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by guiltygatorade
3082 days ago
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How about we put it this way: Both Chinese and US consumers lose when their respective governments engage in arbitrary protectionism. You can find his comments "ironic" all you want, that doesn't mean his complaint doesn't have any merit. It's like if Kid A complained about how getting bullied by Kid B's older brother sucks and you're like HA your complaint is laughable and insane because Kid A's brother is a bully, too! If you presented evidence on why it's reasonable to suspect Huawei for being complicit in espionage in their hardware devices (and why other countries don't seem to be that worried about it), then you'd have a compelling counterpoint. |
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[1] Former head of CIA: Huawei engaged in espionage for Chinese state:
https://www.csmonitor.com/Technology/2013/0719/Former-head-o...
[2] Huawei spied, US federal jury finds:
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2017/05/19/huawei_spied_us_jur...
[3] U.S. Suspicions of China's Huawei Based Partly on NSA's Own Spy Tricks
https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/computing/hardware/us-su...
I agree entirely with your point that there is fault on both sides here. That's precisely what makes it ironic (see [3], in particular!). A better analogy would be that Kid A is bullying Kid B, and in response, Kid B starts bullying back. Ideally, this causes Kid A to "get a taste of his own medicine" and stops bullying Kid B.
That's how I hope the situation will end up, at least.