Under Chinese law, companies in China “must support, co-operate with and collaborate in national-intelligence work” as requested by Beijing, and security experts in the United States and Canada warn that equipment produced by firms such as Huawei could be compromised on behalf of China’s ruling party.
Chinese Asylumn claims up 311 per cent
Australia no longer isolated as 'Five Eyes' turn on Huawei
John McDuling
The Wall
Street Journal
U.S. allies
from Australia to Japan to the European Union raised new security questions
about Huawei Technologies Co. on Friday, putting fresh pressure on the Chinese
telecommunications giant. The head of Australia’s top military cyber defense
agency, Mike Burgess, said Chinese companies were blocked from the rollout of
5G mobile-phone capabilities in August because the new technology would
underpin not only communications, but also critical infrastructure that could
be brought down in a cyberattack. That makes the technology more strategically
important than previous innovations, he said. “If the 5G network of the future
isn’t there, there’s a good chance electricity supply might be interrupted,
water supply might be interrupted, the financial sector or elements of it might
be impacted,” said Mr. Burgess, the head of the Australian Signals Directorate,
in a rare television interview. “That’s why it was important to get security
right at the start. It was a foundational issue.”
WA Labor MP Pierre Yang served aboard suspected China spyship
West Australian Labor MP Pierre Yang, under fire for his links to pro-China groups, spent three months ...
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Shocking! 1.1 Million Chinese Spies Move in with Uyghurs
New Zealand becomes third Five Eyes member to ban Huawei from ...
“I have informed Spark that a significant security risk was identified,” ... UnderChinese law, companies in China “must support, ... and collaborate in national-intelligence work” as requested by ... We must ban Huawei,” he said.
Uncovering Chinese Espionage in the US
Chinese, Russian envoys expand spying in Czech Republic
New DOJ Policies for Prosecution of Entities and the Individuals Within Them Most Responsible
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein announced yesterday important changes to Government policy on prosecuting corporations and individuals yesterday at a conference on the FCPA. See DOJ announcement here. I include below the key excerpts (lengthy) explaining the policy:
Under our revised policy, pursuing individuals responsible for wrongdoing will be a top priority in every corporate investigation.
It is important to impose penalties on corporations that engage in misconduct. Cases against corporate entities allow us to recover fraudulent proceeds, reimburse victims, and deter future wrongdoing. Corporate-level resolutions also allow us to reward effective compliance programs and penalize companies that condone or ignore wrongdoing.
What does the Nine-Fairfax merger mean?
The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald are now part of a company called Nine. What does it mean for the journalists, the companies, Australian media and you?
Sergeant Samantha Baglin, 44, was found dead in the vault room at the Edmund Barton building in Canberra on Sunday morning. AFP suicides: 'It's happened again' - News.com.au
The little bloke: an authorised biography of John Hatton, OA
REMINDER: All modern American presidents exercise power that is morally and constitutionally illegit…