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The China Communications Standards Association (CCSA) is a Chinese professional standards organization with the responsibility for developing communications technology standards. The organization was founded on 18 December 2002, by the Chinese Ministry of Information Industry. [1] The CCSA participates in standards development internationally.
A 2018 report by the United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission stated, "[d]espite the useful social services CSSAs provide for their members, they receive guidance from the CCP through Chinese embassies and consulates — governmental ties CSSAs frequently attempt to conceal — and are active in carrying out overseas Chinese work consistent with Beijing’s United Front ...
oneM2M is a global partnership project founded in 2012 and constituted by 8 of the world's leading ICT standards development organizations, notably: ARIB (Japan), ATIS (United States), CCSA (China), ETSI (Europe), TIA (USA), TSDSI (India), TTA (Korea) and TTC (Japan).
China Communications Standards Association (CCSA) China: CCSA: European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) Europe: ETSI: Telecommunications Standards Development Society (TSDSI) India: TSDSI: Telecommunications Technology Association (TTA) South Korea: TTA: Telecommunication Technology Committee (TTC) Japan: TTC
China's Ministry of Commerce said it would impose measures on 28 U.S. entities and would also prohibit exports of dual-use items to the listed companies starting on Thursday, reported the Global ...
CCSA may stand for: Cab Calloway School of the Arts, a magnet school for grades 6–12 in Delaware; Canadian Centre on Substance Abuse, Canada's national addictions agency; Central Collegiate Ski Association, an NCAA college athletic conference; Certification in Control Self-Assessment; China Communications Standards Association
The FCC previously barred approvals of new telecommunications equipment from China's Huawei Technologies and ZTE and other companies saying they pose "an unacceptable risk" to U.S. national security.
With the development through China's reforms and opening up, in April 2001, the State Council of China decided to set up the General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ), by merging the former CSBTS and the former State Bureau of Import & Export Inspection and Quarantine (CIQ SA) and, at the same time, to establish the Standardization Administration of the ...