#chinesegovernment — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #chinesegovernment, aggregated by home.social.
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https://www.europesays.com/videos/25890/ Trump arrives in China for historic trip • FRANCE 24 English #Beijing #china #ChinaIran #ChineseDiplomacy #ChineseGovernment #ChineseLeader #ChinesePolitics #DonaldTrump #FRANCE24 #FRANCE24English #FRANCE24 #FRANCE24English #GlobalTrade #IranWar #Taiwan #Trade #Trump #TrumpChina #UsArmsTaiwan #UsChinaTies #UsChinaTrade #UsDiplomacy #UsIranWar #USPolitics #XiJinping
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What caused the fentanyl crisis to slow down?
WASHINGTON (TNND) — New research indicates a significant shift in the fentanyl crisis, with a major disruption in…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #America #Bordercrackdown #Chinesegovernment #Drugseizures #fentanylcrisis #Illegalmarket #Overdosedeaths #Supplyshock #syntheticopioids #UnitedStatesofAmerica
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/411691/ -
What caused the fentanyl crisis to slow down?
WASHINGTON (TNND) — New research indicates a significant shift in the fentanyl crisis, with a major disruption in…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #America #Bordercrackdown #Chinesegovernment #Drugseizures #fentanylcrisis #Illegalmarket #Overdosedeaths #Supplyshock #syntheticopioids #UnitedStatesofAmerica
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/411691/ -
China’s beef tariffs aren’t personal as economy slows
In some of the darkest days in the political relationship between Australia and China, trade became a tool…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Economy #AnthonyAlbanese #Australia #Australianbeef #Beef #beefexports #beefimports #Business #China #chinaaustraliatrade #chinabeefimports #Chinabeeftariffs #Chinesegovernment #Exports #Imports #meatindustry #Tariffs #TradeWar #XiJinping
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/383131/ -
China’s beef tariffs aren’t personal as economy slows
In some of the darkest days in the political relationship between Australia and China, trade became a tool…
#NewsBeep #News #US #USA #UnitedStates #UnitedStatesOfAmerica #Economy #AnthonyAlbanese #Australia #Australianbeef #Beef #beefexports #beefimports #Business #China #chinaaustraliatrade #chinabeefimports #Chinabeeftariffs #Chinesegovernment #Exports #Imports #meatindustry #Tariffs #TradeWar #XiJinping
https://www.newsbeep.com/us/383131/ -
Secret Kill Switch on Chinese Buses
Test results showed that the Chinese bus maker had access to the vehicles' control systems for software updates and diagnostics. A leading Norwegian public transport operator has said it will introduce stricter security requirements and step up anti-hacking measures after a test on new Chinese-made electric buses showed the manufacturer could remotely turn them off. Transport operator Ruter said test results published last week showed that Chinese bus maker Yutong Group had access to their […]https://activitypub.writeworks.uk/2025/11/secret-kill-switch-on-chinese-buses/
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China espionage trial in Germany exposes AfD links and arms secrets https://www.byteseu.com/1259753/ #AfD #AliceWeidel #Beijing #Bundestag #China #ChineseGovernment #DerSpiegel #Dresden #eu #EuropeanParliament #Germany #JianG #Kyiv #LeipzigAirport #MaximilianKrah
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The U.S. Department of Justice this week announced the arrest of one of two suspected “state-backed” Chinese spies accused of hacking and stealing medical research about COVID-19 vaccines and treatment from Texas universities.
#Court #Crime #Education #EducationNews #HealthScience #Houston #International #Local #News #ChineseGovernment #COVID19 #Cybercrime #SouthernDistrictCourtOfTexas #TexasUniversities #USJusticeDepartment
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EU set to clamp down on China’s access to medical device market as trade tensions simmer https://www.byteseu.com/1067596/ #Beijing #Brussels #BuyChina #China #ChineseGovernment #DonaldTrump #eu #Europe #EuropeanCommission #EuropeanUnionMemberStates #IPI #JorgeToledo #MarošŠefčovič #OECD #paris #WangWentao
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Origins of Covid19
Feel there is near certainty that the #ChineseGovernment is covering up the origins of #Covid19.
If it was the wet market then it's almost unbelievable that the animal host would not have been found by now.
But no animal host has been identified.If #LabLeak then this would be known to the Chinese government.
If there was a natural host then I think that would have been disclosed so as to rule out the damaging and destabilising lab-leak idea.
Maybe other factors in play?
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#China's internet #censors have deleted a video in which #children at a private #PerformingArts school in the southwestern province of #Sichuan dance to British rock band #PinkFloyd's 1979 hit "Another Brick in the Wall, Part 2" which featured a choir of #schoolchildren protesting overbearing authority & "thought control" in #education.
#AsianMastodon #ChineseGovernment #Censorship #HumanRights #ChildrensRights #ChinaCensorship
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#ChineseGovernment says #relocations are poverty alleviation measures & new locations are ecologically sound, so that affected #Tibetans can improve their livelihoods by relocating, Pearson said.
“But in reality, that hasn’t been the case because many of the people are #pastoralists, and they live off the land, but when they move to more urban-like areas, the work options are different & they would need to speak #Chinese rather than Tibetan,” she added
https://www.rfa.org/english/news/tibet/forced-relocations-report-05212024160518.html
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TikTok Ban — ByteDance Sues US to Kill Bill – Source: securityboulevard.com https://ciso2ciso.com/tiktok-ban-bytedance-sues-us-to-kill-bill-source-securityboulevard-com/ #SecurityChallengesandOpportunitiesofRemoteWork #DeepFakeandOtherSocialEngineeringTactics #SecurityBoulevard(Original) #rssfeedpostgeneratorecho #RegulatoryCompliance #ApplicationSecurity #chinesegovernment #CyberSecurityNews #EditorialCalendar #IndustrySpotlight #SecurityBoulevard #socialengineering #MostReadThisWeek #ByteDance
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In 2011, Arıkan started his own small company and took polar codes to Qualcomm and Seagate to see if they had interest in implementing the idea.
“I did prepare some slides and sent them, but none of the US companies were really interested in it,” he says.
He takes the blame for failing to ignite their interest. “I was an academic who did not know how to promote an idea. Perhaps I did not believe in the idea that strongly myself.”
Later, those companies did work on polar codes and got their own patents, but without the same vigor as Huawei.
“If it weren't for the persistent efforts of Huawei researchers,” Arıkan says, “polar codes would not be in 5G today.”
I asked him about the over-the-top Huawei ceremony immortalized in that YouTube video.
He told me that he'd received the invitation to visit in June 2018.
“I said, ‘What is the occasion?’
And they said, ‘Mr. Ren wants to give you an award,’” Arıkan recalls.“I figured that Huawei is very happy because the standard has been made, and polar coding is definitely in it.”
He thought he would show up and there would be a pleasant conversation with the founder and some engineers. He might leave with a plaque.
Arıkan arrived in Shenzhen and stayed at a guest house on campus.
He had tea with Ren and was toasted by executives, including Wen Tong.
But he sensed that something bigger was afoot.“They revealed the program to me one step at a time. I didn't know how big that room would be, what kind of building we would go into. They didn't tell me to dress nicely.” (He did anyway.)
An hour before the ceremony his hosts informed him that perhaps he should prepare a speech.
He hurriedly finished his remarks in the town car on the way to the ceremony.“I have spent the last 30 years at Bilkent University doing research on a variety of problems that culminated in polar codes,” he told the crowd in his halting English.
“Today our roads cross on a happy occasion.”
The spectacle didn't go to Arıkan's head. “They were not honoring me,” he told me as we sat in his office.
“Huawei was saying, ‘We didn't steal this idea from anybody, and here is the originator of the idea.’
There is no question that Huawei is the most technologically sophisticated company in China.
Maybe for the first time in a thousand years, China is showing they are competing head to head with the rest of the world in technology.
The US could live with intellectual property theft, but it is much harder to live with being in competition with an equal power.
“Polar codes itself is not what's important,” he continued. “It is a symbol.
5G is totally different than the internet. It's like a global nervous system.
Huawei is the leading company in 5G. They will be around in 10, 20, 50 years
—you cannot say that about the US tech companies.In the internet era, the US produced a few trillion-dollar companies.
Because of 5G, China will have 10 or more trillion-dollar companies.
Huawei and China now have the lead.”
US companies and the US government can no longer expect to beat China back with threats or indictments, even if they are sometimes warranted.
And it's not just telecom companies like Huawei.
For all the furor at the highest levels over whether the teen-oriented social app TikTok presented security issues, the real threat to American business was that its Chinese engineers had devised an AI-powered recommendation engine that Silicon Valley had not matched.
Arıkan says the experience has led him to respect Huawei
—and to provide a warning to the country where he learned information theory.“I owe a lot to the US,” he says.
“I give you friendly advice:
You have to accept this as the new reality and deal with it accordingly.”To paraphrase Shannon:
No one knows the future. But Huawei and China now have a hand in controlling it.-- excerpts from:
https://www.wired.com/story/huawei-5g-polar-codes-data-breakthrough/by Steven Levy, editor at large at Wired.
Steven has written seven books, including Hackers, Crypto, Artificial Life, Insanely Great (a history of the Macintosh), and, most recently, In the Plex, the definitive story of Google. He attended Temple University and has a master’s degree in literature from Penn State.
#ErdalArıkan #5G #polarcodes
#RenZhengfei #Huawei #ChineseGovernment #ZTE #DOJ #intellectualproperty #Cisco #Nortel
#stevenlevy #Wired -
In 2011, Arıkan started his own small company and took polar codes to Qualcomm and Seagate to see if they had interest in implementing the idea.
“I did prepare some slides and sent them, but none of the US companies were really interested in it,” he says.
He takes the blame for failing to ignite their interest. “I was an academic who did not know how to promote an idea. Perhaps I did not believe in the idea that strongly myself.”
Later, those companies did work on polar codes and got their own patents, but without the same vigor as Huawei.
“If it weren't for the persistent efforts of Huawei researchers,” Arıkan says, “polar codes would not be in 5G today.”
I asked him about the over-the-top Huawei ceremony immortalized in that YouTube video.
He told me that he'd received the invitation to visit in June 2018.
“I said, ‘What is the occasion?’
And they said, ‘Mr. Ren wants to give you an award,’” Arıkan recalls.“I figured that Huawei is very happy because the standard has been made, and polar coding is definitely in it.”
He thought he would show up and there would be a pleasant conversation with the founder and some engineers. He might leave with a plaque.
Arıkan arrived in Shenzhen and stayed at a guest house on campus.
He had tea with Ren and was toasted by executives, including Wen Tong.
But he sensed that something bigger was afoot.“They revealed the program to me one step at a time. I didn't know how big that room would be, what kind of building we would go into. They didn't tell me to dress nicely.” (He did anyway.)
An hour before the ceremony his hosts informed him that perhaps he should prepare a speech.
He hurriedly finished his remarks in the town car on the way to the ceremony.“I have spent the last 30 years at Bilkent University doing research on a variety of problems that culminated in polar codes,” he told the crowd in his halting English.
“Today our roads cross on a happy occasion.”
The spectacle didn't go to Arıkan's head. “They were not honoring me,” he told me as we sat in his office.
“Huawei was saying, ‘We didn't steal this idea from anybody, and here is the originator of the idea.’
There is no question that Huawei is the most technologically sophisticated company in China.
Maybe for the first time in a thousand years, China is showing they are competing head to head with the rest of the world in technology.
The US could live with intellectual property theft, but it is much harder to live with being in competition with an equal power.
“Polar codes itself is not what's important,” he continued. “It is a symbol.
5G is totally different than the internet. It's like a global nervous system.
Huawei is the leading company in 5G. They will be around in 10, 20, 50 years
—you cannot say that about the US tech companies.In the internet era, the US produced a few trillion-dollar companies.
Because of 5G, China will have 10 or more trillion-dollar companies.
Huawei and China now have the lead.”
US companies and the US government can no longer expect to beat China back with threats or indictments, even if they are sometimes warranted.
And it's not just telecom companies like Huawei.
For all the furor at the highest levels over whether the teen-oriented social app TikTok presented security issues, the real threat to American business was that its Chinese engineers had devised an AI-powered recommendation engine that Silicon Valley had not matched.
Arıkan says the experience has led him to respect Huawei
—and to provide a warning to the country where he learned information theory.“I owe a lot to the US,” he says.
“I give you friendly advice:
You have to accept this as the new reality and deal with it accordingly.”To paraphrase Shannon:
No one knows the future. But Huawei and China now have a hand in controlling it.-- excerpts from:
https://www.wired.com/story/huawei-5g-polar-codes-data-breakthrough/by Steven Levy, editor at large at Wired.
Steven has written seven books, including Hackers, Crypto, Artificial Life, Insanely Great (a history of the Macintosh), and, most recently, In the Plex, the definitive story of Google. He attended Temple University and has a master’s degree in literature from Penn State.
