Chattanooga Times Free Press

Huawei could be stripped of Google services after U. S. ban

- BY FRANK BAJAK AND JOE MCDONALD

Huawei could lose its grip on the No. 2 ranking in worldwide cellphone sales after Google announced it would comply with U.S. government restrictio­ns meant to punish the Chinese tech powerhouse.

The Trump administra­tion move, which effectivel­y bars U.S. firms from selling components and software to Huawei, ups the ante in a trade war between Washington and Beijing that partly reflects a struggle for global economic and technologi­cal dominance.

Google said basic services still would function on the Android operating system used in Huawei’s smartphone­s and existing smartphone owners would not lose access to its Google Play app store or security features.

But unless the U. S. Commerce Department grants exceptions, the ban announced last week on all purchases of U.S. technology would badly hurt Huawei, analyst say.

Washington claims Huawei poses a national security threat, and its placement on the so- called Entity List by the Trump administra­tion last week is widely seen as intended to persuade resistant U.S. allies in Europe to exclude Huawei equipment from their next-generation wireless networks, known as 5G.

“This is a major crisis for Huawei. Instead of being the world’s largest handset manufactur­er this year, it will struggle to stay two, but probably fall behind,” analyst Roger Entner said. “How competitiv­e is a smartphone without the most well- known and popular apps?”

Huawei will likely use its own, stripped-down version of Android, whose basic code is provided free of charge by Google. But it’s not yet clear what other Google software and services — such as maps, Gmail or search — it will be able to use.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ NG HAN GUAN ?? A man uses two smartphone­s at once outside a Huawei store in Beijing on Monday. Google is assuring users of Huawei smartphone­s the American company’s services still will work on them following U. S. government restrictio­ns on doing business with the Chinese tech giant.
AP PHOTO/ NG HAN GUAN A man uses two smartphone­s at once outside a Huawei store in Beijing on Monday. Google is assuring users of Huawei smartphone­s the American company’s services still will work on them following U. S. government restrictio­ns on doing business with the Chinese tech giant.

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