Hikvision was founded in 2001 by Zhejiang HIK Information Technology Co., Ltd. (Chinese: 浙江海康信息技术股份有限公司) with the company having a 51% stake and
Gong Hongjia (龚虹嘉) a 49% stake at that time.[citation needed]
In 2021,
Best Buy,
Home Depot, and
Lowe's stopped selling cameras from Hikvision brand Ezviz due to concerns about Hikvision's complicity in surveillance and human rights violations in Xinjiang.[15]
In 2022, Hikvision was awarded a Chinese government contract to develop software to track "key people" in order to prevent them from entering Beijing.[16][17] The same year,
IPVM also reported that Hikvision has specific alarms in its software to alert Chinese police to "religion,
Falun Gong, and various protest activities.[18] In 2022, Hikvision won a "smart campus" contract with the Chinese government to alert university administrators of students
fasting during Ramadan.[19]Amazon Web Services provides cloud services to Hikvision.[20] In 2023, Hikvision released software that includes
ethnic minority detection.[21]
In January 2019, the U.S. government began considering whether it should sanction Hikvision, which American government officials described as having "provided thousands of cameras that monitor mosques, schools, and
concentration camps in Xinjiang."[22][23]
The U.S. government banned Hikvision from receiving federal government contracts in August 2019 due to security concerns.[24][25][26] In October 2019, Hikvision was formally placed on the
Entity List by the U.S. government, which stated that it was involved in surveillance of
Uyghurs in Xinjiang and of other ethnic and religious minorities in China.[8][27] Hikvision expressed its opposition to the U.S. decision and stated that they believe the decision had no factual basis. They urged the U.S. government to re-examine its decision.[28]
In August 2020, the
Indian government banned Hikvision from bidding in government tenders and also required removal of Hikvison cameras from military and high-security areas.[33]
In April 2021, the
European Parliament confirmed that it had removed Hikvision thermal cameras from its premises following the approval of an amendment sponsored by Dutch
MEPLara Wolters calling for the removal of "all of Hikvision’s thermal cameras from Parliament’s premises" due to "an unacceptable risk that Hikvision, through its operations in Xinjiang, is contributing to serious human rights abuses."[34]
In July 2021, the UK
Foreign Affairs Select Committee published a report stating that Hikvision cameras "have been deployed throughout Xinjiang, and provide the primary camera technology used in the internment camps".[35]
In June 2022, documents from the
Xinjiang Police Files showed how Hikvision technology is used by Xinjiang police to surveil all Xinjiang residents.[36]
In June 2021, 224 Hikvision products were banned for one year by South Korea's
Ministry of Science and ICT over forged test reports.[37]
In September 2021, the
Indian Navy's headquarters "asked its all formations to 'discontinue' procurement of CCTV cameras and surveillance systems from Hikvision," according to
The Week. The Week also reported that the Indian Navy had ordered the replacement and destruction of its existing Hikvision cameras.[38]
In April 2022, the UK
Department of Health and Social Care banned the purchase of Hikvision cameras.[39] In November 2022, the UK prohibited the use of Hikvision equipment in government buildings.[40]
In March 2021, the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) declared that Hikvision services and equipment "pose an unacceptable risk to U.S. national security."[49] In November 2022, the FCC banned sales or import of equipment made by Hikvision for national security reasons.[50]
This section needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(December 2020)
As of 31 December 2017[update] Hikvision was owned by China Electronics Technology HIK Group Co., Ltd. (HIK Group, 中电海康集团有限公司), a wholly owned subsidiary of
China Electronics Technology Group, which has a 39.59% stake.[3]: 82 China Electronics Technology Group is a state-run enterprise owned and supervised by the
State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council. China Electronics Technology Group holds an additional 1.96% stake of Hikvision via its 52nd research institute (中国电子科技集团公司第五十二研究所).[3]: 82 The Chairman of Hikvision, Chen Zongnian (陈宗年), is also the chairman and the
