Comment by anigbrowl

Comment by anigbrowl 3 days ago

203 replies

I think the point is that if you're not Hezbollah or any kind of political actor, but just a customer for Israeli technology (public or private), would you really want to keep buying it? Leave aside boycotts over Israeli policy, you might be opening yourself to becoming an Israeli attack vector and either find your own interests compromised or become a target of Israel's enemies if they thought you were complicit.

tomp 3 days ago

What are you gonna buy? Chinese tech? Iranian tech? Russian tech?

Who do you want to be able to spy on you and compromise your hardware?

Unless you can spin up your own fab (hint: you can't) you're dependent on a hegemon. US/EU/Israel isn't perfect, but pretty much as good as it gets.

  • frmersdog 3 days ago

    I know that this is rhetorical, but I'm sure an analysis of which country is least likely to leave you exposed to the issues mentioned above could be done. I suppose it also depends on who "you" are, and the threat of communications compromise vs drawing the ire of whoever Israel decides to attack through you. I'm sure there are plenty of countries that would rather be bugged by the Chinese or Iranians than be complicit in a way that opens them to actual armed conflict.

    This is another danger of letting Israel swing its sword around without any sort of real condemnation from the US/West: the rationale for geopolitical multi-polarity increases in legitimacy. Pax Americana ends because allying with us doesn't save you from being used as a tool for ends like this. If speculation is correct that Taiwan is involved... Woof.

  • seydor 3 days ago

    > Who do you want to be able to spy on you

    I buy chinese IP cameras. China cannot block my bank account / employment / communications.

    • [removed] 2 days ago
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    • dijit 3 days ago

      Agreed.

      All this fearmongering about telegram and tiktok is weird.

      China can decide what it wants from me- I have no plans to visit or engage with regime; however my life is dependent on the US not thinking of me as interesting.

      So, the less I give to US companies, the better.

      Especially as, being a non-US citizen I have no right to privacy afforded to me in the constitution, and US companies can be forced to comply with the government in secret- much in the same way we consider that China does it to even part-owned China based companies.

      • ruraljuror 3 days ago

        The concern over tiktok is not that Xi’s autocratic regime is surveilling you, but manipulating the algorithms in its large social media market share to foment anti-American (& anti-Israeli) sentiment.

      • dghlsakjg 2 days ago

        The constitution does not exclusively apply to US citizens is the good news.

        The bad news is that there is no explicit and broad right to privacy in the constitution. You are protected by the fourth amendment requiring a warrant for searches and seizures, but the court has ruled that, citizen or not, if a third party like Meta willingly hands over your info, it’s fair game. L

      • cryptonector 2 days ago

        "You have no privacy, get used to it!" -Scott McNealy

        Scott was not saying "you should have no privacy"; he was making a statement of fact. That was nearly two decades ago, and he was prescient and right.

      • PaulDavisThe1st 2 days ago

        > So, the less I give to US companies, the better.

        and all of a sudden, you're interesting.

        • talldayo 2 days ago

          You shouldn't be downvoted, the whole industry ought to know by now that Palantir aggregates multiple international sources of data for sale to American defense agencies. If you're legitimately afraid of America, the internet has few places of refuge.

      • JumpCrisscross 2 days ago

        > China can decide what it wants from me- I have no plans to visit or engage with regime; however my life is dependent on the US not thinking of me as interesting

        If you have something of interest to Beijing and you’re doing something shameful or illegal in America, and they have evidence, they have leverage. This is human asset development 101.

        Most people don’t have skills or information relevant to a foreign state. But some do, and for them being mindful about not giving a foreign adversary blackmail leverage is prudent.

      • nindalf 2 days ago

        > my life is dependent on the US not thinking of me as interesting

        Why do people engage in this sort of larping, like they're secret agents or intellectuals that may be hunted at any moment by the grey suits in western governments?

        We know it's not true for this person in particular because one click on their HN profile tells you their real name. I stopped there, but I'm sure there is plenty of additional info available with 3-4 more clicks. If they were really so afraid of government reprisal like this larping suggests, maybe they'd attempt to be at least a little pseudo-anonymous.

        The actual fact is that 99.9999999999% of us are boring and will remain boring no matter what kind of comments we write on HN. It wouldn't hurt to touch grass once in a while.

      • babkayaga 2 days ago

        cleber. but china can blackmail you into working for them. you will have no recourse if it does.

  • troad 3 days ago

    > US/EU/Israel

    A bit of a false bundle there.

    The two groups are more like US+Europe+China on one hand and 'misc' on the other. Most people get by without depending on the technology from the 'misc' group at all.

    This kind of incident will hurt the Israeli tech sector individually, not some imagined US/EU/Israel tech grouping.

