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Huawei is having a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad month — here's what's going on

The United States has effectively blacklisted the world's second-largest smartphone maker, Huawei , from doing business with US companies.

Ren Zhengfei Huawei CEO
  • The ban is the latest volley in an ongoing trade dispute between the US and China.
  • As the ban took effect this week, major tech companies all over the world cut ties with Huawei.
  • The ripples from the ban are massive, and impact millions of people all over the world.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Chinese tech giant Huawei is having a very bad month.

Following the news that the United States government was effectively banning US companies from doing business with the world's second-largest smartphone maker, major tech companies all over the world have cut ties with Huawei .

Most notably, Google's Android smartphone operating system is the backbone of Huawei's massive smartphone business but in the next three months, it will stop getting updates on Huawei's devices. The same could be said for Huawei's computer business, which relies on Windows 10 from Microsoft and hardware from a variety of different US companies.

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The situation is, to put it lightly, a gigantic mess. And with things coming to a head this week, we put together an explainer of the entire situation so you can catch up.

Here's everything that's happened so far in Huawei's very messy month:

Shona Ghosh/Business Insider

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Huawei is one of the biggest tech companies in the world the company's 2018 revenue exceeded $100 billion, and it employs nearly 200,000 people.

But maybe you've never heard the name? That's because Huawei is a much bigger deal outside the US.

The Chinese tech giant is most well-known for its consumer products: Smartphones, laptops, and networking devices. Huawei is the second-largest phone maker in the world just above Apple and below Samsung. Massive Huawei ads are a common sight in Europe and Asia, as Huawei smartphones are common consumer devices outside of the US.

But in the United States, Huawei phones aren't sold in electronics stores like Best Buy, nor are they sold by carriers like Verizon. The phones aren't even supported by every telecoms company.

In short, it's surprisingly difficult to buy and use Huawei devices in the US even before the company was banned.

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Reuters

On May 16, the US Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security announced that Huawei was added to the "entity list" a complicated, bureaucratic way of saying that US companies are barred from doing business with Huawei unless they get explicit permission from the US government.

In the following days, tech companies all over the world began summarily cutting ties with Huawei in keeping with US government regulation.

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Exactly why the US government added Huawei to the entity list is a matter of contention.

The official reasoning given by the Commerce Department was that Huawei, "is engaged in activities that are contrary to US national security or foreign policy interest."

But the move also appears to be part of the ongoing trade war between the US and China something President Trump indicated in a recent exchange with reporters . "Huawei is something that's very dangerous. You look at what they've done from a security standpoint, from a military standpoint, it's very dangerous," he said this week. What he said next was telling: "It's possible that Huawei even would be included in some kind of a trade deal. If we made a deal, I could imagine Huawei being possibly included in some form of, or some part of a trade deal."

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Kevin Frayer/Getty

Huawei's smartphones run on Android and the blacklisting means Huawei can't use Google's software after August 19th.

Huawei's computers run on Windows 10 and the blacklisting means Huawei can't use Windows 10 after August 19th either.

Starting to get the idea?

That's before we start talking about all the other US companies that Huawei works with to create its products. American companies like NVIDIA and Qualcomm make chips that go in Huawei devices , and American companies like Google and Microsoft make software that runs those devices.

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By adding Huawei to the entity list, these companies are required to stop working with Huawei.

For example: If you're a Huawei smartphone user in, say, London, you can expect your Android-powered phone to stop receiving security updates.

Shona Ghosh/Business Insider

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Theoretically, Huawei could source parts from different manufacturers, and it could use its own custom OS.

Indeed: The company has been preparing its own smartphone operating system for some time.

This is ahuge leap, though, and would be extremely expensive.

Huawei has built a business around the parts suppliers it uses, and currently uses the Android operating system built by Google that comes with major consumer services like the Google Play app store. It would, at very least, be a major adjustment for Huawei that would cost millions.

It would also mean Huawei smartphones would lose a lot of major Google services stuff like Gmail, Google Calendar, YouTube, etc.

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But isn't Android a piece of open-source software? It is! But the open-source version of Android is far from the version that people use on current Android smartphones. And using that version of Android wouldn't allow Huawei to include the aforementioned services.

Google

Building an app store is very difficult. Huawei currently has its own, but it's not very popular. Apple's App Store and Google's Play store are the two heavies, and no other company has been able to come anywhere near their market dominance.

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Amazon tried, as has Samsung. Neither succeeded.

But that's far from the only issue with losing Google's Play store many of the apps that people want are made by American companies. Instagram and Facebook and WhatsApp are all US-owned and operated, and none of those would be allowed to appear on Huawei's own app store.

Kyodo News via Getty Image

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That's the big question. ButHuawei CEO Ren Zhengfei is optimistic.

"The world's economy is clearly on a path to globalization, and we all need to be united on that front," he said in an interview with Business Insider Japan .

"If a country closes itself off and tries to make its own version of a product for itself, not only will the scale of production eventually plateau; costs will also increase. There's no way the product will be able to meet society's needs," he said.

He also warned about the potentially negative knock-on effects of the ban on working with Huawei. "When you go against the tide of globalization, it leads to economic issues," he said. "The Chinese market is still growing and Japan relies heavily on it and I don't think it would be wise for the American economy to give up on the Chinese market either."

For the time being, US companies with existing business ties to Huawei have been granted a 90-day "temporary general license" to keep working with the Chinese tech giant to support their current partnership.

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Google has also assured Android users with Huawei phones that, "while we are complying with all US gov't requirements, services like Google Play & security from Google Play Protect will keep functioning on your existing Huawei device."

See Also:

SEE ALSO: Here are all the companies that have cut ties with Huawei, dealing the Chinese tech giant a crushing blow

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