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Gal Gadot: I didn't cheat on Huawei Mate 10 Pro with iPhone

The Wonder Woman actor says an earlier tweet was all one big mistake.

Gordon Gottsegen CNET contributor
Gordon Gottsegen is a tech writer who has experience working at publications like Wired. He loves testing out new gadgets and complaining about them. He is the ghost of all failed Kickstarters.
Gordon Gottsegen
2 min read
Video screenshot by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper

For a moment there, Gal Gadot, better known for her role in the Wonder Woman movie, joined the ranks of phone brand ambassadors caught using an iPhone when they shouldn't have.  

Gadot, who became Huawei's US brand ambassador for the Huawei Mate 10 Pro in January, appeared to have been caught using an iPhone to tweet about about her love of an iPhone competitor she's paid to represent when a video of the actor and model using the Mate 10 Pro was uploaded to Twitter through the Twitter for iPhone app. The gaffe was called out in another tweet by YouTube tech personality Marques Brownlee.

"Some people have asked about my recent post with my new Huawei smartphone, and think I am using an iPhone," Gadot told CNET through her publicist. "That's simply not the case. I love my Huawei P20 and Mate10Pro. They are lifelines wherever I am in the world." 

It seems that a member of Gadot's publicity team posted the video on the actor's behalf, from their personal device, not recognizing that the device used might be visible to others.

"Sometimes I rely on help from my team to post larger videos," Gadot said, "And that is what happened here."

Gadot's camp also said that the tweet originated from a Mac, not an iPhone, which contradicts the detail in the screenshot above that the tweet was updated via "Twitter for iPhone".

Gadot (or her handlers) deleted the original tweet earlier Tuesday.

Huawei needs all the positive press it can get. A handful of government agencies stated that US buyers should steer clear of Huawei phones due to surveillance and security concerns. Since then, both carriers and retailers have pulled out of deals to sell Huawei phones in the US, leaving the third-largest smartphone brand struggling with its image in the second-largest smartphone market.

Watch this: The Mate 10 Pro is flashy and brings portrait selfies

Updated April 25, 2018: At 9:46am PT: Added claim that the tweet originated from a Mac.

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