The U.S.-China Economic Security Review Commission (USCC) has requested an official probe of Lenovo’s recent contract to provide the U.S. Department of State with 15,000 computers, BBC News reports.The group requested the review because it said the PCs could potentially be turned into bugging devices used for spying on the U.S. government, BBC News reports.Lenovo officials said they would openly submit to the investigation, but warned that the review could negatively affect the way the company handles future government contracts, according to BBC News.Jeff Carlisle, Lenovo’s vice president of government relations, told BBC News his company had “nothing to hide.” The State Department plans to spend roughly $13 million on the Lenovo PCs, and those machines are to be assembled at facilities in Mexico and North Carolina, according to BBC News.The USCC’s requested review comes just weeks after security concerns regarding the purchase of United Kingdom-based Peninsular and Oriental Steam and Navigation Co. (P&O) by United Arab Emirates (UAE)-based Dubai Ports World led the company to announce it would shift control of the U.S. port it acquired as part of the deal to a U.S. entity. Michael Wessel, a member of the USCC, said the Lenovo computers provided an “enormous” potential for intelligence gathering, BBC News reports.Head of the USCC, Larry Wortzel, said it was likely U.S. lawmakers would launch an investigation, according to BBC News.“If you’re a foreign intelligence service and you know that a [U.S.] federal agency is buying 15,000 computers from [a Chinese] company, wouldn’t you look into the possibility that you could do something about that?” Wortzel asked BBC News.For related news coverage, read Senator: U.S. ‘Entity’ Will Manage DP World’s Port Operations.Check out our CIO News Alerts and Tech Informer pages for more updated news coverage. Related content brandpost Sponsored by Freshworks When your AI chatbots mess up AI ‘hallucinations’ present significant business risks, but new types of guardrails can keep them from doing serious damage By Paul Gillin Dec 08, 2023 4 mins Generative AI brandpost Sponsored by Dell New research: How IT leaders drive business benefits by accelerating device refresh strategies Security leaders have particular concerns that older devices are more vulnerable to increasingly sophisticated cyber attacks. By Laura McEwan Dec 08, 2023 3 mins Infrastructure Management case study Toyota transforms IT service desk with gen AI To help promote insourcing and quality control, Toyota Motor North America is leveraging generative AI for HR and IT service desk requests. By Thor Olavsrud Dec 08, 2023 7 mins Employee Experience Generative AI ICT Partners feature CSM certification: Costs, requirements, and all you need to know The Certified ScrumMaster (CSM) certification sets the standard for establishing Scrum theory, developing practical applications and rules, and leading teams and stakeholders through the development process. By Moira Alexander Dec 08, 2023 8 mins Certifications IT Skills Project Management Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe