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Businesses China United States Hardware

China's Top Phone Makers Huawei and Xiaomi In Talks With Carriers To Expand To US Market (bloomberg.com) 44

From a report: Huawei and Xiaomi are in talks with U.S. wireless operators about selling flagship smartphones to American consumers as soon as next year, according to people familiar with the matter. The handset makers are negotiating with carriers including AT&T and Verizon, said the people, asking not to be identified because the matter is private. Talks are still fluid and it's possible no agreements will materialize, they said.
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China's Top Phone Makers Huawei and Xiaomi In Talks With Carriers To Expand To US Market

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  • AT&T has had Huawei phones for years now.
  • Just what we need (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    More cheap crap from inherently dishonest people, who will load up the phones with malware to spy on us and report back to Beijing. The US should ban the import of these phones.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Dunno about you, but Huawei phone have been pretty good in terms of bang for buck performance with minimal software bloat and decent user serviceability. I don't doubt there might be spyware on them, but when has that stopped people from using good hardware? People still buy Lenovo/HP products by the score, and stuff like Google Assistant is lauded by tech news as some great advancement despite being openly spyware-oriented.

    • by rwven ( 663186 )

      It's pretty silly to say this and then exclude companies like Samsung, Apple, LG, HTC, etc from the same logic.

      Xiaomi also makes some very high-end phones that are highly reviewed. Definitely not "cheap crap." Huawei? /shrug

      • It was a xenophobic comment, suggesting that Chinese folks sell snake-oil while twirling their fumanchu and thumbing the scale because, well, that's what the Chinese do. No substance behind it, just some idiotic ranting from racist assholes.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Have you ever been to China?
          Have you ever had to deal with Chinese businesses?

          Your comment is as ignorant as any I have ever read.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      But, they are still more trustworthy than Google.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      who will load up the phones with malware to spy on us and report back to Beijing.

      As opposed to other phones which have the Facebook app pre-installed? Or Google's Gapps suite?

  • Chinese Spy Phones (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Zorro ( 15797 ) on Friday December 15, 2017 @01:09PM (#55746795)

    At very affordable prices.

    • by mi ( 197448 )

      Chinese Spy Phones at very affordable prices.

      Just my thoughts too. THe Kaspersky [nytimes.com] thing may happen again. Heck, the ongoing farce of "Russia collusion" may, bucking the proverbial trend, come back as a real tragedy next time — because Chinese, generally, have their excrement together [thetimes.co.uk] much more than Russians these days.

      • by Guybrush_T ( 980074 ) on Friday December 15, 2017 @01:43PM (#55747067)

        There is still no proof about whether Kaspersky is actually leaking anything to the Russian government. Of course the US federal government doesn't want to use their products, which makes total sense because it is too much of a risk, but nothing, to my knowledge, has been proven.

        Same for Chinese. You may consider the risk of using a Chinese phone, but so far neither Huawei nor Xiaomi have been caught selling data to their government. Even when some data was leaked to servers in China, it was never clear there was a political intent (opposed to just plain incompetence from the Chinese developers).

        This kind of leaks go hardly unnoticed. You can't easily plant them without getting caught and if you do, the risks would be big. The most successful so far have been Google and Amazon, since no one could know if the US agencies had access to all the requests done through Alexa/Google assistant.

        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          Sadly the reality is most people in the world trust the Russian government and the Government of China more than the US government, which has factually proven over and over and over again it absolutely can not be trusted. Quite simply have something they want and you wont sell it to them at a sharp discount they will kill you for it, whether that you is one person or a million people. Who gives a fuck who the US government trusts, no one, absolutely no one, not even US citizens, should trust it, corrupt as

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The only thing we know for sure about Russia is that they came in and defeated ISIS, while we were talking about how cool moderate rebels were and making Oscar Propaganda about White Hats.

    • If letting the Chinese spy on me gets me a phone at half the local cost, I'm OK with that.

      Once I have an always-on, location-aware device on my person, somebody's tracking it. The Chinese are less likely to do anything with whatever information they gather on me, AND they're not in the same country. Or on the same continent.

      Then there's the fact that the particular phone I have has been torn down, and the software disassembled by 'reputable hackers'... and only the usual adware crap was found, which you c

  • by kimgkimg ( 957949 ) on Friday December 15, 2017 @01:13PM (#55746825)
    Xiaomi has made some awesome phones for the overseas markets. Would love to see them add support for T-mobile FDD LTE bands in addition to AT&T support.
    • I had a Xiaomi Mi5 which was a great phone, at a very low price compared to the competition, with the only problem being that it would not work with T-mobile and I visit the US now and then, so it was annoying.
      Enter the Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 - their first device to support T-mobile LTE, and an amazing phone with a gorgeous 6" screen at a device size that is a little smaller than the 5.5" iPhone pluses. It is becoming very popular outside the US, in fact there is a fleet of copycat chinese manufacturers that are m

  • Apologies for not getting the significance of this
  • Increased duty? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Midnight Thunder ( 17205 ) on Friday December 15, 2017 @01:32PM (#55746957) Homepage Journal

    If China is planning to increase duty on foreign branded phones, surely the US should be doing the same for Chinese branded phones and for the same percentages? I don't believe in unfair market protections, so if the another country is applying duties, surely the same tariffs should be applied in the other direction?

  • xiaomi is a big player in the indian market and they are almost selling millions of units every month. But there customer care service is not good as there phone i dont know why but they should take a look in to there customer care number. I have read a post where its toll free number is given but it is not working. http://customeronlineinfo.in/x... [customeronlineinfo.in]
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • My Brother-in-law bought a Huawei to use with AT&T. He loves it. I decided to get one for myself. However, using Verizon, I couldn't. The choice of phones for Verizon are now very limited. Hopefully this news changes that.
  • Here, I'll help the US companies that are involved with these talks. No customer in the entirety of the US will buy a Chinese phone laced with tracking malware and spying features. Thanks anyway though.
  • I'e had 3 Huawei phones. Mate2, 8 and now the 9. Great phones, good value, excellent battery life, very stable OS. If you are into quick updates, look elsewhere...Huawei is slow about updates, but, I don't really care if it's stable. Never had a problem with them.
  • You see, the American consumers are really strange. They don't enjoy owning unlocked smartphones that are free of carrier bloat. They want a smartphone that's locked to one carrier, features carrier logo on the back and on the boot screen, and has dozens of carrier apps and services installed on the phones. Neither consumers like having phones with many radio bands. We want the phone to have the absolute minimum of radio bands to make it work with one carrier, so that the phone becomes crippled when you try

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