huawei. BFD. That's what National Security Agencies do, whatever the country. China does exactly the same to the U.S. and other countries, and have certainly gained a hell of a lot of IP from that venture.

    Did the U.S. steal any Huawei IP?

    No. 
    How could you possibly know they didn't?

    But from the link:

    "getting copies of the company's products' source code"

    IP you say?

    Also from the linked article:

    "The Huawei revelations are devastating rebuttals to hypocritical U.S. complaints about Chinese penetration of U.S. networks, and also make USG protestations about not stealing intellectual property to help U.S. firms' competitiveness seem like the self-serving hairsplitting that it is. (I have elaborated on these points many times and will not repeat them here.) "The irony is that exactly what they are doing to us is what they have always charged that the Chinese are doing through us," says a Huawei Executive."

    What we see here is "we can spy on you and that's ok". On top of that though we have: "although we have the right to do it - you don't, and although we spent the best part of a decade trying to find evidence to support our national security accusations against Huawei but came up largely empty handed (in spite of the hacked info!), couldn't convince our allies to ban them without said evidence and even put US bans in place, we still want to do everything possible to make sure the company doesn't progress further and extend its tech lead and will order foreign companies to obey us to reach our goals."

    The US says Huawei is 'dangerous'. No sir. It is the US government that is dangerous.

    China has just complained to the WTO about Trump's actions. It also brought up the issue of Australia earlier on:

    https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d414d78517a4d34457a6333566d54/index.html
    Okay,

    Your link;


    "ABOUT US - China Global Television Network

    CGTN, See the difference

    Who we are

    China Global Television Network, or CGTN, is an international media organization launched by CCTV on December 31, 2016. It is now part of China's predominant radio and television broadcaster, China Media Group, which has incorporated CCTV, CNR and CRI since March 2018.

    As a multi-language and multi-platform media organization, CGTN operates in television and online. It also incorporates a video news agency CCTV+. 

    Headquartered in Beijing, CGTN has an international team of professionals based around the world with production centers located in Nairobi, Washington D.C. and London. 

    CGTN's six TV channels – English, Spanish, French, Arabic, Russian and Documentary – are available in more than 170 countries and regions worldwide. 

    CGTN, a pioneer of media convergence in China, also delivers content through digital platforms. CGTN Digital is accessible via CGTN.com, CGTN mobile applications, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Weibo and other social media platforms, with over 150 million followers across the globe.

    The CGTN media convergence center endeavors to create a world-leading news content brand, integrating various media assets, technologies and management resources. From multimedia journalism to news cloud sharing, from tailored production to multiple delivery channels, it's designed to maximize the efficiency of content production.

    Our mission

    CGTN seeks to cover China and the world, reporting the news from a global perspective. It seeks to offer a distinctive alternative to the international information flow. CGTN aims to differentiate itself from other media organizations by providing more balanced reporting. The platforms focus on nations, regions, and stories that are often underreported by other international media."


    You keep linking to PRC sources. Why is that?


    here'a an audio link specifically about the WTO from an Australian perspective;


    https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/am/china-brings-huawei-complaint-to-wto-australia-stands-by-ban/11002700


    Basically, the WTO has a very broad National Security Exception, and that is what Australia, and the others that have or will ban Huawei, will use.



    edited May 2019
  • Reply 16 of 19
    ivanhivanh Posts: 597member
    What’s the point to use a $999 mobile phone when 5G + IoT + IPV6 is available at a very cheap price? Who says communication in the 5G era will still need a smart phone. Huawei can take this threat, as an opportunity to focus on Edge Computing development. Will others are still enhancing Bluetooth, ARM chips, SD etc., IoT needs a complete paradigm shift of mindset and technology suite. Thus, Huawei has founded the Edge Computing Consortium, located in China, unable to ban by those like Intel, which is just a member of the consortium. While Amazon is still working on the mature cloud-Computing technology, Huawei is already a step ahead towards edge-Computing era. 

