\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>BEIJING: China's government accused Washington on Tuesday of pursuing \"technology hegemony\" following news reports the United States might step up pressure on tech giant Huawei<\/a> by blocking all access to American suppliers.

The possible move, reported by Bloomberg News, The Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal, would tighten restrictions imposed in 2019 that limit Huawei's access to processor
chips<\/a> and other technology. The company, which makes network equipment and smartphones, was allowed to buy some less-advanced components.

Huawei Technologies Ltd.<\/a>, China's first global tech brand, is at the center of conflict between Washington and Beijing over technology and security. U.S. officials say Huawei is a security risk and might facilitate Chinese spying, an accusation the company denies.

\"China is gravely concerned about the reports,\" said a foreign ministry spokeswoman, Mao Ning. She accused Washington of \"over-stretching the concept of national security and abusing state power\" to suppress Chinese competitors.

\"Such practices are contrary to the principles of market economy\" and are \"blatant technological hegemony,\" Mao said.

Mao said Beijing would \"defend the legitimate rights\" of its companies but gave no indication how the government might respond. Beijing has made similar declarations after past U.S. action against its companies but often does nothing.

The ban on sales of advanced U.S. processor chips and music, maps and other services from Alphabet Inc.'s
Google<\/a> unit crippled Huawei's smartphone business. The company sold its low-end Honor smartphone brand to revive sales by separating it from the sanctions on its corporate parent.

The Commerce Department agreed to grant export licenses to U.S. companies to allow them to sell less-advanced chips and other technology to Huawei that was deemed not to be a security risk. That followed complaints suppliers would lose billions of dollars in annual sales.

The Biden administration is considering no longer granting such licenses, although no decision has been made, the news outlets reported, citing unidentified people familiar with official deliberations.

Huawei scrambled to remove U.S. components from its network and other products and has launched new business lines serving factories, self-driving cars and other industrial customers. The company hopes those are less vulnerable to U.S. pressure.

Huawei says its business is starting to rebound.

\"In 2020, we successfully pulled ourselves out of crisis mode,\"
Eric Xu<\/a>, one of three Huawei executives who take turns as chairman, said in a December letter to employees. \"U.S. restrictions are now our new normal, and we're back to business as usual.\"

Last year's revenue was forecast to be little-changed from 2021 at 636.9 billion yuan ($91.6 billion), Xu said.

<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":97499980,"title":"Spotify shares jump on bullish outlook as more users tune in","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/spotify-shares-jump-on-bullish-outlook-as-more-users-tune-in\/97499980","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":97500063,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"China accuses Washington of wanting 'technological hegemony'","synopsis":"The possible move, reported by Bloomberg News, The Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal, would tighten restrictions imposed in 2019 that limit Huawei's access to processor chips and other technology. The company, which makes network equipment and smartphones, was allowed to buy some less-advanced components.","titleseo":"telecomnews\/china-accuses-washington-of-wanting-technological-hegemony","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":213,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":327000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"AP","artdate":"2023-01-31 21:16:03","lastupd":"2023-01-31 21:18:36","breadcrumbTags":["huawei","google","eric xu","huawei technologies ltd.","chips","Huawei Technologies","devices"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/china-accuses-washington-of-wanting-technological-hegemony"}}" data-authors="[" "]" data-category-name="" data-category_id="" data-date="2023-01-31" data-index="article_1">

中国指责美国政府希望“技术霸权”

可能移动,彭博社报道,英国《金融时报》和《华尔街日报》将在2019年收紧限制限制华乐动扑克为的处理器芯片和其他技术。该公司,这使得网络设备和智能手机,被允许买一些欠发达的组件。

  • 更新2023年1月31日09:18点坚持
阅读: 100年行业专业人士
读者的形象读到100年行业专业人士
北京:中国政府周二指责华盛顿追求“技术霸权”的新闻报道美国科技巨头可能加大压力乐动扑克华为通过阻断所有访问美国的供应商。

可能移动,彭博社报道,英国《金融时报》和《华尔街日报》将在2019年收紧限制限制华乐动扑克为的处理器芯片和其他技术。该公司,这使得网络设备和智能手机,被允许买一些欠发达的组件。

华为技术有限公司中国首个全球科技品牌,华盛顿和北京之间的冲突的中心在技术和安全。美国官员说,华为是一个安全风险,并可能促进中国间谍,指责该公司对此予以否认。

广告
“中国是严重关注报道,”外交部发言人说,毛宁。她指责华盛顿“过度扩张国家安全的概念和滥用国家权力”压制中国竞争对手。

”这样的做法是违背市场经济”的原则,“公然科技霸权,”毛说。

毛说中国政府将“保护合法权益”的公司,但没有迹象表明政府如何回应。中国政府发表了类似的声明在过去美国对其公司但往往什么也不做。

美国禁止销售先进的处理器芯片和音乐、地图和其他服务从字母Inc .)谷歌单位瘫痪华为的智能手机业务。该公司出售了其荣誉低端智能手机品牌重振销售通过将它从对企业母公司的制裁。

