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China protests U.S. politicizing telecom disputes
BEIJING, Mar 03, 2013 (Xinhua via COMTEX) --
China has voiced its discontent
with the United States for politicizing intellectual property
disputes concerning Huawei and ZTE, two leading Chinese telecom
equipment makers.
"Intellectual property right is a private right, and we oppose
its politicization," State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO)
commissioner Tian Lipu told Xinhua on Sunday.
He said Huawei Technologies Co. and ZTE Corp. are leading
intellectual property owners in the world IT industry, and main
applicants of the world's Patent Cooperation Treaty.
"They are on par with any western multinational corporation in
the quantity and quality of owned intellectual property," said
Tian. "They comply with international business rules and safety
rules in operations."
According to the SIPO, China granted 2,734 invention patents to
Huawei and 2,727 to ZTE, in 2012, meaning they were the biggest
receivers of invention patents on the Chinese mainland last year.
Tian said "Public policies should take into account social
impacts. When intellectual property disputes arise, we should
appeal to legal and judicial means and allow businesses to solve
the disputes by themselves.
"It is a little ridiculous for the United States to penalize
Chinese companies with intellectual properties. It reflects the
anxiety and irrationality of some people. I hope they can change
such practices."
On Jan. 31, the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC)
initiated a Section-337 investigation into wireless devices from
Huawei and ZTE, along with two others based in South Korea and
Finland, on the grounds of patent infringement.
The probe was based on a complaint filed by InterDigital
Communications and another three U.S. companies in early January.
The complainant accused these companies of infringing its
patents related to wireless devices with 3G and/or 4G
capabilities, and requested an exclusion order and cease and
desist orders, according to the federal bipartisan panel.
Within 45 days, the USITC will set a target date for completing
the investigation. Should the complaint be approved, the panel
will issue remedial orders, such as a ban on importation of
accused products.
Huawei and ZTE responded by denying the patent claims and
saying they would actively fight the suit.
In October 2012, the U.S. House of Representatives Intelligence
Committee issued a report alleging that Huawei and ZTE pose
possible threats to U.S. national security. The committee
suggested U.S. companies should avoid buying their equipment from
Huawei and ZTE.
Huawei and ZTE were accused of deliberately inserting "back
doors" in their products. Back doors are programs secretly
inserted by developers, enabling attackers to install malicious
software that could paralyze networks and allow hackers to gain
entry to highly classified systems.
But an 18-month White House-ordered review on Huawei, indicated
no evidence of Huawei espionage was found.
Huawei and ZTC are the second- and fifth-largest telecom
equipment makers in the world, respectively. In recent years, they
have pursued a foothold in the U.S. market but are accused to be
under the control of the Chinese government and have entered the
U.S. market through unfair means.
Huawei's products and services are sold in over 140 countries,
and it has over 20 research and development centers around the
world. It pocketed 15.4 billion yuan (2.44 billion U.S. dollars)
in net profits in 2012, up 33 percent year on year. About 66
percent of its revenues came from overseas markets, according to
Cathy Meng, the company's chief financial officer.
ZTE, a smaller listed competitor, has estimated losses of 2.5
to 2.9 billion yuan for 2012.
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