In January, before President Trump left office, Chinese electronics company Xiaomi was added to a blacklist by the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) following its classification as a "Communist Chinese military company." That decision has now been reversed.
Xiaomi responded to the blacklisting by filing a lawsuit where it denied the allegations it had ties to the Chinese military or was a Communist Chinese military company. As Bloomberg reports, a federal judge in March sided with Xiaomi and blocked the restrictions from being imposed.
As The Verge reports, it looks as though the U.S. government doesn't intend to pursue the matter any further. According to a joint status report filed with the DoD, the two parties "have agreed upon a path forward that would resolve this litigation without the need for contested briefing." The most recent court filing also states that Xiaomi and the DoD have "agreed that a final order vacating the January 14, 2021 designation of Xiaomi Corporation as a CCMC...would be appropriate."
If the blacklisting had been enforced, it would result in U.S. investors only having until Nov. 11 this year to divest any holdings in Xiaomi, which currently counts as the third-largest smartphone manufacturer. Unsurprisingly, Xiaomi's share price is already 6 percent higher today, whereas back in January it fell 11 percent on news of the blacklisting.
文章
84464
浏览
5933
获赞
99
Apple gives students and teachers free AirPods with purchase of Mac or iPad
AirPods are cool. Free AirPods are even cooler. Apple is giving away a free pair of AirPods for studFixing an iPhone X's screen will cost $279 without AppleCare+
If you snagged a pre-order reservation for the iPhone X this morning, a quick word of advice: be extApple's new macOS beta release adds hundreds of new emoji
Hundreds of new emoji are finally starting to make their way into the world.Apple dropped the latest'Rocket League' is finally coming to the Nintendo Switch in November
Mark your calendars, folks. Rocket Leaguewill be finally released on the Nintendo Switch on NovemberJust a normal adult here, definitely not 2 kids in a trench coat
Do modern kids actuallydo the two-kids-in-a-trench-coat trick to look like a totally normal adult peVolvo's new wave of electric cars starts with a new brand: Polestar
Volvo made a big commitment earlier this year to put electric motors in all of its vehicles by 2019There's a major problem with both Apple and Google's burger emoji
Are you team Apple or team Google? We're not asking about your choice of smartphone, laptop or tableHere's why some apps will look bad on the iPhone X
The iPhone X has the best display of any iPhone ever, but if you're among the throngs of people liniFacebook bans far right ‘Boogaloo’ accounts from its platform
Facebook is cracking down on the Boogaloo movement.On Tuesday, the social media giant announcedthatWhat the inside of Google's Pixel 2 XL looks like, including those weird squeeze sensors
In a time when prying a smartphone open (without destroying it) is about as easy as cracking a safe,LG V30 review: Great looks, disappointing camera
LG is on the right path when it comes to smartphones. After its modular LG G5 tanked, the company'sConfessions of a Tinder Tourist: The rules of right
Sitting across from my friend in my favourite coffee shop, I began reciting the story of yet another'Billionaire's son' Bobby Misner knows YouTube doesn't like him
Bobby Misner knows people don't like him, and he is more than OK with it — he's still raking iHow to take screenshots with Apple's new iPhone X
The iPhone X is finally here.If you've been lucky enough to get your hands on one, then you know thaIndia overtakes the U.S. to become world's second largest smartphone market
India is now the world's second largest smartphone market, behind China. That pushes the U.S. down t