美國為甚麼對孟晚舟發難?(2)

 劍槁大學研究員Janus Dongye說:



The detailed rea­son for this arrest has been revealed. Huawei CFO Wanzhou Meng is sus­pect­ed of con­spir­a­cy to defraud mul­ti­ple finan­cial US insti­tu­tions. The US Judi­cia­ry found that there was a com­pa­ny called Sky­com that trad­ed with Iran dur­ing 2011–2014 and Huawei was sus­pect­ed to con­trol the com­pa­ny Sky­com at that time.So the accu­sa­tion is about the old Iran sanc­tions 7 years ago. And you might won­der why some­one brought this up at this par­tic­u­lar time. Whether it was true or not, I am sure Huawei would use its legal depart­ment and best lawyers to defend itself. The case would cost months to set­tle and Huawei would lose a CFO tem­porar­i­ly to direct the com­pa­ny dur­ing the time. We will close­ly watch the sit­u­a­tion and changes.
 
How­ev­er, there is some­thing else that you need to know to under­stand this inci­dent. I hope I can change some of your perspectives.
 
5G is the fifth gen­er­a­tion of cel­lu­lar mobile com­mu­ni­ca­tions. It suc­ceeds the 4G (LTE/WiMax), 3G (UMTS) and 2G (GSM) sys­tems. 5G is the new crit­i­cal node for the future glob­al sup­ply chain. This is the ulti­mate tech­nol­o­gy that deter­mines the communication/mobile net­works in the next 10 years. There­fore this is a big cake that every­one wants to get a slice from it.
 
The whole 5G frame­work can be divid­ed into two key tech­nol­o­gy: the modem chipset and router infrastructure.
 
On one hand, the modem chipset is installed in your phones and oth­er sen­sors that need to be con­nect­ed to the Internet.
 
The cur­rent 5G modem chipset patent (IP) is held by:
 
Huawei (Chi­na)
Qual­comm (US)
Sam­sung (Korea)
Medi­aTek (Tai­wan)
Intel (US)
Apple (US) (rumoured)
 
On the oth­er hand, the router infra­struc­ture is placed in base sta­tions all over the build­ings and tow­ers. It direct­ly talks to the 5G modem in your mobile phones and trans­lates your 5G requests to the Internet.
 
The cur­rent 5G router patent (IP) is held by:
 
Huawei (Chi­na)
Nokia (Fin­land)
Eric­s­son (Swe­den)
ZTE (Chi­na) Sur­prise Hah?
Cis­co (US)
Sam­sung (Korea)
 
There are two hid­den traps from this 5G tech­nol­o­gy that oth­er peo­ple might not tell you:
The router and the modem chipset must be com­pat­i­ble, and there­fore a stan­dard must be set­tled in order for them to talk.
 

The modem chipset is deeply cou­pled into the sys­tem on a sin­gle chip with CPU and GPUs. The sys­tem is nor­mal­ly shipped as a package.

If you hold the 5G modem IP in a SOC (Sys­tem-on-chip), you can also bind your CPU and GPU IP in a pack­age. That means who­ev­er con­trols the 5G IP would also con­trol the whole mar­ket of the CPU and GPU intel­lec­tu­al prop­er­ty. If you hold the 5G router stan­dard, you can also con­trol the modem stan­dard and then con­trol the whole sys­tem standard.
For exam­ple, if the US were to allow Huawei to sell its 5G router devices to Ver­i­zon or AT&T, then Huawei could make all of its base sta­tions to only sup­port its own modem stan­dard. Then you could end up with the whole sys­tem pack­age deliv­ered by Huawei as well. Then the US might have to buy more devices made by Huawei in order to use 5G.
 
That’s how Qual­comm rose from a small com­pa­ny to the top sim­ply based on its 3G patents. And you can see that Huawei and Sam­sung is the dom­i­nant play­er here that they both con­trol the modem and router patents.
 

How­ev­er, owing to the pres­sure of the US gov­ern­ment, Sam­sung sur­ren­dered its chip IP right to US com­pa­nies. This is the fun­da­men­tal dif­fer­ence between Sam­sung and Huawei. Because the South Kore­an mar­ket is so small and there­fore Sam­sung has to sur­ren­der to the US in order to survive.

Sam­sung Galaxy S10 Comes with Qual­comm Snap­drag­on 855 SoC and 5G Ser­vice — Tech News Watch
 
You might won­der why Sam­sung does not use its Exynos proces­sors in US but it has to use Qual­comm one? That is the pres­sure from the US government.
 

Mean­while, Huawei gets the full cul­ti­va­tion in the Chi­nese mar­ket and does not fear the US gov­ern­ment. It nev­er intends to go to the US mar­ket as well. What it focus­es on is the adop­tion in Chi­na and the rest of third-world coun­tries. If you read the fol­low­ing recent news, you can get a feel­ing that Chi­na is real­ly lead­ing the glob­al 5G bat­tle in all three fields: tech­nol­o­gy, adop­tion and market.

Chongqing launch­es first 5G tri­al network
‘World’s first’ 5G call com­plet­ed by Voda­fone and Huawei
Chi­na Mobile and Chi­na Uni­com to start 5G tri­als | TelecomLead
Brief­ing: Chi­na’s mobile oper­a­tors grant­ed nation­wide 5G licens­es · TechNode
 
The Chi­nese gov­ern­ment said it would per­form nation­wide 5G adop­tion using Huawei tech­nol­o­gy around March 2019. Please note that this is a mar­ket of 1.4 bil­lion peo­ple that is US pop­u­la­tion and Europe pop­u­la­tion com­bined. And the Chi­nese gov­ern­ment is push­ing this real­ly hard, unlike the US stuck in leg­is­la­tion as you can imag­ine.

 

 

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