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House of Huawei

The Secret History of China's Most Powerful Company

by Eva Dou
ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 6 weeks
“Authoritative… a tale that sits at the heart of the most significant geopolitical relationship today.” – Financial Times

“There’s probably no better account of China’s rise to economic dominance as seen through the prism of a single company.” – The Wall Street Journal


ABOUT THE BOOK


The untold story of the mysterious company that shook the world.

On the coast of southern China, an eccentric entrepreneur spent three decades steadily building an obscure telecom company into one of the world’s most powerful technological empires with hardly anyone noticing. This all changed in December 2018, when the detention of Meng Wanzhou, Huawei Technologies’ female scion, sparked an international hostage standoff, poured fuel on the US-China trade war, and suddenly thrust the mysterious company into the global spotlight.
In House of Huawei, Washington Post technology reporter Eva Dou pieces together a remarkable portrait of Huawei’s reclusive founder, Ren Zhengfei, and how he built a sprawling corporate empire—one whose rise Western policymakers have become increasingly obsessed with halting. Based on wide-ranging interviews and painstaking archival research, House of Huawei dissects the global web of power, money, influence, surveillance, bloodshed, and national glory that Huawei helped to build—and that has also ensnared it.
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    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2024
      A respected reporter looks behind the curtain at a corporate behemoth. It can be a surprise to learn that Huawei is possibly the largest telecommunications company in the world, dominant in China and powerful elsewhere. Dou, a technology journalist with theWashington Post, tackles the daunting task of documenting its story, amassing a huge amount of material from official records and expert opinions. Ren Zhengfei, who founded Huawei in 1987, is a somewhat reclusive figure, although Dou is able to piece together a picture of him (providing a useful timeline of events as well as a cast of major characters). An engineer by training, his real strength has always been strategy, and he was quick to grasp the need for a reliable phone system in China. Ren was adept at navigating the shifting shoals of Chinese politics, and when the cellphone boom came, he was in good position to take advantage. There were continued allegations that Huawei was, in tandem with the government, building eavesdropping and malware bugs into its "pipeline" systems, both at home and abroad, which eventually led to the company's being banned from the U.S. and other countries. Dou acknowledges that it is difficult to track the connections between Huawei and the government; it seems to be a matter of personal connections and agreed objectives. In fact, now that Ren has stepped back from an active role, it is difficult to establish where the real power within the company lies, although several members of Ren's family hold crucial positions. Dou holds the lengthy and complex narrative together, untangling the webs of money and politics that underpin China's tech giant. A timely, clear, and undeniably worrying account.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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