#ErdalArıkan #5G #polarcodes
#RenZhengfei #Huawei #ChineseGovernment #ZTE #DOJ #intellectualproperty #Cisco #Nortel
#stevenlevy #Wired -
In 2011, Arıkan started his own small company and took polar codes to Qualcomm and Seagate to see if they had interest in implementing the idea.
“I did prepare some slides and sent them, but none of the US companies were really interested in it,” he says.
He takes the blame for failing to ignite their interest. “I was an academic who did not know how to promote an idea. Perhaps I did not believe in the idea that strongly myself.”
Later, those companies did work on polar codes and got their own patents, but without the same vigor as Huawei.
“If it weren't for the persistent efforts of Huawei researchers,” Arıkan says, “polar codes would not be in 5G today.”
I asked him about the over-the-top Huawei ceremony immortalized in that YouTube video.
He told me that he'd received the invitation to visit in June 2018.
“I said, ‘What is the occasion?’
And they said, ‘Mr. Ren wants to give you an award,’” Arıkan recalls.“I figured that Huawei is very happy because the standard has been made, and polar coding is definitely in it.”
He thought he would show up and there would be a pleasant conversation with the founder and some engineers. He might leave with a plaque.
Arıkan arrived in Shenzhen and stayed at a guest house on campus.
He had tea with Ren and was toasted by executives, including Wen Tong.
But he sensed that something bigger was afoot.“They revealed the program to me one step at a time. I didn't know how big that room would be, what kind of building we would go into. They didn't tell me to dress nicely.” (He did anyway.)
An hour before the ceremony his hosts informed him that perhaps he should prepare a speech.
He hurriedly finished his remarks in the town car on the way to the ceremony.“I have spent the last 30 years at Bilkent University doing research on a variety of problems that culminated in polar codes,” he told the crowd in his halting English.
“Today our roads cross on a happy occasion.”
The spectacle didn't go to Arıkan's head. “They were not honoring me,” he told me as we sat in his office.
“Huawei was saying, ‘We didn't steal this idea from anybody, and here is the originator of the idea.’
There is no question that Huawei is the most technologically sophisticated company in China.
Maybe for the first time in a thousand years, China is showing they are competing head to head with the rest of the world in technology.
The US could live with intellectual property theft, but it is much harder to live with being in competition with an equal power.
“Polar codes itself is not what's important,” he continued. “It is a symbol.
5G is totally different than the internet. It's like a global nervous system.
Huawei is the leading company in 5G. They will be around in 10, 20, 50 years
—you cannot say that about the US tech companies.In the internet era, the US produced a few trillion-dollar companies.
Because of 5G, China will have 10 or more trillion-dollar companies.
Huawei and China now have the lead.”
US companies and the US government can no longer expect to beat China back with threats or indictments, even if they are sometimes warranted.
And it's not just telecom companies like Huawei.
For all the furor at the highest levels over whether the teen-oriented social app TikTok presented security issues, the real threat to American business was that its Chinese engineers had devised an AI-powered recommendation engine that Silicon Valley had not matched.
Arıkan says the experience has led him to respect Huawei
—and to provide a warning to the country where he learned information theory.“I owe a lot to the US,” he says.
“I give you friendly advice:
You have to accept this as the new reality and deal with it accordingly.”To paraphrase Shannon:
No one knows the future. But Huawei and China now have a hand in controlling it.-- excerpts from:
https://www.wired.com/story/huawei-5g-polar-codes-data-breakthrough/by Steven Levy, editor at large at Wired.
Steven has written seven books, including Hackers, Crypto, Artificial Life, Insanely Great (a history of the Macintosh), and, most recently, In the Plex, the definitive story of Google. He attended Temple University and has a master’s degree in literature from Penn State.
#ErdalArıkan #5G #polarcodes
#RenZhengfei #Huawei #ChineseGovernment #ZTE #DOJ #intellectualproperty #Cisco #Nortel
#stevenlevy #Wired -
In 2011, Arıkan started his own small company and took polar codes to Qualcomm and Seagate to see if they had interest in implementing the idea.
“I did prepare some slides and sent them, but none of the US companies were really interested in it,” he says.
He takes the blame for failing to ignite their interest. “I was an academic who did not know how to promote an idea. Perhaps I did not believe in the idea that strongly myself.”
Later, those companies did work on polar codes and got their own patents, but without the same vigor as Huawei.
“If it weren't for the persistent efforts of Huawei researchers,” Arıkan says, “polar codes would not be in 5G today.”