    • ilbeeper 2 days ago

      Intel and Nvidia are still pretty big in tech, despite the latest fall in shares price.

    • whatnotests2 3 days ago

      Until you look at the cybersecurity industry players. Many big players are based in Tel Aviv

      • troad 2 days ago

        Many more aren't than are.

        Just because Slovakia is good at manufacturing cars doesn't mean that car manufacturing is dependent on Slovakia.

        • flyinglizard 2 days ago

          Many of those that aren't based in Tel Aviv probably have R&D offices in Tel Aviv, as do many of the tech behemoths which you use every day.

      • account42 2 days ago

        Cybersecurity industry? More like voluntary malware industry.

  • nradov 3 days ago

    Exactly. Our concept of sovereign states has become outdated by advances in technology. Up until maybe 1990 even second-tier countries could make just about anything indigenously. It might be a little worse and a little more expensive, but still good enough. Today only China and the USA are fully sovereign in terms of having the capability to build the full spectrum of electronic, communications, and military equipment. (We might outsource some of that to save money but the latent capability and capital reserves are there.) Even with nuclear weapons, India, Russia, UK, and France are only partially sovereign. Other countries can barely even pretend anymore, and their freedom of action will continue to evaporate barring some drastic realignment of the geopolitical order.

    • Sabinus 2 days ago

      Because of this, the geopolitical bloc groupings will get stronger. Friend-shoring supply chains will bring allies together and exclude belligerents.

    • implements 2 days ago

      > Today only China and the USA are fully sovereign in terms of having the capability to build the full spectrum of electronic, communications, and military equipment.

      Not arguing, but I think China still relies on Russia for jet engines - though it’s making great efforts to become self-sufficient there.

      (Edit: high performance / high technology jet engines)

      • nradov 2 days ago

        Yes, China has struggled with the metallurgy necessary for advanced turbine engines. They seem to have made significant progress recently.

        https://www.twz.com/air/our-best-look-yet-at-chinas-j-20a-fi...

        Russia is no longer a reliable supplier. They need all the engines they can make for domestic use, including replacing war losses and building airliners to service domestic routes. Production is down because all the foreign technical experts left.

      • account42 2 days ago

        Are those jet engines the only option for China or are they just the best option. Because if you require state of the art tech then everyone still relies on Taiwan (TSMC).

  • paganel 2 days ago

    We’re all buying Chinese tech one way or the other.

    • ddalex 2 days ago

      American tech, chinese tech, all made in Taiwan

  • sam1r 2 days ago

    >> Unless you can spin up your own fab (hint: you can't) you're dependent on a hegemon. US/EU/Israel isn't perfect, but pretty much as good as it gets.

    It's much easier to spin up your fab tech more so now -- than ever before.

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  • lukan 2 days ago

    "US/EU/Israel isn't perfect, but pretty much as good as it gets."

    I really hope you are wrong about the conclusion.

    • lukan 2 days ago

      To clarify, obviously I rather live in the EU than in china, but if this system is as good as it gets, then I am quite sceptical for humanities long term survival.

  • thiagoharry 2 days ago

    I am not aware of chinese or iranian devices exploding and killing people. Spying is not worse than spying and killing. I do not get how do you get the conclusion that US/EU/Israel is as good as it gets if you are a random citizen not from any of these mentioned countries.

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  • gizajob 2 days ago

    Yeah but if you’re dealing with hardware with any kind of Israeli involvement, do you really want to open every single customer unit to make sure one of the capacitors hasn’t been swapped for C4? I think that’s what the poster was indicating. At first I thought yesterday’s action was deviously impressive. Now I’m starting to think it’s actually shortsighted and bizarre. It’s a declaration of war on Lebanon, and obviously a declaration of a war they think they can win, but no good can come of this action.

    • shykes 2 days ago

      > It’s a declaration of war on Lebanon

      A few observations:

      1. This is an attack against Hezbollah, not Lebanon. The two entities are tightly coupled, but they are not the same.

      2. Israel and Hezbollah are already at war. 60,000 Israelis have been displaced because of Hezbollah ongoing rocket and missile attacks. Israel has retaliated in various ways.

      TLDR: you can argue that this is an act of war against Hezbollah. But it is not a declaration of war, and it is not against Lebanon.

      • gizajob 2 days ago

        In Britain, if the mobile phones of 3000 members of the non-governing Conservative Party exploded in their pockets caused by the armed forces of a different state, one could be reasonably assured you just declared open war on Britain.

  • foobarian 3 days ago

    > Unless you can spin up your own fab

    Huh, which fabs does Israel have?

