The Australian Strategic Policy Institute’s International Cyber Policy Centre updated its digital map of China’s tech industry[1] in November 2019, adding in several new data sets and streamlining the interface. The map displays a wide variety of information, including:
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“26,000+ data points that have helped to geo-locate 2,500+ points of overseas presence for the 23 companies
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“447 university and research partnerships, including 195+ Huawei Seeds for the Future university partnerships
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“115 smart city or public security solution projects, most of which are in Europe, South America and Africa
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“88 5G relationships in 45 countries
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“295 surveillance relationships in 96 countries
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“145 R&D labs, the greatest concentration of which is in Europe
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“63 undersea cables, 20 leased cables and 49 terrestrial cables
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“208 data centres and 342 telecommunications and ICT projects spread across the world.”
Each data point is explained with links to more information, which makes for a substantial amount of data available to the public. The data could prove useful to global compliance and supply chain professionals in the electronics industry; the data points can reveal, for example, partnerships and associations that could help companies avoid sanctionable transactions.
1 Australian Strategic Policy Institute, International Cyber Policy Centre, Mapping China’s Tech Giants, https://bit.ly/35CS8vC.
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