I asked him about the over-the-top Huawei ceremony immortalized in that YouTube video.
He told me that he'd received the invitation to visit in June 2018.
“I said, ‘What is the occasion?’
And they said, ‘Mr. Ren wants to give you an award,’” Arıkan recalls.“I figured that Huawei is very happy because the standard has been made, and polar coding is definitely in it.”
He thought he would show up and there would be a pleasant conversation with the founder and some engineers. He might leave with a plaque.
Arıkan arrived in Shenzhen and stayed at a guest house on campus.
He had tea with Ren and was toasted by executives, including Wen Tong.
But he sensed that something bigger was afoot.“They revealed the program to me one step at a time. I didn't know how big that room would be, what kind of building we would go into. They didn't tell me to dress nicely.” (He did anyway.)
An hour before the ceremony his hosts informed him that perhaps he should prepare a speech.
He hurriedly finished his remarks in the town car on the way to the ceremony.“I have spent the last 30 years at Bilkent University doing research on a variety of problems that culminated in polar codes,” he told the crowd in his halting English.
“Today our roads cross on a happy occasion.”
The spectacle didn't go to Arıkan's head. “They were not honoring me,” he told me as we sat in his office.
“Huawei was saying, ‘We didn't steal this idea from anybody, and here is the originator of the idea.’
There is no question that Huawei is the most technologically sophisticated company in China.
Maybe for the first time in a thousand years, China is showing they are competing head to head with the rest of the world in technology.
The US could live with intellectual property theft, but it is much harder to live with being in competition with an equal power.
“Polar codes itself is not what's important,” he continued. “It is a symbol.
5G is totally different than the internet. It's like a global nervous system.
Huawei is the leading company in 5G. They will be around in 10, 20, 50 years
—you cannot say that about the US tech companies.In the internet era, the US produced a few trillion-dollar companies.
Because of 5G, China will have 10 or more trillion-dollar companies.
Huawei and China now have the lead.”
US companies and the US government can no longer expect to beat China back with threats or indictments, even if they are sometimes warranted.
And it's not just telecom companies like Huawei.
For all the furor at the highest levels over whether the teen-oriented social app TikTok presented security issues, the real threat to American business was that its Chinese engineers had devised an AI-powered recommendation engine that Silicon Valley had not matched.
Arıkan says the experience has led him to respect Huawei
—and to provide a warning to the country where he learned information theory.“I owe a lot to the US,” he says.
“I give you friendly advice:
You have to accept this as the new reality and deal with it accordingly.”To paraphrase Shannon:
No one knows the future. But Huawei and China now have a hand in controlling it.-- excerpts from:
https://www.wired.com/story/huawei-5g-polar-codes-data-breakthrough/by Steven Levy, editor at large at Wired.
Steven has written seven books, including Hackers, Crypto, Artificial Life, Insanely Great (a history of the Macintosh), and, most recently, In the Plex, the definitive story of Google. He attended Temple University and has a master’s degree in literature from Penn State.
#ErdalArıkan #5G #polarcodes
#RenZhengfei #Huawei #ChineseGovernment #ZTE #DOJ #intellectualproperty #Cisco #Nortel
#stevenlevy #Wired -
In 2011, Arıkan started his own small company and took polar codes to Qualcomm and Seagate to see if they had interest in implementing the idea.
“I did prepare some slides and sent them, but none of the US companies were really interested in it,” he says.
He takes the blame for failing to ignite their interest. “I was an academic who did not know how to promote an idea. Perhaps I did not believe in the idea that strongly myself.”
Later, those companies did work on polar codes and got their own patents, but without the same vigor as Huawei.
“If it weren't for the persistent efforts of Huawei researchers,” Arıkan says, “polar codes would not be in 5G today.”
I asked him about the over-the-top Huawei ceremony immortalized in that YouTube video.
He told me that he'd received the invitation to visit in June 2018.
“I said, ‘What is the occasion?’
And they said, ‘Mr. Ren wants to give you an award,’” Arıkan recalls.“I figured that Huawei is very happy because the standard has been made, and polar coding is definitely in it.”
He thought he would show up and there would be a pleasant conversation with the founder and some engineers. He might leave with a plaque.
Arıkan arrived in Shenzhen and stayed at a guest house on campus.
He had tea with Ren and was toasted by executives, including Wen Tong.
