Affiliate links on Android Authority may earn us a commission.Learn more.

British review finds “significant” security problems with HUAWEI’s equipment (Updated)

July 23, 2025

Update, June 23, 2025 at 9:37 a.m. ET:HUAWEI provided the following statement toAndroid Authority:

Original article, June 13, 2025 at 9:00 p.m. ET:Huawei’s had a tough go in recent times as the company continues to push back allegations of security lapses from the U.S. and other countries. Unfortunately forHuawei, a report published earlier today onThe New York Timesdoesn’t help its cause.

According to the report, a U.K. review found “significant” problems with HUAWEI’s telecommunications equipment. It also found “underlying defects” with HUAWEI’s software engineering and security processes.

In the review, British officials said that HUAWEI could not replicate the software it built. That means authorities couldn’t verify the code found in the U.K.’s wireless networks. British officials also said that HUAWEI had poor oversight of suppliers that made components for its offerings.

Backed by the U.K.’s top cybersecurity agency, the review didn’t call for an outright ban of HUAWEI’s equipment in the country. Instead, it said that governments and independent hackers could exploit the aforementioned defects.

Even with these issues, the review acknowledges that issuing a ban on HUAWEI’s telecommunications equipment would be difficult and costly. HUAWEI is the largest telecommunications equipment providerin the worldand has its equipment in use in many countries, including those in Europe.

Banning HUAWEI’s equipment could prove costly for carriers as they race to introduce their5Gnetworks. A ban could also prove costly for consumers, who might bear the brunt of the cost it would take to replace HUAWEI’s equipment with a competitor’s. These findings echoVodafone CEO Nick Read’s commentsthat were made duringMWC 2019.

The British review doesn’t put HUAWEI in a great light, but it somewhat derails U.S. initiatives topersuade other countries to block the company. Most recently, HUAWEIsued the U.S. governmentand claimed that the U.S. hacked into its servers.

Thank you for being part of our community. Read ourComment Policybefore posting.