    Ban Huawei, Trump needs better people around.
  • Reply 17 of 19
    jumejume Posts: 209member
    The best option right now for Huawei is to go 100% open source. And I think that will happen, and that is the road to win. Consumers will win!
  • Reply 18 of 19
    avon b7avon b7 Posts: 7,621member
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    I don't normally go sifting through links for things I've already posted in the past so this is simply the first result from Google:

    https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2014/03/nsa_hacks_huawe.html

    Of course, Snowden and Huawei themselves have since mentioned illicit US government activity.
    So, they hacked Huawei. BFD. That's what National Security Agencies do, whatever the country. China does exactly the same to the U.S. and other countries, and have certainly gained a hell of a lot of IP from that venture.

    Did the U.S. steal any Huawei IP?

    No. 
    How could you possibly know they didn't?

    But from the link:

    "getting copies of the company's products' source code"

    IP you say?

    Also from the linked article:

    "The Huawei revelations are devastating rebuttals to hypocritical U.S. complaints about Chinese penetration of U.S. networks, and also make USG protestations about not stealing intellectual property to help U.S. firms' competitiveness seem like the self-serving hairsplitting that it is. (I have elaborated on these points many times and will not repeat them here.) "The irony is that exactly what they are doing to us is what they have always charged that the Chinese are doing through us," says a Huawei Executive."

    What we see here is "we can spy on you and that's ok". On top of that though we have: "although we have the right to do it - you don't, and although we spent the best part of a decade trying to find evidence to support our national security accusations against Huawei but came up largely empty handed (in spite of the hacked info!), couldn't convince our allies to ban them without said evidence and even put US bans in place, we still want to do everything possible to make sure the company doesn't progress further and extend its tech lead and will order foreign companies to obey us to reach our goals."

    The US says Huawei is 'dangerous'. No sir. It is the US government that is dangerous.

    China has just complained to the WTO about Trump's actions. It also brought up the issue of Australia earlier on:

    https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d414d78517a4d34457a6333566d54/index.html
    Okay,

    Your link;


    "ABOUT US - China Global Television Network

    CGTN, See the difference

    Who we are

    China Global Television Network, or CGTN, is an international media organization launched by CCTV on December 31, 2016. It is now part of China's predominant radio and television broadcaster, China Media Group, which has incorporated CCTV, CNR and CRI since March 2018.

    As a multi-language and multi-platform media organization, CGTN operates in television and online. It also incorporates a video news agency CCTV+. 

    Headquartered in Beijing, CGTN has an international team of professionals based around the world with production centers located in Nairobi, Washington D.C. and London. 

    CGTN's six TV channels – English, Spanish, French, Arabic, Russian and Documentary – are available in more than 170 countries and regions worldwide. 

    CGTN, a pioneer of media convergence in China, also delivers content through digital platforms. CGTN Digital is accessible via CGTN.com, CGTN mobile applications, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Weibo and other social media platforms, with over 150 million followers across the globe.

    The CGTN media convergence center endeavors to create a world-leading news content brand, integrating various media assets, technologies and management resources. From multimedia journalism to news cloud sharing, from tailored production to multiple delivery channels, it's designed to maximize the efficiency of content production.

    Our mission

    CGTN seeks to cover China and the world, reporting the news from a global perspective. It seeks to offer a distinctive alternative to the international information flow. CGTN aims to differentiate itself from other media organizations by providing more balanced reporting. The platforms focus on nations, regions, and stories that are often underreported by other international media."


    You keep linking to PRC sources. Why is that?


    here'a an audio link specifically about the WTO from an Australian perspective;


    https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/am/china-brings-huawei-complaint-to-wto-australia-stands-by-ban/11002700


    Basically, the WTO has a very broad National Security Exception, and that is what Australia, and the others that have or will ban Huawei, will use.



    You are flaying about wildly in search of a way out of the mess you have got yourself into.

    You point to somewhere and when you are shown there is really nothing there, you immediately leave that point and simply point somewhere else! 

    First you question the availability of links to support what I said - in spite of me having placed innumerable links on the subject (and directed at you specifically!) in other threads on the subject. I indulged you with a link.

