Colorado
Colorado state and local governments buying banned Chinese tech
Efforts to dam Chinese language telecom tools from U.S. provide chains are proving tough as state and native governments in Colorado and elsewhere, proceed to purchase merchandise designated a risk to nationwide safety, a brand new report finds.
Driving the information: State and native governments should higher align themselves with U.S. insurance policies to maintain Chinese language gear out of faculties, hospitals and different essential infrastructure nationwide, in line with Georgetown College’s Middle for Safety and Rising Know-how.
- The wide-ranging checklist of banned merchandise contains smartphones, surveillance cameras and networking tools, in line with the report, which is predicated on procurement data scraped from public paperwork.
By the numbers: Between 2015 and 2021, Colorado’s state and native governments spent $202,000 on Chinese language expertise throughout 31 transactions. The main points on the purchases are unclear.
Why it issues: U.S. officers warn Chinese language telecom tools might make the U.S. susceptible to financial espionage or digital sabotage.
- Federal companies have been banned since 2018 from procuring merchandise from Chinese language tech firms Huawei, ZTE, Hikvision, Dahua and Hytera.
Sure, however: Federal-level bans do not apply to state companies and solely 5 states — Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Texas and Vermont — have enacted measures to restrict procurement of such tools on nationwide safety grounds.
What they’re saying: The governor’s Workplace of Info Know-how says it prohibits its contractors from utilizing items or providers from federally banned firms.
- However spokesperson Brandi Wildfan Simmons says, “OIT solely represents a portion of Colorado’s state authorities and doesn’t have a job within the buying actions of native communities.”
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Colorado star and Heisman Trophy favorite Travis Hunter says he will enter the NFL Draft
Colorado Buffaloes two-way star Travis Hunter said Thursday he plans to declare for the 2025 NFL Draft.
“That’s definitely for sure,” Hunter, 21, told reporters when asked if he intended to declare.
A favorite to win the Heisman Trophy, Hunter plays both cornerback and receiver for the Buffaloes. He is projected by many to be selected first overall next April.
When asked about playing both offense and defense as a professional, Hunter acknowledged the rarity of doing both, saying, “It’s never been done.”
He added: “I understand that it will be a high risk, [teams] don’t want their top pick to go down too early and I know they’re going to want me to be in a couple packages. But I believe I can do it. Nobody has stopped me from doing it thus far.”
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In 10 games for Colorado this season, Hunter has 74 receptions for 911 yards and nine touchdowns — all career bests. Defensively, Hunter has three interceptions, eight passes defended and 23 tackles.
Hunter was a highly recruited player coming out of high school. A consensus five-star prospect, he originally committed to Florida State before flipping his commitment to Jackson State — becoming the first five-star recruit to commit to an HBCU.
Hunter played for one season at Jackson State under head coach Deion Sanders, then transferred to Colorado before the 2023 season when Sanders took the head coaching job there.
Last season, Hunter averaged close to 115 plays per game, participating in offense, defense and special teams.
Sanders’s son Shedeur, who plays quarterback for Colorado, is projected to be among the first signal-callers selected in next year’s draft. Another player who could be a Heisman finalist, Sanders said Thursday that Hunter is the more deserving of the two to win the award.
“If it’s between me and him, I would want him to get it,” Shedeur Sanders said. “He does a lot of amazing things and things that haven’t been done before. I’m not a selfish guy. I know what he’s capable of, so I would rather him win.”
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