The The Liar (2014)UK's big play against Huawei all comes to a head next September.
Mobile providers will not be allowed to install new Huawei gear in the UK's 5G mobile network from the end of Sept. 2021, according to the government.
The ban was announced in July, after the government reversed its decision to allow the Chinese tech company to have a role in 5G networks across the UK. This came after pressure from within the country's conservative party, but also significantly from the U.S., following sanctions imposed by President Donald Trump on Huawei on the grounds of national security.
A new law, the Telecommunications (Security) Bill, is up for its second parliamentary reading on Tuesday, and if passed will be used to officially restrict the use of Huawei's services in Britain's 5G networks — and issue big fines to networks found not complying (up to ten per cent of turnover or £100,000 a day).
According to the government, all Huawei 5G equipment must be removed from networks by 2027. Telecoms providers are allowed to keep and maintain existing Huawei gear in their networks used to support systems like 4G after September next year. As stipulated in the initial announcement, operators buying new Huawei 5G equipment will be banned after Dec. 31 2020.
The UK's digital secretary Oliver Dowden unveiled the new 5G Supply Chain Diversification Strategy on Monday, a roadmap which outlines the government's plans, and approach to "grow our telecoms supply chain while ensuring it is resilient to future trends and threats." The strategy identifies the timeline for the removal of "high risk vendors" from the network, as well as ways to support existing suppliers and attract new suppliers into the UK market.
SEE ALSO: Huawei Mate 40 Pro: Powerful new 5G chip, 90Hz display, still no Google servicesThe strategy will also see the government spend an initial £250 million to fund new projects including a new Open RAN (open radio access networks) trial with Japanese telecoms vendor NEC in Wales, which will test solutions to deploy 5G networks, and the establishment of a new National Telecoms Lab, a research facility that will test new ways of increasing security.
"Today I am setting out a clear path for the complete removal of high risk vendors from our 5G networks. This will be done through new and unprecedented powers to identify and ban telecoms equipment which poses a threat to our national security," said Dowden in a press statement.
"We are also publishing a new strategy to make sure we are never again dependent on a handful of telecoms vendors for the smooth and secure running of our networks."
Huawei has not yet issued public comment, but condemned the decision in July, calling it "bad news for anyone in the UK with a mobile phone," something that would "move Britain into the digital slow lane, push up bills and deepen the digital divide."
Topics 5G Cybersecurity Huawei
OpenAI Sora release: It's officially hereNYT mini crossword answers for December 8Best Target deal: Save $25 when you spend $100 on select toys at Target4 gadgets to upgrade your beauty routineShop this week's deals on the Dyson Airwrap, Supersonic and moreNYT Connections hints and answers for December 9: Tips to solve 'Connections' #547.Get the latest Kindle Paperwhite for $25 off at Amazon and Best BuyMeta Quest 3S (256GB) deal: Score a free $30 Best Buy gift cardYouTube is experimenting with multiplayer gamesNYT Connections hints and answers for December 9: Tips to solve 'Connections' #547.OpenAI Sora release: It's officially hereBest TV deal: Save over $400 on LG 55Get the latest Kindle Paperwhite for $25 off at Amazon and Best BuyBest Amazon deal: Save 15% on the Amazon Kindle KidsGoogle is suing a federal regulator over supervision of its payment divisionLenovo laptop deal: Get 52% off at Best BuyNYT mini crossword answers for December 11Best earbuds at Amazon: Bang & Olufsen Beoplay EX wireless earbuds are 50 percent offPornhub Year in Review 2024: Demure, tradwives, and moreBest Chroma Pearl DualSense controller deal: Get $20 off at Best Buy Xiaomi ranks third in Q1 global smartphone shipments · TechNode NIO’s first mainstream model glimpsed in leaked pictures · TechNode Genshin Impact developer miHoYo makes debut in top 10 among global top 50 publishers · TechNode CATL shares surge on margin improvement, strong growth in cheap EV batteries · TechNode Sony China refutes recent reports of smartphone withdrawal in China · TechNode Alibaba to test rocket package delivery service with China’s startup Space Epoch · TechNode ByteDance refutes claims of founder Zhang Yiming discussing potential sale of TikTok · TechNode UMC secures major order from Qorvo for next Alibaba Cloud cuts prices for international customers as AI demands rise · TechNode JD shares surge after Q4 revenue beats expectations and flood of new users join · TechNode BYD aims to sell 500,000 EVs overseas this year: report · TechNode Qualcomm’s new Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 may debut on Xiaomi Civi 4 smartphone · TechNode Tencent Cloud says recent service failure results from cloud API anomalies · TechNode Jack Ma praises Alibaba’s changes in the past year under new chairman and CEO · TechNode Tencent's gaming division made nearly $25 billion in revenue in 2023 · TechNode 11 Alibaba apps begin development for Huawei HarmonyOS · TechNode Online merchants offer AI China’s BYD unveils its latest supercar: the Super 9 · TechNode China’s EV price war escalating to “unsustainable” levels, says Bosch executive · TechNode Huawei P70 series now available for pre
2.21s , 8223.71875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Liar (2014)】,Unobstructed Information Network