Temporary trade license
The US Department of Commerce responsible for intra-US trade has confirmed this information to Reuters. It is a three-month license to trade with US parties – this does not remove it from the Entity List. The US sees the license primarily as a requirement to help its own providers, without the license it would no longer be able to supply network equipment to American providers within a short time. The Ministry also deals with software updates, with the license Huawei can (temporarily) work with Google for Android updates. This specifically concerns updates for ‘existing devices’. Huawei will not be able to work with Google on new devices with this license. It is also a temporary license, although after three months the Ministry would evaluate whether an extension will take place. Kevin Wolf, a lawyer from Washington, states that the license seems to be intended to prevent the internet, computer and mobile systems from crashing. “This is not a surrender (to Huawei, ed.), But rather a license to keep the American industry up and running.” With the license, it is still forbidden for the Chinese factory to work on new equipment and import hardware for it, the ministry writes.
Huawei 5G standard
With the license, Huawei also gets back its rights to talk about the 5G standards. Huawei lost its rights there because of its place on the Entity List. On the one hand, it is positive that a license is issued to continue trading; yet it does not solve everything. After all, the company cannot yet develop new network equipment or new Android phones with the Google Play Store and apps such as Gmail. Consequences for upcoming software upgrades to Android 10 Q are unknown. An earlier fight between the US and ZTE lasted a few months. It was a different matter, but it could be that the United States will eventually put those consequences aside.