Huawei Says Banning It Can't Stop China From Spying Other Countries
Dhir Acharya
Huawei Technologies USA chief security officer Andy Purdy says made the statement when discussing matters involving the arrest of Meng Wanzhou.
- Huawei Band 10 Launches in India with Advanced Health Tracking Features
- After Windows Replacement OS, Huawei Set to Launch "Kirin X90" Chip for PCs to Replace Intel
- Six Best Smartphones Under 40,000 In India: Price & Detailed Review
Huawei Technologies USA chief security officer Andy Purdy says that worrying about the company being used by the Chinese government for spying doesn’t address the broader issue of governments spying without consent, which already happens.
This statement was made when Purdy was commenting on the ongoing geopolitical tensions between the US and China, the detainment of two Canadian nationals in China, and the allegations that Huawei’s data is handled by state hands.
Purdy said:
“There are at least five nations of the world that have the ability to virtually implant hidden functionality and malware, in hardware and software. So the fact that that's the case, blocking us is not going to address that larger issue. That larger issue exists in the global ecosystem.”
When Purdy was asked how Huawei can make sure past events where security researchers found backdoors in Huawei technology wouldn’t happen again, Purdy turned to the broader issue of governments spying. He referenced 2013 reports, which pointed out that the National Security Agency tapped Cisco products.
“The situation about backdoors in Cisco products. The question was, well, did Cisco give them permission? Or did the U.S. government hack in? My point is, I don't know. In a way, it doesn't matter.”
He suggested concentrating on managing the risks of backdoors by using third-party mechanisms and independent monitoring that can indicate there aren’t any backdoors in products. In addition, he said that equipment should be supported even after it’s deployed.
Purdy also referred to the arrest of Huawei CFO Meng Wanzhou, saying that they haven’t seen what has happened regarding facts or the adjudication or resolution.
Whatever Purdy said, true or not, reasonable or not, it seems to me that he’s trying to draw attention from the one fact that Huawei as used by the Chinese government as backdoors for spying.
>>> China-Based ByteDance Could Lose Up To $6 Billion With TikTok Ban
Featured Stories
Mobile - Feb 16, 2026
Xiaomi Launches Affordable Tracker to Compete with Apple's AirTag
ICT News - Feb 15, 2026
X Platform Poised to Introduce In-App Crypto and Stock Trading Soon
ICT News - Feb 13, 2026
Elon Musk Pivots: SpaceX Prioritizes Lunar Metropolis Over Martian Colony
ICT News - Feb 10, 2026
Discord's Teen Safety Sham: Why This Data Leak Magnet Isn't Worth Your Trust...
ICT News - Feb 09, 2026
PS6 Rumors: Game-Changing Specs Poised to Transform Console Play
ICT News - Feb 08, 2026
Is Elon Musk on the Path to Becoming the World's First Trillionaire?
ICT News - Feb 07, 2026
NVIDIA's Gaming GPU Drought: No New Releases in 2026 as AI Takes Priority
ICT News - Feb 06, 2026
Elon Musk Clarifies: No Starlink Phone in Development at SpaceX
ICT News - Feb 03, 2026
Elon Musk's SpaceX Acquires xAI in Landmark $1.25 Trillion Merger
ICT News - Feb 02, 2026
Google's Project Genie: Premium Subscribers Unlock Interactive AI-Generated Realms
Read More
ICT News- Feb 15, 2026
X Platform Poised to Introduce In-App Crypto and Stock Trading Soon
X has been laying the groundwork for this expansion.
Mobile- Feb 16, 2026
Xiaomi Launches Affordable Tracker to Compete with Apple's AirTag
For users tired of ecosystem lock-in or high prices, the Xiaomi Tag represents a compelling, no-frills option that delivers core functionality at a fraction of the cost.
Mobile- Feb 17, 2026
Anticipating the Samsung Galaxy S26 and S26+: Key Rumors and Specs
The Samsung Galaxy S26 series is on the horizon, sparking excitement among tech enthusiasts.