Industry Veteran Wei Shi Moves To Head Up Telecoms.com Intelligence
Industry Veteran Wei Shi Moves To Head Up Telecoms.com Intelligence ->->->-> https://urllio.com/2teLLa
Between December 2018 and January 2019, German and British intelligence agencies initially pushed back against the US' allegations, stating that after examining Huawei's 5G hardware and accompanying source code, they have found no evidence of malevolence and that a ban would therefore be unwarranted.[193][194] Additionally, the head of Britain's National Cyber Security Centre (the information security arm of GCHQ) stated that the US has not managed to provide the UK with any proof of its allegations against Huawei and also their agency had concluded that any risks involving Huawei in UK's telecom networks are \"manageable\".[195][194] The Huawei Cyber Security Evaluation Centre (HCSEC), set up in 2010 to assuage security fears as it examined Huawei hardware and software for the UK market, was staffed largely by employees from Huawei but with regular oversight from GCHQ, which led to questions of operating independence from Huawei.[196] On 1 October 2020, an official report released by National Cyber Security Centre noted that \"Huawei has failed to adequately tackle security flaws in equipment used in the UK's telecoms networks despite previous complaints\", and flagged one vulnerability of \"national significance\" related to broadband in 2019. The report concluded that Huawei was not confident of implementing the five-year plan of improving its software engineering processes, so there was \"limited assurance that all risks to UK national security\" could be mitigated in the long-term.[197] On 14 July 2020, the United Kingdom Government announced a ban on the use of company's 5G network equipment, citing security concerns.[198] In October 2020, the British Defence Select Committee announced that it had found evidence of Huawei's collusion with the Chinese state and that it supported accelerated purging of Huawei equipment from Britain's telecom infrastructure by 2025, since they concluded that Huawei had \"engaged in a variety of intelligence, security, and intellectual property activities\" despite its repeated denials.[169][199] In November 2020, Huawei challenged the UK government's decision, citing an Oxford Economics report that it had contributed 3.3 billion to the UK's GDP.[200] 153554b96e
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