    Then you try to poo poo it while simultaneously ignoring the main opinion piece of the link which was also relevant. Not only that but you didn't read it properly. This last point wouldn't be an issue if you didn't have the habit of of telling other people their reading comprehension is terrible (even when it is not true). Anyway the root reason for your subsequent post was to simply point somewhere else:

    "Did the U.S steal any Huawei IP? No"

    I asked you how you could make that affirmation but, yes, you guessed it, you didn't have an answer for that and simply pointed somewhere else! The news organisation that provided the piece I linked too.

    Well, let's forget you not having an answer for your claim and focus on the claim itself. Why? Because it was dealt with in my original link and I even brought that to your attention (I quoted the text in the link). However, once again you simply dropped that line and pointed somewhere else!

    Ok, now we reach your last post with a lot of copy pasting. All irrelevant.

    First, you should be getting your news from a wide array of sources which necessarily include biased sources, propaganda machines or the horse's mouth (Trump tweets for example). Then it is up to you to make sense of what you have. It is also important to see who actually wrote a particular piece (independently of the vehicle that delivered it). 

    In this particular case, in your haste to invalidate the the vehicle in question, you completely forgot who actually wrote it!

    Let's recap. We have the backdrop of protectionist measures by the U.S government against China/Huawei. We have U.S pressure on Five Eyes members of which Australia is a member and the resulting ban of Huawei in some communications areas in Australia. The ban is being questioned on legal grounds.

    The piece I linked to was not penned by the CGTN. It was penned by Zhou Weihuan.

    So, who is he?

    Let me bring you up to speed by copy/pasting the very first paragraph of the piece:


    Editor's note: Zhou Weihuan is a senior lecturer and member of the Herbert Smith Freehills China International Business and Economic Law (CIBEL) Centre of the Faculty of Law at the University of New South Wales (UNSW Sydney) in Australia, and Kong Qingjiang is the dean of the School of International Law at China University of Political Science and Law. The article reflects the authors' opinion, and not necessarily the views of CGTN.

    What were you saying about poor reading comprehension? Or didn't you bother to read it?

    You didn't even bother to challenge the content of the piece.

    The only question that remains is where you will point to next.

    I hope it isn't the legal side of things because when I mentioned Huawei was considering legal action against the U.S you jumped on that with your 'absolute' claims on the subject. I countered that if they did make moves in the legal arena then Huawei wouldn't agree with you. So, what happened last night? Huawei filed for Summary Judgement on recent events.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/business-48441814

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/29/business/huawei-us-lawsuit.html

    I hope you find those news sources to be valid. ;-)
    edited May 2019
  • Reply 19 of 19
    tmaytmay Posts: 6,309member
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    tmay said:
    avon b7 said:
    jdgaz said:
    And maybe the folks of the USA will finally look at the labels on items and choose to purchase products from countries that don't practice open theft of technology.
    What about the companies that sell components to Chinese businesses and manufacture products in China?

    Wouldn't it make more sense for the decisions to be taken by them instead of consumers?

    That aside, the realities are far more complex than your two line conclusion.

    Do you think the US has not stolen information from Huawei?

    We need to be realistic and a little more understanding of global trade. The US has been fine doing business with China for years. It is only now (with China actually taking the lead in key areas) that Trump has hit the panic button and with it he has severely disrupted world trade.

    Perhaps he should sign an executive order on national security grounds, forcing US companies to pull out of China? 
    "Do you think that the U.S. has not stolen information from Huawei?

    Sure sounds like you now accept that Huawei has stolen IP in the past, and there is certainly a lot of data to that effect. Funny how you throw a canard about the U.S. stealing from Huawei without any evidence at all.

    That's another low bar for you.
    No idea how you reached that conclusion but we know the US has stolen information from Huawei.
    "We know" but you can't provide a link. Heck, you can't even state what was stolen, just some vague handwaving on your part.

