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        Futurewei Technologies and its parent company


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Futurewei Technologies, a research team based in the United States of China Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd., has taken action to separate its business from its parent company Huawei, which was blacklisted by the U.S. government in May, two people familiar with the matter said.
A Futurewei employee, who declined to be named, told Reuters that the company had banned Huawei employees from entering its office and had moved Futurewei employees to a new IT system to prohibit them from using Huawei's name or logo when communicating. The employee also said that Huawei would continue to own Futurewei.
Milton Frazier, Futurewei's general counsel, declined to comment on the split or the strategy behind it, leaving the issue to Huawei spokesman Chase Skinner, who did not comment.
The split between Huawei and Futurewei has not been reported in the media before. Many universities in the United States have stopped their research cooperation with Huawei after the U.S. government accused Huawei of posing a threat to national security. Many universities are also reconsidering their partnerships with other Chinese companies.
Huawei is one of the largest telecom equipment manufacturers in the world. In May, the U.S. Department of Commerce listed Huawei as a "physical list" of security risks. The Ministry of Justice earlier accused the company of stealing trade secrets and other crimes.
Futurewei is Huawei's R&D department in the United States. The company has hundreds of employees in Silicon Valley and offices in Seattle, Chicago and Dallas, according to LinkedIn. According to the US Patent and Trademark Office, Futurewei has applied for more than 2,100 patents in telecommunications, 5G mobile networks and video and photographic technology.
The Futurewei employee said that up to now, Futurewei's business is basically indistinguishable from Huawei's. Futurewei does not have a separate brand or even a website, and its staff often consider themselves Huawei employees.
Both companies have extensive research cooperation and funding projects with American universities.
Last year, 26 congressmen wrote to U.S. Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos, warning that Huawei's cooperation with at least 50 American universities "could pose a major threat to national security".


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