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The China Syndrome: It's getting rough but US firms can't quit China

The US had been trying very hard to block any China tech firms from operating in the US, yet they got the ball to actually tell us to open our network so they can put spyware to spy and hack us? LOL
 
The US had been trying very hard to block any China tech firms from operating in the US, yet they got the ball to actually tell us to open our network so they can put spyware to spy and hack us? LOL
You live in America, you should know American double standard mentality by now. But hings are looking good for China as more domestic tech companies are replacing foreign suppliers due to NSA activities.
 
You live in America, you should know American double standard mentality by now. But hings are looking good for China as more domestic tech companies are replacing foreign suppliers due to NSA activities.
Not only am I living in the US but working in the IT industry in the US. You will be amazed how much they try extremely hard to make China tech firms become non-existence in the US. Almost every China tech firms go through multiple layers of security clearance to operate in the US. No other countries face this type of scrutiny than Chinese tech firms.
 
Not only am I living in the US but working in the IT industry in the US. You will be amazed how much they try extremely hard to make China tech firms become non-existence in the US. Almost every China tech firms go through multiple layers of security clearance to operate in the US. No other countries face this type of scrutiny than Chinese tech firms.
China should treat them the same and that's what the recent news is all about.
 
Finally the Western tech/governments are being treated just the way they deserve.

They will reap the benefits if they comply with the anti-terrorism law.

They will be punished and kicked out if they break the law.

Could not be any simpler.
 
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Obama Attacks China for Creating US-Inspired Spying Apparatus

23:46 03.03.2015(updated 09:36 04.03.2015)

President Obama has harsh words for China’s proposed counterterrorism law. This despite the fact that the new rules are modeled largely on the US regulations, and more directly, on the precedent set by the NSA’s spying apparatus.

China released a few demands last week. If US tech companies want to do business in China – and given the market size, yes, tech companies want to do business in China – then they’ll have to place servers in China. They’ll also have to provide encryption keys, and allow the Chinese government special surveillance access into their systems.

President Obama is, understandably, a little wary. Tech companies are weary. Giving a global superpower “backdoor” access to servers used by millions of people feels a bit like Big Brother. It’s uncomfortably dystopian.

But as the Snowden documents revealed, this is exactly the kind of unfettered access enjoyed by the United States.

“This is something that I’ve raised directly with President Xi,” Obama told Reuters. “We have made it very clear to them that this is something they are going to have to change if they are to do business with the United States.”

This is a very different tune than the one sung earlier this year, when both President Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron expressed their intention to pressure tech giants into cooperating with Western intelligence agencies.

“We’re still going to have to find ways to make sure that if an al-Qaeda affiliate is operating in Great Britain or the United States that we can try to prevent real tragedy,” Obama said during a joint news conference. “And I think the companies want to see that as well. They’re patriots, they have families that they want to see protected.”

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Obama Supports U.K. Request to Pressure Tech Giants on Security Cooperation

But many tech companies have done that in the past. As the Guardian reported in 2013, the Snowden documents revealed that Microsoft provided the NSA with direct access to encrypted messages. Even last year, both the FBI and NSA warned Internet companies not to use encryptions that law enforcement couldn’t crack.

Given that China is one of the world’s largest, rising economies, it may prove too tempting a market for tech companies to ignore. Especially if these “new” business conditions are ones they’ve already been forced to follow for years, now.

Read more: Obama Attacks China for Creating US-Inspired Spying Apparatus / Sputnik International
 
Justifiable for China to strengthen cyber security regulation
March 3, 2015

In light of successive revelations in recent years of spying scandals perpetrated by the United States with its sophisticated hacking technology, it is justifiable for China to strengthen cyber security regulation amid growing technology trade between the world's two leading economies.





Last month, cyber security firm Kaspersky Lab unveiled a new surveillance and espionage technique mastered by the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA), evoking memories of shocking disclosure of its massive surveillance program that even includes eavesdropping on leaders of Washington's allies.

The "invisible sword" of cyber-hacking also targeted ordinary people as the NSA reportedly acquired contents of digital communications online from a number of U.S. technology and Internet companies.

It is shocking that technology giants including Microsoft and Apple, which have enjoyed a strong and growing presence in people's daily life and work across the world, were also part of the notorious surveillance program.

For those hundreds of millions of or even billions of users of the high-technology products or services of those U.S. companies, it is natural to find those products or services insecure when it comes to issues of information security and privacy.

In that case, the responsibility falls on the government's shoulder to ensure that the convenience brought about by technological progress is fully enjoyed by ordinary people without their interests being sabotaged or privacy being intruded.


If some "back doors" are indeed deliberated placed in those high-technology products or services as required by intelligence authorities, no one is more able and authorized than the government to prevent government-sponsored hackers from reaching ordinary users.

With the new rules adopted by China's banking regulator that outlines security criteria for technology products in the financial sector and that requires all foreign companies providing banking technology in China to be subject to security audits, China eyes nothing but secure and controllable application of technologies so as to protect state and business secrets from peeping eyes.

As justifiable as they are, China's efforts to strengthen cyber security and protect interests of domestic users of foreign-made high-technology products are apparently far from trade discrimination and protectionism as accused by some foreign media.

Cyber security is a common challenge facing the entire world and thus requires shared responsibility.

It is advisable for China and the United States, both leading global economies with rapidly growing technological strength, to strengthen exchange, cooperation and mutual trust for meaningful progress in enhancing cyber security.
 
The Nano technology will reform US and EU to take economic revenge from China. Even if things are cool in Pakistan then we can easily beat China.
 

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