    I would agree that the U.S. has spied on Huawei, but stolen IP? Not seeing that.
    I don't normally go sifting through links for things I've already posted in the past so this is simply the first result from Google:

    https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2014/03/nsa_hacks_huawe.html

    Of course, Snowden and Huawei themselves have since mentioned illicit US government activity.
    So, they hacked Huawei. BFD. That's what National Security Agencies do, whatever the country. China does exactly the same to the U.S. and other countries, and have certainly gained a hell of a lot of IP from that venture.

    Did the U.S. steal any Huawei IP?

    No. 
    How could you possibly know they didn't?

    But from the link:

    "getting copies of the company's products' source code"

    IP you say?

    Also from the linked article:

    "The Huawei revelations are devastating rebuttals to hypocritical U.S. complaints about Chinese penetration of U.S. networks, and also make USG protestations about not stealing intellectual property to help U.S. firms' competitiveness seem like the self-serving hairsplitting that it is. (I have elaborated on these points many times and will not repeat them here.) "The irony is that exactly what they are doing to us is what they have always charged that the Chinese are doing through us," says a Huawei Executive."

    What we see here is "we can spy on you and that's ok". On top of that though we have: "although we have the right to do it - you don't, and although we spent the best part of a decade trying to find evidence to support our national security accusations against Huawei but came up largely empty handed (in spite of the hacked info!), couldn't convince our allies to ban them without said evidence and even put US bans in place, we still want to do everything possible to make sure the company doesn't progress further and extend its tech lead and will order foreign companies to obey us to reach our goals."

    The US says Huawei is 'dangerous'. No sir. It is the US government that is dangerous.

    China has just complained to the WTO about Trump's actions. It also brought up the issue of Australia earlier on:

    https://news.cgtn.com/news/3d3d414d78517a4d34457a6333566d54/index.html
    Okay,

    Your link;


    "ABOUT US - China Global Television Network

    CGTN, See the difference

    Who we are

    China Global Television Network, or CGTN, is an international media organization launched by CCTV on December 31, 2016. It is now part of China's predominant radio and television broadcaster, China Media Group, which has incorporated CCTV, CNR and CRI since March 2018.

    As a multi-language and multi-platform media organization, CGTN operates in television and online. It also incorporates a video news agency CCTV+. 

    Headquartered in Beijing, CGTN has an international team of professionals based around the world with production centers located in Nairobi, Washington D.C. and London. 

    CGTN's six TV channels – English, Spanish, French, Arabic, Russian and Documentary – are available in more than 170 countries and regions worldwide. 

    CGTN, a pioneer of media convergence in China, also delivers content through digital platforms. CGTN Digital is accessible via CGTN.com, CGTN mobile applications, YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, Weibo and other social media platforms, with over 150 million followers across the globe.

    The CGTN media convergence center endeavors to create a world-leading news content brand, integrating various media assets, technologies and management resources. From multimedia journalism to news cloud sharing, from tailored production to multiple delivery channels, it's designed to maximize the efficiency of content production.

    Our mission

    CGTN seeks to cover China and the world, reporting the news from a global perspective. It seeks to offer a distinctive alternative to the international information flow. CGTN aims to differentiate itself from other media organizations by providing more balanced reporting. The platforms focus on nations, regions, and stories that are often underreported by other international media."


    You keep linking to PRC sources. Why is that?


    here'a an audio link specifically about the WTO from an Australian perspective;


    https://www.abc.net.au/radio/programs/am/china-brings-huawei-complaint-to-wto-australia-stands-by-ban/11002700


    Basically, the WTO has a very broad National Security Exception, and that is what Australia, and the others that have or will ban Huawei, will use.



    You are flaying about wildly in search of a way out of the mess you have got yourself into.

    You point to somewhere and when you are shown there is really nothing there, you immediately leave that point and simply point somewhere else! 

    First you question the availability of links to support what I said - in spite of me having placed innumerable links on the subject (and directed at you specifically!) in other threads on the subject. I indulged you with a link.

