This article is more than 1 year old

Qualcomm reveals it's not selling to Russia during Twitter spat

Policy via social media: It's a thing now. Even though Russia won't be able to read it...

Chipmaker Qualcomm is the latest tech firm to stop doing business with Russia following the invasion of Ukraine.

Unusually, it appears that the company's policy was disclosed in a Twitter exchange between Qualcomm's senior vice president for Government Affairs Nate Tibbits and Ukraine's Vice Prime Minister and Minister of Digital Transformation, Mykhailo Fedorov.

In the tweets posted yesterday, Fedorov accused Qualcomm of still having its products available in Russia, saying this was inadvertently enabling the Russian state to kill thousands of Ukrainians.

Tibbits responded by claiming that this is not correct, and stating that "we comply with US sanctions & laws [and] are not selling products to Russian companies."

He also said that Qualcomm wants a peaceful resolution to the aggression in Ukraine, has donated to relief organizations supporting the Ukrainian people, and has also matched its employees' contributions.

In a later response, Fedorov thanked Qualcomm and Tibbits for halting sales to Russia, and went on to suggest that if Qualcomm really wished to offer assistance, the company could donate satellite phones to help equip Ukrainian rescue personnel amidst the country's shattered infrastructure.

Fedorov also directed his anger at SAP, which he claimed is continuing to support Russian businesses and government-owned organisations such as Sberbank and Aeroflot, as reported earlier this month.

SAP CEO Christian Klein said on 7 March that his firm would continue to serve existing customers within the scope of its contractual commitments, as far as sanctions and export control restrictions permitted, but that it was not accepting new orders.

However, SAP is one of the few going against the grain in taking this approach. Earlier this week, database firm MongoDB announced that it would not sell either its software or its cloud database services to customers in Russia or Belarus.

Linux vendors Red Hat and Suse announced last week that they were taking action, with Red Hat discontinuing sales and services in Russia and Belarus, while Suse said it had suspended all direct sales in Russia and was prepared to comply with any additional sanctions.

Others that have suspended sales or withdrawn from Russia over the invasion of Ukraine include Oracle and Microsoft, plus tech consultancies such as KPMG, PwC, Accenture, and DXC. ®

More about

More about

More about

TIP US OFF

Send us news


Other stories you might like