86 | FCC `stuns` RWA with immediate USF ban on Huawei (簡訳:FCC、HuaweiでのUSFの即時禁止によりRWAを「気絶」させる) | ----------- | |
FierceWireless: Wireless | 2020-07-02 03:00 | ????0? | |
This webinar looks at how CSPs can gain the agility to port use cases and services from one customer or segment to another, quickly and seamlessly. In the webinar we will examine what agility means for concrete services and use cases, how we can quickly adapt a service for multiple different industries, how catalog based service orchestration and DevOps priniciples bring agility to operations and more.“Given the difficultly in demonstrating where specifically their USF support is being utilized in their networks, this puts rural carriers in a precarious situation,” RWA continued, pointing out that the group is simultaneously working to give customers time to pay bills as requested by the FCC, adjust to changes from the T-Mobile/Sprint merger and keep rural Americans connected during the COVID-19 pandemic.“Both companies have close ties to the Chinese Communist Party and China’s military apparatus, and both companies are broadly subject to Chinese law obligating them to cooperate with the country’s intelligence services,” Pai said in a statement (PDF). “The Bureau also took into account the findings and actions of Congress, the Executive Branch, the intelligence community, our allies, and communications service providers in other countries. We cannot and will not allow the Chinese Communist Party to exploit network vulnerabilities and compromise our critical communications infrastructure.”“Huawei believes this order is unlawful as the FCC has singled out Huawei based on national security, but it provides no evidence that Huawei poses a security risk. Instead, the FCC simply assumes, based on a mistaken view of Chinese law, that Huawei might come under Chinese government control,” Huawei stated. Huawei has been in the U.S. crosshairs on several fronts, including Washington’s campaign to keep the tech giant out of communications networks both at home and abroad. In March, the Trump administration signed bipartisan legislation to establish a $1 billion fund to help smaller telecom providers rip out and replace insecure network equipment from companies like Huawei and ZTE that are deemed a national security risk. -- ???????? | |||
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