Telecommunications giant Huawei has been suspended from a prominent global cybersecurity trade group amid ongoing US scrutiny of the Chinese company.

Why it matters: While largely unknown, the Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams (FIRST) has become a first responder in major breaches and cybersecurity incidents around the world.

  • The organizationโ€™s members include governments, companies, and cybersecurity researchers from across the globe. Notable firms include Accenture, Cisco, Google, Apple, and Alibaba.
  • The companyโ€™s suspension could put a vast number of its users at risk given that FIRST members share intelligence about security threats.

Details: FIRST said that the organization resorted to suspending Huaweiโ€™s membership to comply with evolving US export regulations after Huawei was blacklisted, which blocked the tech giant from sourcing American components.

  • FIRST called for organizations involved in cybersecurity response to be allowed to cooperate even when sanctions are imposed.
  • The organization said it โ€œregretsโ€ being put in a position where it was forced to suspend Huaweiโ€™s membership.
  • The security of the internet is dependent on security professionals around the world being able to work together to mitigate security risks, FIRST said.
  • The organization said it would work with US authorities and Huawei to assuage any concerns about the companyโ€™s involvement in its operations.

โ€œWhen regulation directly affects the ability to cooperate, the stability and security of the internet can be placed at risk.โ€

โ€”FIRST in a statement

Context: Washington has made repeated calls to limit Huaweiโ€™s operations in the US, citing national security concerns.

  • Huawei critics have said that given the companyโ€™s Chinese roots, it could be compelled to give up sensitive information to Chinaโ€™s government.
  • The telecom giant was added to the US Department of Commerceโ€™s โ€œentity listโ€ earlier this year, which bars US companies from doing business with it.

Christopher Udemans is TechNode's former Shanghai-based data and graphics reporter. He covered Chinese artificial intelligence, mobility, cleantech, and cybersecurity.

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