Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Huawei ban partially lifted, but situation remains as confused as ever

Add as a preferred source on Google
Huawei P30 Pro review
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

The ban on U.S. companies selling products and services to Huawei has been partially lifted, but the situation remains just as confused as it was before. For example, Huawei will stay on the U.S.’s Entity List, but President Donald Trump has stated that “U.S. companies can sell their equipment to Huawei.” His words came during the G20 summit that took place in Japan over the weekend, and followed talks with China’s President Xi Jinping.

However, there is a caveat. U.S. companies can only supply Huawei, “provided there are no national security issues or problems,” according to Larry Kudlow, the director of the National Economic Council, who spoke about the announcement over the weekend. It seems more licenses will be granted to U.S. companies in the near future, and Kudlow suggested the products being sold to Huawei will be those that are widely available elsewhere.

Recommended Videos

Several U.S. companies had already found ways around the ban, and continued to sell products to Huawei anyway. The temporary reprieve until August has also enabled Huawei to work with Google and deliver software updates to key devices, including the P30 Pro and the newly released Honor 20 and Honor 20 Pro. What’s not clear is exactly which companies will be given new licenses to continue working with Huawei, when the licenses will come, and whether — perhaps most crucially — Google, Intel, Qualcomm, and other major brands will be included.

Any change is good news for Huawei, which has been working on its own plans to mitigate damage from the ban. It has its own alternative software operating system in development for its products, but the release is not expected until next year. Work will likely continue, but provided Google can sell to Huawei again, its release may not be as high a priority as it was before this latest announcement. It can be assumed that Huawei will not be invited to sell its 5G infrastructure hardware in the U.S., as this would represent a security risk according to U.S. lawmakers.

The agreement that U.S. companies can sell some products to Huawei again is part of Trump’s continued conversations with Xi over the ongoing U.S. trade war. Tariffs totaling $300 billion will not be imposed, and negotiations will continue, according to a report on the meeting by the BBC.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
A developer built Quick Share from scratch for phones Google forgot, and it actually works
Bada gives the millions of Android devices locked out of Google's Quick Share a working file-sharing solution.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Google's Quick Share is the kind of feature you don't think about until the day you need it and your phone simply doesn't have it. Huawei device owners live in that reality permanently, given that they don’t have access to Google Play services, and so does anyone running the Chinese regional build of Android. 

However, a developer with the handle Kyujin-cho just published an open-source Android app called Bada on GitHub that seems to solve exactly this problem. It does so by implementing Google's own Quick Share protocol from scratch, circumventing the lack of Google Play Services.

Read more
Samsung’s next budget flagship just leaked, and here’s what it looks like
The Galaxy S26 FE is months away, but case renders are already here to spill the beans.
A hand holding the Galaxy S25 FE, the screen is on and facing the camera

Samsung has a busy second half of 2026 lined up, with several Galaxy devices in the pipeline. Apart from the expected Galaxy Z Fold 8 and Ultra launch, one of the most anticipated launches aimed at the affordable market is the Galaxy S26 FE. 

We are still a few months away from its official debut, but as reported by SammyGuru, a third-party case maker has already listed protective cases for the phone, giving us our first look at its design from multiple angles.

Read more
Samsung’s next foldable phones could get a confusing name swap
Samsung might rename its foldables and things are about to get very confusing.
Galaxy Z Fold 7 hands on

Samsung is getting ready to launch two new foldable phones in July, and if a recent leak is accurate, the company is about to flip its naming convention completely, and it’s going to confuse a lot of people.

Tipster Ice Universe has claimed on Weibo that the phone we have been calling the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Wide will actually launch simply as the Galaxy Z Fold 8. The device we expected to be the standard Galaxy Z Fold 8 will instead become the Galaxy Z Fold 8 Ultra. 

Read more