Huawei denies US espionage allegations

Huawei denies US espionage allegations

Juan Bonora, the firm’s vice president in Argentina, said there was no evidence and that their networks had been checked.

Juan Bonora
Juan Bonora

Chinese company huawei Remains steadfast in what he has argued since the 2018 conflict with the United States began: It There is no evidence to substantiate the alleged espionage, for which their presence has been restricted in various countries.

“So far there has been no evidence of such allegations. Huawei and its networks have been audited, and even NESAS – a global network security standard – has confirmed that Huawei is a provider of secure 5G networks. “Data is what speaks to the security of our networks, not speech,” he said in a dialogue ᲔᲠᲘ Juan Bonora, Vice President of Huawei Argentina.

Regarding blocks in some countries, Bonora said the company knows and recognizes that there are nations and operators who decide not to buy its network equipment. “Sovereignty and the free market are concepts that we do not use in any way, unlike some companies and countries. Nevertheless, Huawei is a leader in the supply of 5G networks in the world. “And after almost 40 years on the market, our customers trust our solutions and continue to make our choices for our security, technology, support and guarantee,” he added.

On the other hand, the manager noted that Open RAN (Technology proposed by the United States) is not a standard but a way of manufacturing network equipment “It is not supported by all manufacturers or supports network operators who see many difficulties in this concept.” “Because there are so many companies to build a team, when failure appears, they do not know who to complain to. There are also doubts about data security. If a piece of equipment is made by several companies, who guarantees or is responsible for the safety of each part and the parts as a whole? He asked himself.

Finally, he said that Huawei believes that what the industry and countries need is to meet the global 5G standard. “There is no Chinese 5G or European 5G. There is a global 5G. All manufacturers must comply with the global 5G regulation defined by members from all over the world, grouped into 3GPP (Third Generation Partnership Project), which sets international standards above 3G. “Moreover, the United States and China, by the way, are part of that definition,” he concluded.

Source: La Nacion

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