    • toast0 3 days ago

      Intel's fabs 28, 28a, and 38 are in Israel. They also do some assembly in Israel.

      Tower Semiconductor is based in Israel and runs two fabs there as well.

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  • RantyDave 2 days ago

    There's a big difference between spinning up your own fab and unscrewing the back of the pager to see if there's a bomb in it.

  • darby_nine 3 days ago

    > US/EU/Israel isn't perfect, but pretty much as good as it gets.

    I imagine China is just as good in pretty much every way.

    • _DeadFred_ 3 days ago

      How does a Bay Area tech site, when Bay Area tech has sooo many individuals who originally came to the USA as students but then couldn't go home due to tiananmen, have this kind of 'enlightened thought' on China, day in and day out?

      • andrepd 2 days ago

        I think the point is that the US and its allies (e.g. Israel) do similar things to what China is criticised for.

      • darby_nine 2 days ago

        Too much interaction with falun gong.

        Regardless, I'm talking about competency. I don't endorse any particular state, culture, or ideology.

      • pyrale 2 days ago

        I believe the point GP makes is not that China is a good place. More like that we are oblivious to all the points that make our own place pretty bad too.

        On one hand, you can claim that it's a well-known propaganda technique (e.g. the soviets using "...And you are lynching negroes" as a rebuttal to anything). But on the other hand, the most satisfying way to avoid that form of propaganda would probably be to fix our own flaws rather than calling whataboutism.

        • _DeadFred_ 2 days ago

          I mean American's seem like about the most 'bring our flaws out into public and deal with them' society I have ever interacted with. Daterape is no longer acceptable. The entire way men treat women has changed in my lifetime. How we respond to domestic violence has completely changed (we don't just ignore it). LGBT+ rights have greatly changed. Race relations have completely changed (they may need work but they are so much better than the 80s where people rampantantly used the N word at work, in social situations).

          The average American is much more aware of our issues, not China's. Our own place isn't pretty bad just because we have past history nor ongoing problems. It's a matter of 'what are we doing to change and improve', and are we willing/free to bring up problems that need changing, and does our societies structure allow change? Or does society pound down those nails that dare stick out? Every society is a flawed human constructed stumbled into not intelligently/humanely designed. The American systems is the most dynamic/flexible of all the ones I have been exposed to. There are more liberal ones, but less dynamic and flexible (no free speech laws in the UK which might cause the lack of reflection that you lament). There are more conservative ones that are again less dynamic/flexible.

      • bushbaba 2 days ago

        It’s called propaganda of which HN isn’t immune to

    • mensetmanusman 3 days ago

      Unless you are a slave there, or from Tibet, or say anything wrong.

    • nozzlegear 3 days ago

      Can you expand? What makes you think that?

      • bbqfog 3 days ago

        Has China ever blown up thousands of pagers in someone else's country?

  • ummonk 3 days ago

    China is the one major power that doesn't seem to engage in extraterritorial assassinations, so by default I'm more inclined to at least trust that the Chinese state won't ever decide to activate a kill switch against me.

    • _DeadFred_ 3 days ago

      Isn't China the one country that actively sets up their own police forces all over the world? Aren't there numerous Canadians of chinese origin that China has abducted? I see news articles of Canadians being arrested for assisting China in these abductions fairly often lately.

      • paganel 2 days ago

        > Isn't China the one country that actively sets up their own police forces all over the world?

        The US does the same thing and worse, just look for the very long arm of their FBI and Secret Service when it comes to what they allege to be “cyber-crime”. A decade or so ago I was visiting my company’s ISP one morning when I manage to stumble just as some US federal agents were doing their thing among the server racks. I live in Bucharest, Romania.

      • stanleykm 3 days ago

        i think you need to be a little more critical of the media you consume

      • HappMacDonald 3 days ago

        No, I'm pretty sure the US does more of that than China.. Or if not "police forces" then just straight-up military presence.

      • olalonde 2 days ago

        AFAICT, that's mostly propaganda. What makes them "police" centers exactly? They do not have police men in them, don't have jails, no one has been convicted of a crime in relation to them, etc. Not sure what you mean by "abductions" but if you are referring to the Canadians who was arrested on Chinese soil, one of them admitted to espionage and is even suing the Canadian government for involving him against his will.

    • sam345 2 days ago

      Not accurate: https://www.state.gov/reports/2022-country-reports-on-human-...

      Examples of Extraterritorial killings and abuses listed (edited for more relevant source)

      • plorg 2 days ago

        That article pretty clearly says they were assassinations within China of people who no one disputes were actual CIA spies or handlers. So at bare minimum it wasn't extraterritorial, which I understand to be the key differentiation made by GP.