But he sensed that something bigger was afoot.“They revealed the program to me one step at a time. I didn't know how big that room would be, what kind of building we would go into. They didn't tell me to dress nicely.” (He did anyway.)
An hour before the ceremony his hosts informed him that perhaps he should prepare a speech.
He hurriedly finished his remarks in the town car on the way to the ceremony.“I have spent the last 30 years at Bilkent University doing research on a variety of problems that culminated in polar codes,” he told the crowd in his halting English.
“Today our roads cross on a happy occasion.”
The spectacle didn't go to Arıkan's head. “They were not honoring me,” he told me as we sat in his office.
“Huawei was saying, ‘We didn't steal this idea from anybody, and here is the originator of the idea.’
There is no question that Huawei is the most technologically sophisticated company in China.
Maybe for the first time in a thousand years, China is showing they are competing head to head with the rest of the world in technology.
The US could live with intellectual property theft, but it is much harder to live with being in competition with an equal power.
“Polar codes itself is not what's important,” he continued. “It is a symbol.
5G is totally different than the internet. It's like a global nervous system.
Huawei is the leading company in 5G. They will be around in 10, 20, 50 years
—you cannot say that about the US tech companies.In the internet era, the US produced a few trillion-dollar companies.
Because of 5G, China will have 10 or more trillion-dollar companies.
Huawei and China now have the lead.”
US companies and the US government can no longer expect to beat China back with threats or indictments, even if they are sometimes warranted.
And it's not just telecom companies like Huawei.
For all the furor at the highest levels over whether the teen-oriented social app TikTok presented security issues, the real threat to American business was that its Chinese engineers had devised an AI-powered recommendation engine that Silicon Valley had not matched.
Arıkan says the experience has led him to respect Huawei
—and to provide a warning to the country where he learned information theory.“I owe a lot to the US,” he says.
“I give you friendly advice:
You have to accept this as the new reality and deal with it accordingly.”To paraphrase Shannon:
No one knows the future. But Huawei and China now have a hand in controlling it.-- excerpts from:
https://www.wired.com/story/huawei-5g-polar-codes-data-breakthrough/by Steven Levy, editor at large at Wired.
Steven has written seven books, including Hackers, Crypto, Artificial Life, Insanely Great (a history of the Macintosh), and, most recently, In the Plex, the definitive story of Google. He attended Temple University and has a master’s degree in literature from Penn State.
#ErdalArıkan #5G #polarcodes
#RenZhengfei #Huawei #ChineseGovernment #ZTE #DOJ #intellectualproperty #Cisco #Nortel
#stevenlevy #Wired -
Global News BC: ‘Appalling’: B.C. mayor unimpressed with Ottawa amid foreign meddling claim https://globalnews.ca/news/9919787/bc-mayor-criticism-ottawa-foreign-interference/ #globalnews #britishcolumbia #news #PortCoquitlammayortargetedforeigninteference #Chinesepoliticalinterference #Chineseinterference #foreigninterference #portcoquitlammayor #Chinesegovernment #TwoMichaels #Politics #BradWest #Beijing #Canada #WeChat #World #CSIS
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For 22 years, #journalist Gulchehra Hoja has covered #stories of her homeland from #exile in the #UnitedStates . Now the Uyghur #journalist is sharing the toll that takes & all that she longs for, in a #memoir called A Stone Is Most Precious Where It Belongs. She joins Piya Chattopadhyay to talk about her childhood, her family's #legacy of preserving #Uyghur #culture & #consequences they face for #SpeakingOut about the #ChineseGovernment 's treatment of Uyghurs
https://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.6767170 -
Kwan, a longtime #activist who has been #warning the #FederalGovernment for the better part of two decades about #ChineseGovernment #interference , both through his testimony to the parliamentary #ForeignAffairs committee & as a contributor to several reports, says #Ottawa needs to be careful the process doesn't cause #backlash against the #ChineseCommunity .
https://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.6779785
#AsianMastodon #CanPoli #AntiAsian #Racism #Chinese #Asian #Canada #Canadian #diaspora #AntiRacism
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Hong Kong’s crypto ambition gets subtle nod from Beijing: Report - While China has cracked down on cryptocurrencies in the mainland,... - https://cointelegraph.com/news/hong-kong-s-crypto-ambition-gets-subtle-nod-from-beijing-report #hongkongcryptolicence #chinesegovernment #cryptoregulation #cryptohongkong #cryptohub #cryptoban #hongkong #china #asia #hk