Huawei is making moves to sidestep the Trump administration's de facto ban by trademarking its own operating system. The OS, which has reportedly been in the works for years, was named in trademark applications filed in Peru under the name "Hongmeng," for use within nine countries and Europe (although it's been filed under the name "Ark OS" on the continent). . The company has previously suggested the system could roll out as early as this fall, but it only seems likely to do so if it is permanently denied access to Android. However, while launching its own OS is one way Huawei could continue operations in the face of its US ban, there are concerns about such a system's security, as software is not the company's strongest area. Meanwhile, Huawei has made its feelings about its ban clear in an ex parte memo to the Federal Communications Commission. The letter, published this week, condemns the decision to ban the company on the grounds of national security threats, noting that doing so will "do little or nothing to protect the security of America's telecommunications networks," and that forcing operators to replace their existing equipment would "pose a greater threat" to network security. The link for this article located at Engadget is no longer available. . Following US government restrictions, Huawei has launched HarmonyOS, igniting discussions about data privacy and security protocols surrounding it. Huawei, Hongmeng OS, mobile operating system, US ban, security concerns. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
What started out as a hobby collecting fun ideas to customise IKEA products became so big that the Swedish furniture giant threatened a lawsuit against Ipoh-born Jules Yap over trademark violation. . That is before an army of fans and those from the online community protested and even called the world The link for this article located at Yahoo SG is no longer available. . Jules Yap's passion for transforming IKEA furniture blossomed into a creative movement, inspiring a thriving online community of DIY enthusiasts sharing innovative hacks.. Jules Yap, IKEA Hacks, DIY Furniture, Customization, Community Movement. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Internet engineering community rebuffed one of its own security gurus this week, by rejecting a request from the inventor of the popular Secure Shell protocol to change the technology's acronym to protect his company's trademark on the term. Tatu Ylonnen . . . . The Internet engineering community rebuffed one of its own security gurus this week, by rejecting a request from the inventor of the popular Secure Shell protocol to change the technology's acronym to protect his company's trademark on the term. Tatu Ylonnen created Secure Shell in 1995 as a way of securing remote login, file transfer, TCP/IP and X11 forwarding. The protocol automatically encrypts, authenticates and compresses transmitted data. Ylonnen published Secure Shell as free software, and the technology is now available from several software vendors, including Sun Microsystems, Lucent Technologies, Nokia and Ericsson. Ylonnen's own company, SSH Communications Security of Finland, sells a full suite of cryptography and authentication products based on the Secure Shell protocol. The link for this article located at NWFusion is no longer available. . The Internet engineering community rebuffed one of its own security gurus this week, by rejecting a . internet, engineering, community, rebuffed, security, gurus, rejecting. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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