Ren Zhengfei
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 79 |
Date of birth | October 25,1944 |
Zodiac sign | Scorpio |
Born | Zhenning Buyei And Miao Autonomous County |
Anshun | |
China | |
Nationality | Chinese |
Net worth | 1. 8 billion USD (2019) |
1 billion USD | |
Children | Meng Wanzhou |
Ren Ping | |
Annabel Yao | |
Parents | Ren Moxun |
Cheng Yuanzhao | |
Job | Engineer |
Businessperson | |
Spouse | Yao Ling |
Siblings | Ren Shulu |
Ren Zhengli | |
Ren Shuhong | |
Education | Chongqing University |
Chongqing Jianzhu University | |
Height | 173 (cm) |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 455969 |
Ren Zhengfei Life story
Ren Zhengfei is a Chinese entrepreneur and engineer who is the founder and CEO of Huawei Technologies, the world's largest manufacturer of telecommunications equipment and second largest manufacturer of smartphones. He is a member of the Chinese Communist Party.
Coco Lee: Death of pop icon sparks mental health discussion in China
... In an article published in 2015, Ren Zhengfei, founder of tech giant Huawei, revealed he had once suffered from severe depression and anxiety...
China anniversary: How the Communist Party runs the country
... That includes people like billionaires such as Alibaba s Jack Ma or Huawei s Ren Zhengfei, and even celebrities like actress Fan Bingbing...
What's next after the release of Meng Wanzhou?
... She is also the daughter of the firm s founder, Ren Zhengfei, who was once a member of the Chinese People s Liberation Army...
Huawei chief offers to share 5G know-how for a fee
...Ren Zhengfei says a Western buyer could modify his firm s products to meet the US s security concerns Huawei s chief executive has proposed selling its current 5G know-how to a Western firm as a way to address security concerns voiced by the US and others about its business...
How damaging is the Huawei row for the US and China?
... Google is one of several firms that has stepped backed from Huawei after the US put restrictions on the Chinese company The company s founder Ren Zhengfei recently told Bloomberg that Huawei would use more of its own chips if there were further US restrictions, and would reduce its purchases from the US...
GCHQ: Chinese tech 'threats' must be understood
... The company s founder, Ren Zhengfei, told the BBC last week that the US made up only a fraction of its overall business and could not crush it...
Ren Zhengfei: Huawei's reclusive founder
...Ren Zhengfei is one of China s richest businessmen When Huawei s founder and president Ren Zhengfei started his firm back in 1987 with just 21,000 yuan - the equivalent of about $6,600 today - little did he know his creation would grow to become a telecoms giant and make him one of the richest people in the world...
Huawei: A simple guide to why the company is in so much trouble
... What is Huawei? Huawei was founded in 1987 in Shenzhen, southern China, by Ren Zhengfei, a former army officer...
Huawei chief offers to share 5G know-how for a fee
Ren Zhengfei says a Western buyer could modify his firm's products to meet the US's security concerns
Huawei 's chief executive has proposed selling its current 5G know-how to a Western firm as a way to address security concerns voiced by the US and others about its business.
Ren Zhengfei said the buyer would be free to "change the software code".
That would allow any flaws or supposed backdoors to be addressed without Huawei 's involvement.
The US and Australia have banned their networks from using Huawei 's equipment. The UK is still weighing a decision.
Huawei has repeatedly denied claims that it would help the Chinese government spy on or disrupt other countries' telecoms systems, and says it is a private enterprise owned by its workers.
One expert, who had, said the idea of it helping Another Country 's business to compete represented an "extraordinary offer".
"Perhaps the explanation is that Huawei recognises that it is unlikely to be able to bypass the efforts the Trump administration is putting into minimising its scope to operate in North America , Western Europe and Australasia," said Prof Steve Tsang from Soas University of London.
"But it's difficult to see Nokia or Ericsson being interested in buying it. And it's also difficult to see how an American company would be able to reassure the Trump administration that it's absolutely top notch American technology.
"And if they can't do that, why would they want to spend tens of billions of US dollars on something that will quickly become out-of-date. "
Seeking 'balance'Huawei 's founder Ren Zhengfei made The Proposal in interviews with The Economist and the New York Times.
The Deal would allow a Western firm to use Huawei 's tech to making competing 5G productsIt would include ongoing access to The Firm 's existing 5G patents, licences, code, technical blueprints and Production Engineering knowledge.
"[Huawei is] open to sharing our 5G technologies and techniques With Us companies, so that they can build up their own 5G industry,"
"This would create a balanced situation between China, the US and Europe . "
: "A balanced distribution of interests is conducive to Huawei 's survival. "
A spokesman for Huawei has confirmed the quotes are accurate and the idea represents a "genuine proposal".
At present, Europe 's Nokia and Ericsson are the main alternatives to Huawei when It Comes to networks selecting what 5G cell tower base stations and other equipment to install.
South Korea 's Samsung and China's ZTE are other alternatives.
But while American firms including Cisco, Dell Emc and Hewlett Packard Enterprise have developed 5G-related technologies, the US lacks an infrastructure-equipment specialist of its own.
Beyond the licensing fee, Huawei could benefit because it might convince Washington to drop restrictions that currently prevent it buying US-linked technologies for its own use.
One consequence of this is that Huawei faces having to launch an Android smartphone later this month that will not offer Google apps such as YouTube or The Play Store.
A deal would also help ensure Huawei gets its 5G technologies widely adopted.
For instance, 5G supports two different coding techniques for Data Transmission to help tackle interference.
Huawei has developed a technique called "polar codes", which it says will give 5G devices longer battery life than an alternative favoured by many Western firms called "low density parity check".
If polar codes are widely adopted, Huawei will earn more patent fees from device-makers that support them.
Intelligence lawOne company-watcher, however, suggested Ren's proposal was doomed to fail.
Huawei faces having to launch the Mate 30 without some of Android's most popular apps"Huawei misunderstands the underlying problem," Hosuk Lee-Makiyama, from the European Centre for International Political Economy , told the BBC.
"The issue is not the trustworthiness of Huawei as a vendor but the legal obligations that the Chinese government imposes on it.
"China's National Intelligence Law requires Chinese businesses and citizens to surrender any data or 'communication tools' they may have access to, under strict punitive sanctions.
"Any equipment or software that Huawei licenses to an US entity would still fall under this obligation, and there is no way that the licensing entity or The Intelligence agencies could scrutinise millions of lines of code for potential backdoors. "
But Prof Tsang said The Proposal was still a "smart move".
Even if Huawei 's offer is ultimately rejected, he explained, it demonstrates that The Company is willing to go to remarkable lengths to try and win The West 's Trust .
cyber-security,5g, huawei
Source of news: bbc.com