June 28, 2020
The Rural Wireless Association has estimated
The Rural Wireless Association has estimated that it would cost USD 800 million
to USD 1 billion for all members to replace equipment purchased from China’s
Huawei and ZTE.Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said in March
2018 that he was proposing banning the use of money from its Universal Service
Fund to buy equipment or services from companies that pose a security threat to
US communications networks.The Universal Service Fund subsidizes equipment used
to provide service in four programs, including some rural or hard-to-reach
areas, libraries and schools and a program that helps low-income consumers get
phone service.Huawei also argued in the filing that banning its equipment from
sale in the United States "would likely violate" US obligations to the World
Trade Organization.Huawei argued in a filing to the FCC Wednesday that the
proposed rule would do nothing to protect national security, and could
destabilize rural networks if they are required to rip out Huawei equipment they
installed years ago. Pai identified Huawei as a company of concern in a letter
to Congress."The Commission should not allow unsubstantiated ‘national security
concerns’ to serve as a pretext for potential violation of long-standing
international trade agreements, especially since such targeted actions would
fail to address supply chain security concerns effectively," the company said in
the filing. Huawei has denied that it would help China spy. But recent actions
by the United States government are only one step away from doing so," Huawei
said in its filing. A commissioner also asked for comment on whether existing
gear from companies of concern should be China
NMRV Worm Gear reducer Manufacturers removed from US telecommunications
networks.Missouri’s Mark Twain Communications, for example, also noted in a
recent filing that it would be difficult for the companies to determine which
suppliers it should avoid because they may in the future pose a national
security threat..The US government has also angered China by putting Huawei on a
blacklist that would ban US companies from doing business with the Chinese firm.
National security experts worry that "back doors" in routers, switches and other
Huawei equipment could allow China to spy on US communications.Rural carriers
have also opposed the bar on using Universal Service Fund monies on Huawei
equipment, which is often cheaper than competitors."Huawei cannot and will not
sabotage its customer networks.China’s Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, the world’s
biggest telecoms equipment maker, argued on Wednesday that Washington should
scrap plans to prohibit wireless companies from using US government funds to buy
Huawei gear for their networks.The rule has not gone into effect, although Pai
reiterated support for it in a congressional hearing last month.Huawei also said
in the filing that it had sought to meet with FCC commissioners to discuss the
rule-making but were rebuffed.Huawei has been battling the US government for
more than a year
Posted by: wormad at
03:21 AM
| No Comments
| Add Comment
Post contains 474 words, total size 3 kb.
<< Page 1 of 1 >>
9kb generated in CPU 0.0062, elapsed 0.0309 seconds.
30 queries taking 0.0266 seconds, 41 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.
30 queries taking 0.0266 seconds, 41 records returned.
Powered by Minx 1.1.6c-pink.