      • ummonk 2 days ago

        Could you clarify? I see some reports of extraterritorial assaults, as well as harassment (particularly including threats against relatives within Chinese territory), but couldn't find examples of extraterritorial killings, at least with my best attempt at ctrl-f.

    • stanislavb 2 days ago

      I'm sorry, but this is definitely not true. Have you heard about Chinese police overseas or China prosecuting "their" citizens outside of China?

      • ummonk 2 days ago

        I have. I just haven't heard of them resorting to assassinations. Happy to be proven wrong, but I'll need to see at least one actual example assassination.

    • mensetmanusman 3 days ago

      Wait til you learn about this place called Tibet.

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      • ummonk 2 days ago

        I don't live in Tibet, or any other place that China might decide to invade and/or claim as its own territory.

      • Sawamara 2 days ago

        Right afterwards, you can learn about the place called Haiti. Or Cuba. Or Venezuela. Or heck, Mexico. Oh, Vietnam. North-Korea. China. Japan. Wait until you learn about Chile. And do not forget to look up the meaning of 'Jakarta is coming'

        BTW, before someone screams whataboutism: adjusting your worldview according to facts and applying your moral standards to all countries is not whataboutism. Its a prerequisite to being able to morally condemn any action.

  • computerex 3 days ago

    > US/EU/Israel isn't perfect, but pretty much as good as it gets.

    EU maybe, but US/Israel are as good as it gets? PRISM? Literally China/Russia are more trustworthy.

    • kelnos 2 days ago

      > Literally China/Russia are more trustworthy.

      Only in the sense that, as a US citizen who has no desire to travel to China or Russia, I don't feel all that worried that either country is going to do anything bad to me directly.

      But if I lived in either one of those places... whooooa boy. I'd have to be a different person to not get in trouble. And I wouldn't call myself much of an activist or pot-stirrer, really. I feel bad for people who want to show public dissent of their government in China or Russia but can't (or do, and end up in jail), and for people in marginalized groups that the government doesn't like.

      • dlenski 2 days ago

        > > Literally China/Russia are more trustworthy. > > Only in the sense that, as a US citizen who has no desire to travel to China or Russia, I don't feel all that worried that either country is going to do anything bad to me directly.

        I sort of get this PoV, but on the other hand…

        If China had any information about you that was valuable for any purpose whatsoever (trade an intelligence tip to a corrupt businessman in a mafia state?) its government could do so with no legal or political safeguards.

        The US government has legal safeguards against this, and would face _massive_ potential political risk for doing so against one of its own citizens.

      • stann 2 days ago

        Snowden will disagree with you

    • threeseed 2 days ago

      > Literally China/Russia are more trustworthy

      They have no free elections unlike US.

      They have no free press unlike US.

      They have no independent judiciary unlike US.

      They both rank poorly on the corruption index unlike US.

      • account42 2 days ago

        > They have no free elections unlike US.

        The US is a two party system with many hereditary politicians. How free do you think your elections really are?

        > They have no free press unlike US.

        How did the US news report on Snownden, Assange and others the US government does not like? The US press is an oligopoly that does barely any real reporting. Theoretical freeness does little here.

        > They have no independent judiciary unlike US.

        Which is more than happy to shield the executive from any consequences. Qualified immunity makes this separation meaningless.

        > They both rank poorly on the corruption index unlike US.

        According to western definitions of corruption that conveniently do not include corporate lobbying, revolving door relationsships between politics and industry, backdoor laws via trade deals and all the other shadyness that has effectively taken over so-called democracies. But sure, pat yourself on the back for being less likely to get out of a speeding ticket by slipping the officer some cash.

        • nozzlegear 2 days ago

          How many hereditary politicians do you think there are in the US, and how much power do you think they have?

    • nozzlegear 3 days ago

      > Literally China/Russia are more trustworthy.

      Why?

    • xvector 3 days ago

      The EU? Anyone remember Crypto AG? Switzerland, I guess, but Schengen Area regardless.

      • snovv_crash 2 days ago

        Thy was what, 40 years ago? China has their great firewall set up today, never mind their social credit systems, automated CCTV citizen tracking systems, etc. Russia has people accidentally falling out of hospital windows or drinking polonium tea. I don't think this is at all comparable.

      • shakow 3 days ago

        Mexico? Anyone remember Guantanamo? The US I guess, but NAFTA regardless...

        • alext5 3 days ago

          Guantanamo bay is in Cuba, definitively not part of NAFTA

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bratbag 2 days ago

If they used their own products to do this then yes. If not then no.

Is that what happened?

underdeserver 3 days ago

Why not? When was anything Israeli-made involved in any funny business? I mean officially Israeli-made, not... this.