Chinese laser sensor startup Hesai announced on Watch Woman in Her 20s Who Has Luscious Matured Curves OnlineThursday it will file a complaint against the US Defense Department, saying that its inclusion on an official Pentagon blacklist due to alleged links to China’s military is “unjust, capricious, and meritless.” In a statement, chief executive Li Yifan called the US government decision “without any explanation or justification,” stating that Hesai is not a military company and its products are for civilian use only and have never been designed or validated for military use. The move comes days after the US authorities on Jan. 31 designated the firm, among others, as working with China’s military and placed it on a list that could hit its reputation and result in more sanctions against it from other government departments. Shares of the Shanghai-based and Nasdaq-listed lidar maker declined 7.9% to less than $4 on Wednesday, which is more than 80% down from their peak. [Hesai statement]
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT mini crossword answers for May 12, 2025
5 underrated countries that should be your next destination
Elon Musk visits Shanghai to announce first Tesla factory outside U.S.
The first 'Game of Thrones' spinoff starts filming soon
Your 'wrong person' texts may be linked to Myanmar warlord
England fan gets soccer player's face tattooed on his chest after making Twitter promise
Someone gave Captain America Billy Eichner's voice and Chris Evans loves it
Microsoft Surface Go hands on: The iPad killer might be here
Facebook gave a Russian firm with Kremlin ties an extension on data collection
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。