Chinese telecom giant Huawei has punished two employees for posting a
New Year greeting on the company’s official Twitter account using an
iPhone made by arch rival Apple, an internal memo shows.
Huawei dislodged Apple last year from its position as the world’s
second biggest smartphone-seller, below global number one Samsung. But
in a public relations gaffe, the Chinese company wished followers a
“Happy #2019” in a tweet on
New Year’s Day — marked sent “via Twitter
for iPhone”.
Video producer Marques Brownlee shared a screenshot of the post with
his 3-million Twitter followers before Huawei deleted it and sent
another, this time marked “sent via Twitter Media Studio”.
One unnamed employee and Huawei’s director of digital
marketing were demoted and had their monthly salary slashed by 5,000
yuan ($730), according to the memo, widely shared on China’s
Twitter-like platform Weibo and seen by AFP.
As well as the pay cut, the digital marketing director was hit with a salary freeze and no promotions for the next 12 months.
Although the blunder was made by a third-party social media company
called Sapient, the pair were disciplined for the “negative impact” on
the Huawei brand caused by the incident, which highlighted “procedural
incompliance and management oversight”, the memo said.
In the memo dated Thursday, Huawei’s corporate senior vice-president
Chen Lifang said the gaffe took place when Sapient used an iPhone with a
Hong Kong SIM card to send the Twitter greeting after experiencing “
virtual private network (VPN) problems”.
Twitter — and other major foreign sites such as Facebook and Google —
are blocked in China and users need a VPN connection to circumvent
Beijing’s internet controls.
Huawei did not reply to AFP’s request for a comment on the incident.
The company has come under fire in 2018, with Washington leading efforts to blacklist Huawei internationally.
No comments:
Post a Comment