Party Committee Secretary of HIK Group, and Head of the aforementioned research institute.[3]: 92
As of November 2019[update] the firm's largest individual shareholder was vice-chairman Gong Hongjia with a 13% stake.[52] As of 12 2019
Fidelity International was also a major investor in Hikvision.[53]
In 2017, the third largest shareholder was a private equity fund (新疆威讯投资管理有限合伙企业; Xīnjiāng Wēixùn) which had a 7% stake,[3]: 82 which is associated with then Hikvision general manager Hu Yangzhong.[3]: 82 According to previous filing, "Xinjian Weixun" was also associated with Liu Xiang (刘翔),[54]: 57 former director (from 2015 to March 2018) and former deputy general manager of Hikvision, then deputy general manager of HIK Group, chairman of sister listed company Phenix Optical.[3]: 92
In 2017, the fourth largest shareholder was another private equity fund (新普康投资有限合伙企业) which had a 2% stake.[3]: 92 The fund was partly owned by Gong's wife Chen Chunmei (陈春梅) and aforementioned Hu Yangzhong.[3]: 83 Hu Yangzhong also owned an additional 1.33% stake personally.[3]: 82 To sum up, those shareholders owned a combined 65.71% stake. Lastly,
Hong Kong Securities Clearing Company owned 9.77%,[3]: 82 which was the nominees of the
Shanghai-Hong Kong Stock Connect and
Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect.
In 2021, IPVM alleged that Hikvision was created and controlled by the Chinese government.[55][56]
Alleged attempts to conceal government ownership
In 2015, IPVM criticized Hikvision for allegedly obscuring its Chinese government ownership.[57] Jeffrey He, president of Hikvision North America, had criticized the online blogger site for allegedly seeking financial gain.[58]
Alan West, in a 2016 interview published by The Times (and re-published by The Australian), suggested that Hikvision's ownership raised ethical and security concerns when it came to the usage of Hikvision's products by the British government.[4]
Cybersecurity vulnerabilities
In May 2017, seven series of Hikvision cameras were affected by an improper
authenticationvulnerability which, if exploited, could allow "a malicious attacker [to] escalat[e] his or her privileges or assum[e] the identity of an authenticated user and [obtain] sensitive data," according to the U.S.
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.[59]
In May 2021, Italian public broadcaster
RAI reported that Hikvision cameras automatically "opened communication channels with addresses registered in China" once connected to the internet.[60] Hikvision declined to comment on the RAI investigation.[60]
In September 2021, Hikvision announced a
command injection vulnerability with the
CVE-ID CVE-2021-36260.[61]Forbes reported that the vulnerability, which has a
CVSS base score of 9.8 out of 10, left dozens of Hikvision camera models "susceptible to remote hijacking" without requiring a username or password.[62]
In 2022,
Axios reported that Hikvision had hired
FTI Consulting to conduct cybersecurity audits of its products.[63]
^See also in the wiktionary for the individual meaning of the character 威 and 視; the concatenation 威視 has no meaning other than a compound word that is phonetically similar to vision.
^
abcdefghijk2017 Annual Report. Hikvision. 2018-04-21.
Archived from the original on 2018-09-11. Retrieved 2018-09-11 – via Shenzhen Stock Exchange website.
^"How the Left Should Respond to Ethnic Cleansing in China". The Nation. 2019-01-15.
Archived from the original on 2020-02-17. The United States has considered sanctioning the Chinese surveillance giant Hikvision, which has provided thousands of cameras that monitor mosques, schools, and concentration camps in Xinjiang.
^Lohr, Steve (2019-08-07).
"U.S. Moves to Ban Huawei From Government Contracts". The New York Times.
Archived from the original on 2019-08-10. Retrieved 2019-08-10. The prohibition was mandated by Congress...And it extends to other Chinese companies...including the telecom equipment maker ZTE and Hikvision, which develops facial-recognition technology
^2015年年度报告 [2015 Annual Report] (PDF) (in Chinese (China)). Hikvision. 2016-04-09.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 2016-11-15. Retrieved 2016-11-15 – via Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
^"ICS Advisory (ICSA-17-124-01)". Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency. CISA. 2017-05-04.
Archived from the original on 2021-10-17. Retrieved 2021-10-15.