Mumbai: Chinese telecom equipment manufacturer Huawei's India chief executive Jay Chen on Thursday said 5G is safer than previous networks and only quantum computing can help break into the architecture.
Asserting that the company, which has made the entire world paranoid from the security front has never been found violating a security protocol in its three decades of presence.
Speaking at The Economist's India Summit, Chen also said that it is the only vendor willing to sign the "backdoor agreement", through which it is committing for ensuring that no entity will have backdoor access to data.
It can be noted the possibility of user data being used by Chinese entities because of Huawei's network equipment has made many people concerned, especially at the cusp of a massive roll-out of the 5G networks across the world.
"5G is much safer than previous networks because of the architecture. An only quantum computer can break the safety," Chen said.
"Many are talking on the backdoor concerns. Until today, no evidence can be presented to tell that yes, there is something on Huawei. We are also the only company willing to sign the backdoor agreement. It's a global commitment to sign the backdoor agreement to governments," he said.
It can be noted that India, which is mulling a rollout of the 5G networks in the country, is as yet undecided on whether to allow the Chinese company to act as a vendor, unlike the US, which is not. The third-largest telco Bharti Airtel has come out in support of the Chinese firm.