美国商务部同意给予美国公司出口许可证,允许他们欠发达芯片和其他技术卖给华为,被认为是不安全的风险。随后投诉供应商将失去数十亿美元的年销售额。

拜登政府正在考虑不再发放许可证,虽然没有做出决定,新闻媒体的报道,不愿透露姓名的知情人士透露,官方评议。乐动扑克

华为争相消除美国从其网络组件和其他产品,推出了新的业务服务工厂,无人驾驶汽车和其他工业客户。该公司希望那些不太容易受到美国的压力。

广告
华为表示,其业务已经开始反弹。

“2020年,我们成功地把自己从危机模式,”徐勇三个华为高管之一,轮流担任董事长,说12月给员工。“现在美国限制我们的新常态,我们回到一切如常。”

去年的收入预计将从2021年变化不大6369亿元(916亿美元),徐说。

  • 发表在2023年1月31日09:16点坚持
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\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>BEIJING: China's government accused Washington on Tuesday of pursuing \"technology hegemony\" following news reports the United States might step up pressure on tech giant Huawei<\/a> by blocking all access to American suppliers.

The possible move, reported by Bloomberg News, The Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal, would tighten restrictions imposed in 2019 that limit Huawei's access to processor
chips<\/a> and other technology. The company, which makes network equipment and smartphones, was allowed to buy some less-advanced components.

Huawei Technologies Ltd.<\/a>, China's first global tech brand, is at the center of conflict between Washington and Beijing over technology and security. U.S. officials say Huawei is a security risk and might facilitate Chinese spying, an accusation the company denies.

\"China is gravely concerned about the reports,\" said a foreign ministry spokeswoman, Mao Ning. She accused Washington of \"over-stretching the concept of national security and abusing state power\" to suppress Chinese competitors.

\"Such practices are contrary to the principles of market economy\" and are \"blatant technological hegemony,\" Mao said.

Mao said Beijing would \"defend the legitimate rights\" of its companies but gave no indication how the government might respond. Beijing has made similar declarations after past U.S. action against its companies but often does nothing.

The ban on sales of advanced U.S. processor chips and music, maps and other services from Alphabet Inc.'s
Google<\/a> unit crippled Huawei's smartphone business. The company sold its low-end Honor smartphone brand to revive sales by separating it from the sanctions on its corporate parent.

The Commerce Department agreed to grant export licenses to U.S. companies to allow them to sell less-advanced chips and other technology to Huawei that was deemed not to be a security risk. That followed complaints suppliers would lose billions of dollars in annual sales.

The Biden administration is considering no longer granting such licenses, although no decision has been made, the news outlets reported, citing unidentified people familiar with official deliberations.

Huawei scrambled to remove U.S. components from its network and other products and has launched new business lines serving factories, self-driving cars and other industrial customers. The company hopes those are less vulnerable to U.S. pressure.

Huawei says its business is starting to rebound.

\"In 2020, we successfully pulled ourselves out of crisis mode,\"
Eric Xu<\/a>, one of three Huawei executives who take turns as chairman, said in a December letter to employees. \"U.S. restrictions are now our new normal, and we're back to business as usual.\"

Last year's revenue was forecast to be little-changed from 2021 at 636.9 billion yuan ($91.6 billion), Xu said.

<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":97499980,"title":"Spotify shares jump on bullish outlook as more users tune in","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/spotify-shares-jump-on-bullish-outlook-as-more-users-tune-in\/97499980","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":97500063,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"China accuses Washington of wanting 'technological hegemony'","synopsis":"The possible move, reported by Bloomberg News, The Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal, would tighten restrictions imposed in 2019 that limit Huawei's access to processor chips and other technology. The company, which makes network equipment and smartphones, was allowed to buy some less-advanced components.","titleseo":"telecomnews\/china-accuses-washington-of-wanting-technological-hegemony","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[],"analytics":{"comments":0,"views":213,"shares":0,"engagementtimems":327000},"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"AP","artdate":"2023-01-31 21:16:03","lastupd":"2023-01-31 21:18:36","breadcrumbTags":["huawei","google","eric xu","huawei technologies ltd.","chips","Huawei Technologies","devices"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/china-accuses-washington-of-wanting-technological-hegemony"}}" data-news_link="//www.iser-br.com/news/china-accuses-washington-of-wanting-technological-hegemony/97500063">