In a bid to counter threats posed by Chinese technology firms, US President Joe Biden signed a law to ban big-time Chinese tech corporations like Huawei and ZTE from attaining approval for network equipment licences in the states.


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The new legislation, which is termed the ‘Secure Equipment Act of 2021’ had got bipartisan support before it was signed by the president himself, said a ZDNet report on Friday.


The move comes after the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), an independent US agency that regulates communications, labelled Huawei and ZTE as national security threats to US’ communication networks that made it harder for the country to buy equipment from these Chinese companies.


Under the new law, the FCC is required to no longer review or approve any authorisation application for equipment posing a clear risk to national security. FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr had made repeated calls for the legislation to be passed since March this year.


"Once we have determined that Huawei or other gear poses an unacceptable national security risk, it makes no sense to allow that exact same equipment to be purchased and inserted into our communications networks as long as federal dollars are not involved. The presence of these insecure devices in our networks is the threat, not the source of funding used to purchase them," Carr had said.


Besides Huawei and ZTE, other Chinese firms touted as national security threats are Hytera Communications Corporation, Hangzhou Hikvision Digital Technology Company, and Dahua Technology Company.


In June this year, Biden signed an executive order that increases the number of restricted Chinese firms from 48 to 59, expanding a Donald Trump-era ban on Chinese surveillance companies with alleged ties to the military.


The executive order bans Americans from investing in additional Chinese firms starting from August 2.


In October, the FCC Commissioner had warned that Chinese drone maker DJI "is collecting vast troves of sensitive data on Americans and US critical infrastructure, potentially operating as Huawei on wings".


Shenzhen-based DJI accounts for more than 50 per cent of the US drone market.


(With inputs from IANS)


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