Commerce Department gave Huawei a temporary, 90-day license to provide security patches to existing phones.
In addition, Huawei has been suspended from the Wi-Fi Alliance, an industry standard-setting body for technology protocols.
Senate and House of Representatives introduced bills on July 16 to keep tight restrictions on HuaweiTechnologies, amid concern about President Donald Trump's easing of curbs on the Chinese firm.
Canadian telecom provider Rogers Communications Inc's vice chairman, Philip Lind, said on May 30 that HuaweiTechnologies Co should be banned from Canada's 5G network, Bloomberg reported.
Before importing American parts, Huawei must first obtain the approval of BIS; otherwise, American companies cannot sell or transfer technology or products to Huawei.
In August 2019, forty-six Huawei affiliates were added to the entity list.
On Sept. 15, 2020, SMIC told the Chinese state-run Securities Times that it stopped supplying chips to Huawei because SMIC used American technology to make its chips and Huawei was blacklisted from purchasing any American technology.
HuaweiTechnologies Co. Ltd.'s newly launched Mate 30 devices have lost their access to manually install Google's Android apps, Bloomberg reported on Oct. 1.
The plan, which was ultimately shelved, called for placing HuaweiTechnologies, the world's second largest smartphone producer, on the Treasury Department's Specially Designated Nationals (SDN) list.
WASHINGTON—U.S. lawmakers plan to unveil a bill on March 12 that could be used to block HuaweiTechnologies from accessing U.S. banks for certain transactions, in a bid to thwart the Chinese telecoms giant.
The office also sent a thank-you letter to the Greek branch of HuaweiTechnologies Co. and the Fujian Province Chamber of Commerce in Greece. Both letters were dated September 2017.
Commerce Department added HuaweiTechnologies and 68 affiliates to an export blacklist, citing the risk of to U.S. national security from the telecommunications network equipment maker.
By David Shepardson
Europe should be wary of telecommunications company Huawei and other Chinese technology companies, says European Union's technology chief, echoing cybersecurity concerns raised in other parts of the world.
Huawei, the world's biggest producer of telecoms equipment, is under intense scrutiny after the United States told allies not to use its technology because of fears it could be a vehicle for Chinese spying. Huawei has categorically denied this.
The ban is one part of a multifaceted U.S. push against HuaweiTechnologies Co Ltd, the world's largest telecoms network gear maker, which Washington accuses of espionage and stealing intellectual property.
Their detention came shortly after Canadian authorities in Vancouver arrested Meng Wanzhou, a senior executive with Chinese firm HuaweiTechnologies, who is wanted by the U.S. on fraud charges.
Huawei, the world’s biggest producer of telecoms equipment, is under intense scrutiny after the United States told allies not to use its technology because of fears it could be a vehicle for Chinese spying.
WASHINGTON—A bipartisan group of 15 U.S. senators urged the Commerce Department to suspend issuing licenses to U.S. firms that conduct business with China's HuaweiTechnologies.
Saskatchewan’s SaskTel may become the latest Canadian telecommunications company to announce it will not use Huaweitechnology for its 5G network infrastructure, following in the footsteps of Bell and Telus.
No Czech telecoms operator has so far barred Huawei from supplying 5G technology. But some Czech state agencies have begun to exclude products and services by Huawei and ZTE since NÚKIB issued its warning, wrote the Czech daily Právo.
Commerce Department added Huawei and its affiliates to a list that bans the company from acquiring components and technology from U.S. firms without government approval.
The United States has charged Meng with bank fraud, and accused her of misleading HSBC Holdings Plc about HuaweiTechnologies Co. Ltd.'s business in Iran.
But Meng's legal team argued that "double criminality," is the central issue in this case.
WASHINGTON—White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow will host a meeting with semiconductor and software executives on July 22 to discuss the U.S. ban on sales to China's HuaweiTechnologies Co Ltd, two sources briefed on the meeting said on July 19.
Asked about the role of HuaweiTechnologies Co Ltd, which the administration has blacklisted over national security concerns, Mnuchin told CNBC said that allowing any U.S. sales to the Chinese telecoms equipment company was an issue independent from the
Thirty-eight Huawei subsidiaries around the world are on the "entity list" of U.S. export restrictions to prevent Huawei from obtaining U.S. technology and related products.
An executive at HuaweiTechnologies Co. Ltd., the world's biggest supplier of telecom network gear, said this week the company had sufficient equipment stockpiles to last three to six months.
Huawei and other Chinese tech companies for years have been accused of intellectual property theft in copying foreign companies’ design and technology.