    Then you try to poo poo it while simultaneously ignoring the main opinion piece of the link which was also relevant. Not only that but you didn't read it properly. This last point wouldn't be an issue if you didn't have the habit of of telling other people their reading comprehension is terrible (even when it is not true). Anyway the root reason for your subsequent post was to simply point somewhere else:

    "Did the U.S steal any Huawei IP? No"

    I asked you how you could make that affirmation but, yes, you guessed it, you didn't have an answer for that and simply pointed somewhere else! The news organisation that provided the piece I linked too.

    Well, let's forget you not having an answer for your claim and focus on the claim itself. Why? Because it was dealt with in my original link and I even brought that to your attention (I quoted the text in the link). However, once again you simply dropped that line and pointed somewhere else!

    Ok, now we reach your last post with a lot of copy pasting. All irrelevant.

    First, you should be getting your news from a wide array of sources which necessarily include biased sources, propaganda machines or the horse's mouth (Trump tweets for example). Then it is up to you to make sense of what you have. It is also important to see who actually wrote a particular piece (independently of the vehicle that delivered it). 

    In this particular case, in your haste to invalidate the the vehicle in question, you completely forgot who actually wrote it!

    Let's recap. We have the backdrop of protectionist measures by the U.S government against China/Huawei. We have U.S pressure on Five Eyes members of which Australia is a member and the resulting ban of Huawei in some communications areas in Australia. The ban is being questioned on legal grounds.

    The piece I linked to was not penned by the CGTN. It was penned by Zhou Weihuan.

    So, who is he?

    Let me bring you up to speed by copy/pasting the very first paragraph of the piece:


    Editor's note: Zhou Weihuan is a senior lecturer and member of the Herbert Smith Freehills China International Business and Economic Law (CIBEL) Centre of the Faculty of Law at the University of New South Wales (UNSW Sydney) in Australia, and Kong Qingjiang is the dean of the School of International Law at China University of Political Science and Law. The article reflects the authors' opinion, and not necessarily the views of CGTN.

    What were you saying about poor reading comprehension? Or didn't you bother to read it?

    You didn't even bother to challenge the content of the piece.

    The only question that remains is where you will point to next.
    Uhm, I actually challenged your two experts, with a link to another expert. Bottom line, the WTO has a broad exemption for National Security, and Australia expects to be able to justify that exemption to the WTO.  Now it may be correct that the WTO disagrees with Australia, but it appears that your experts are wrong on the facts. In fact, the basis of the Australian exemption is that Huawei is very much under the control of the Chinese Government that is the issue. I have posted on that as well.

    You obviously don't consider that CCTV, et al, are propaganda arms of the CCP and Chinese Government, but others do see that as propaganda.

    For the record, Australia, and New Zealand were way ahead of the U.S. in "banning" Huawei, and I would include the Czechs as well in that group.

    Also, National Intelligence Gathering, ie , spying, is distinct from illegal acquisition of IP, and we know that Huawei, and China, are guilty of the latter, and I posted links to that document that. You have been unable to demonstrate that the U.S. has acquired IP illegally from Huawei.

    I'll post this Reuters link, again;

    https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/huawei-usa-campaign/

    "CANBERRA

    In early 2018, in a complex of low-rise buildings in the Australian capital, a team of government hackers was engaging in a destructive digital war game.

    The operatives – agents of the Australian Signals Directorate, the nation’s top-secret eavesdropping agency – had been given a challenge. With all the offensive cyber tools at their disposal, what harm could they inflict if they had access to equipment installed in the 5G network, the next-generation mobile communications technology, of a target nation?

    What the team found, say current and former government officials, was sobering for Australian security and political leaders: The offensive potential of 5G was so great that if Australia were on the receiving end of such attacks, the country could be seriously exposed. The understanding of how 5G could be exploited for spying and to sabotage critical infrastructure changed everything for the Australians, according to people familiar with the deliberations.

    Mike Burgess, the head of the signals directorate, recently explained why the security of fifth generation, or 5G, technology was so important: It will be integral to the communications at the heart of a country's critical infrastructure - everything from electric power to water supplies to sewage, he said in a March speech at a Sydney research institute."

    National Security concerns, hence why you don't buy critical infrastructure from actual or potential adversaries, and China is certainly an adversary.

    edited May 2019
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