
The U.S. government considers making changes to two rules to expand the countryâs authority to ban more foreign shipments to China-based telecommunications equipment firm Huawei, Reuters reported Sunday.
Sources said the Department of Commerce and other agencies plan to expand the De minimis Rule and the Direct Product Rule. The first rule helps determine whether U.S. technology in foreign-made goods provides the government authority to stop shipments, while the latter policy subjects to U.S. regulations foreign products that are based on U.S. technology.
In May, Commerce decided to put Huawei on its trade blacklist due to national security concerns.
The governmentâs consideration of the expansion of such policies came days after the department moved to renew Huaweiâs temporary general license. The Trump administration also issued Wednesday about 75 licenses to permit some suppliers to resume sales to the Chinese firm.
Related Articles
Gregory Barbaccia, federal chief information officer and a 2025 Wash100 awardee, has shared his insights on how the federal government should advance digital transformation. “I notice a lot of the government considers itself to be ‘digital,’ but in reality, we’ve only digitized, not transformed. Sure we went 0-1, but that should have just been the beginning,” Barbaccia wrote in a LinkedIn post. He noted the lack of automation and that workflows remain unchanged despite the replacement of paper ledgers with spreadsheets. “Files are shared over email instead of through real-time collaboration tools,” he added. Advancing Digital Transformation in Federal Government
The Federal Communications Commission has adopted new rules that seek to eliminate unnecessary paperwork and address regulatory barriers to the ground-station-as-a-service, or GSaaS, business model as part of efforts to drive innovation in the U.S. space economy. FCC said Thursday the new rules establish a process for ground station operators to secure a baseline license without first identifying a satellite point of communication. A simple FCC notification will be required for each new point of communication. According to FCC, the change would eliminate nearly half of earth station modification applications. “Making the smallest change to a satellite system or earth
The General Services Administration has announced a OneGov agreement with Amazon Web Services that will provide up to $1 billion in direct incentive credits to federal civilian agencies. According to GSA, the direct incentive credits, aggregated across the agencies, will include savings on core AWS cloud services through AWS credits, infrastructure and application technologies modernization through AWS modernization credits, access to AWS training and certification through training credits and a streamlined engagement model with greater savings for direct contracts through direct partnerships. Advancing America’s AI Leadership The agreement is expected to accelerate large-scale IT transformation and boost AI innovation across