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Ceratisa t1_ja7zkg3 wrote

When companies in China are essentially controlled by the CCP making a big show of themselves isn't as difficult as a regular independent company

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ilionsd t1_ja881ao wrote

"Regular independent company" like Apple or Samsung? Not only they are not controlled by politicians, they are so big they are controlling politicians to stop, for example, Right to Repair.

May be instead of that they should innovate more?

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[deleted] t1_ja8ugzj wrote

They're innovating how they make money lol

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bobby_j_canada t1_jaazaf2 wrote

You either get companies controlled by the government, or a government controlled by the companies. Choose your poison.

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autotldr t1_ja7pb13 wrote

This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 88%. (I'm a bot)


> BARCELONA, Spain - A contingent of Chinese companies led by technology giant Huawei is turning the world's biggest wireless trade fair into an opportunity to show their muscle in the face of Huawei's blacklisting by Western nations concerned about cybersecurity and escalating tensions with the U.S. over TikTok, spy balloons and computer chips.

> Washington widened sanctions last month with new curbs on exports to Huawei of less advanced tech components.

> Strand, who has been attending MWC for 26 years, said Huawei wants to show the world it's pivoting away from mainly making networking gear - the hidden plumbing such as base stations and antennas connecting the world's mobile devices - and becoming an all-round tech supplier.


Extended Summary | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: Huawei^#1 company^#2 us^#3 network^#4 MWC^#5

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OldMork t1_ja890n1 wrote

attend a fair is one thing, actually getting orders is another

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PeterTinkle t1_ja8q454 wrote

The US doesn’t want to ban Chinese products, they just want them to release the data their obtaining from our citizens. China can still operate here but they’ll have to cough up the goods or else they’ll see some bans.

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