Huawei is Woman Waiting for Adulterylooking for a speedy end to its lawsuit against the U.S. government.
The Chinese tech giant filed a summary judgment in the case against the U.S. on Tuesday, in which it challenged the constitutionality of a law which prohibits government agencies from buying Huawei equipment.
Huawei's chief legal officer, Song Liuping, said that using cybersecurity as an excuse to ban Huawei would do nothing to improve the security of networks, and instills a "false sense of security."
"Politicians in the U.S. are using the strength of an entire nation to come after a private company," Song said in a press conference in Shenzhen on Wednesday.
"They are using every tool they have, including legislative, administrative, and diplomatic channels. They want to put us out of business. This is not normal. Almost never seen in history.
"The U.S. government has provided no evidence to show that Huawei is a security threat. There is no gun, no smoke. Only speculation."
SEE ALSO: Why Trump’s Huawei ban could cripple the companyThe motion's aim is to get the court to throw out Section 889 of the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act, which singles out Huawei and ZTE by name. If successful, this would mean that the lawsuit, first filed in March, would avoid a lengthy trial.
The lawsuit, of course, came about before Trump's decision to add Huawei to the so-called Entity List, which prohibits it from buying products from U.S. companies without government approval. On that, Song said it sets a "dangerous precedent."
"Today it's telecoms and Huawei. Tomorrow it could be your industry, your company, your consumers," he said.
Huawei's CEO Ren Zhengfei said the company has prepared for restrictions, in which it has reportedly been stockpiling chips to maintain production.
Topics Huawei
The best/worst of 'Me at the beginning of 2016 vs end of 2016' memesCharmander and friends come to life in artist's Pokémon renderingsThese £5 notes have a hidden easter egg worth £20,000The 12 best Android apps of 2016BuzzFeed regrets running a pirated stream of 'Monty Python' on Facebook LiveJohn Glenn and baseball legend Ted Williams were once teammates in the most unexpected placePizzagate truthers targeting Brooklyn shop have apparently never seen a hipsterDad completely falls apart after hugging a very soft alpacaAirplane dating app is now boarding for all your inIn Trump's America, NFL players are targeted with racist messagesDad DIYs his daughter's sleep onesie into a NASA space suitDelightful woman in her 60s has the best time on her first flightWhy 'La La Land' is exactly the movie we need right nowDonald Trump's antiMichael Bublé's son goes home for the holidays between cancer treatmentsThese baskets are perfect for people who want to shop in solitudeSomeone tried to steal Steph Curry's shoes from a kidDad DIYs his daughter's sleep onesie into a NASA space suitAirplane dating app is now boarding for all your inWhy 'La La Land' is exactly the movie we need right now Taco Bell's new burrito features a generous sprinkle of spicy pop rocks Enough with the online collectible card games LG V30's camera will have some amazing specs 'Game of Thrones' Season 7, episode 5 photos: 'Eastwatch' Facebook cracks down on sketchy bait and switch ads Starbucks just made a huge Pumpkin Spice Latte announcement 'Game of Thrones' fan theory shows why Cersei has already made a huge mistake Krispy Kreme will debut a special doughnut for the eclipse, and it looks delicious 'Game of Thrones': Who is Dickon and why does he matter? Uber is rolling out an in Samsung's Galaxy Note 8 might copy iPhone's pressure American thought to be loyal to ISIS allegedly got paid through eBay That 'Fallout' board game borrows from the series in clever ways 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' might pit Laura Dern against Carrie Fisher FaceApp removes racist 'ethnicity change' face filters from its app Find out how much money you could be getting for your place on Airbnb Amazon's big rival in India just got $2.5 billion 'Call of Duty' figures out how to make loot boxes even more awful Will Twitter suspend Trump for his threatening North Korea tweets? Hackers of the future could use malware stored in DNA to infect computers
2.855s , 8200.890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Woman Waiting for Adultery】,Feast Information Network