The US moves to block most new routers made overseas

Skye Jacobs

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Staff
What just happened? The FCC has widened its campaign to secure America's technology infrastructure, this time targeting consumer routers. In a sweeping move announced this month, the agency added all foreign-produced consumer networking equipment to its Covered List, preventing the import of any new devices into the US unless manufacturers obtain special exemptions.

The order effectively halts the entry of nearly all future Wi-Fi and wired routers, as the vast majority are produced abroad. Products that have already received FCC authorization can continue to be sold and imported, and existing consumer equipment remains unaffected. However, for router makers planning to release new products in the United States, the decision introduces a significant obstacle.

To remain in the US market, companies must now secure what the FCC calls "conditional approval," granting temporary authorization while they demonstrate plans to move or expand manufacturing domestically. Those unwilling or unable to comply face a stark choice: exit the US consumer market entirely, as drone maker DJI did after a similar ban last year.

The FCC's latest action builds on a policy trajectory that began in December, when it banned the import of drones from foreign countries deemed security risks. At the time, the agency cited potential threats to "the national security of the United States and to the safety and security of US persons." The same rationale appears in the new router directive, which mirrors the earlier decision in both scope and justification.

According to the FCC's National Security Determination, allowing foreign-produced routers to dominate the US market poses "unacceptable economic, national security, and cybersecurity risks." The document further claims that "routers produced abroad were directly implicated in the Volt, Flax, and Salt Typhoon cyberattacks, which targeted critical American communications, energy, transportation, and water infrastructure."

By linking these actions to specific cyber incidents, the FCC argues that foreign networking hardware could serve as a vector for future intrusions. The Commission's position underscores its growing willingness to treat consumer electronics not just as commercial products, but as components of national infrastructure requiring tighter control.

For router makers, the consequences are immediate and far-reaching.

For router makers, the consequences are immediate and far-reaching. Most major consumer networking brands rely on overseas production lines concentrated in East and Southeast Asia. Rebuilding domestic manufacturing capacity to meet the FCC's new conditions would require significant investment, supply chain restructuring, and regulatory coordination – steps that could delay new product launches and raise prices in the short term.

The ban could also reshape competition among router vendors. US companies with partial domestic manufacturing may gain an advantage, while foreign brands must weigh the cost of compliance against abandoning the American market.

The FCC's decision leaves open a path back to compliance. The new "conditional approval" mechanism allows companies to continue selling products while negotiating production plans with regulators. However, success will depend on how flexibly the agency applies its rules and how quickly manufacturers can adapt.

For now, the agency's position is clear: equipment deemed to carry foreign risk will not receive FCC radio authorization, effectively barring it from entry. The Commission's escalating approach suggests the earlier drone ban was not an isolated move, but part of a broader strategy to localize production of key technologies and reduce foreign dependencies across sectors vital to US security.

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If they're so worried about network equipment belonging to other countries, just wait until the learn how many of our politicians are owned by other countries. That's a little harder to legislate though... Just remember the FCC exists to protect business dollars from you and not you from others.
 
What will this do aside from increase the price for consumers? The firmware doesn’t change so aside from price the product will be identical and perhaps will be slightly worse in terms of manufacturing quality
 
All of America is now a circus. Their government is hilarious. Everything they don't like or don't trust is labeled a "national security threat". It has become a catch all term for the government to ban, threaten, and coerce any company they don't like. They don't even have to be foreign companies. Case and point: Anthropic. Oh you won't let us use your AI for mass domestic surveillance and for unmanned killing machines? Well, you're a national security threat now, even though yesterday you were labeled "essential" to nation security when we thought we could use your AI any way we please.

Americans by and large applaud this behavior while at the same time complain that everything is becoming more expensive. Geeze, I wonder why? They got used to cheaply manufactured products elsewhere, but now they want all those products banned. They want those products manufactured domestically, but also want them to cost the same as the cheap products that were banned. And they can't understand why the math doesn't add up. They're convinced it's possible to manufacture and sell products cheaply and at the same time pay workers high wages with full benefits. So yeah, good luck with all that.
 
Whats happening there reminds me a lot of what taught in literature.

Ancient romans had that saying: "Nihil novi sub sole."
E. M. Remarque wrote: "Am Westen nicht Neues." (All quiet on the western front)
and the Bard added his 2 pennies with
Much Ado About Nothing
The Comedy of Errors

It would be funny if it was not so bad.
 
If they're so worried about network equipment belonging to other countries, just wait until the learn how many of our politicians are owned by other countries. That's a little harder to legislate though... Just remember the FCC exists to protect business dollars from you and not you from others.

Governor Jesse Ventura said that our politicians should all wear NASCAR jackets so we will know who owns them.
 
This anti-China sentiment is mostly neocon fantasy. China's not only the web, but it's the spider. You aren't unentangling it anytime soon.

As I've pointed out before: China is running point on the future of electric and digital/ surviellance infrastructure. America is so ridiculously far behind it's not even funny. We will never see America itself building all these devices. America is desperately searching for "the next slave" to pay slave wages and make our products so that our corporations can sell them at profit.

So you're gonna move to India? You mean that country that most phone/internet scams are linked to? Good luck with that one.

At the end of the day: the last thing they'll do is employ Americans.
 
Oh and don't forget *****s in charge .. even is it 'made (assembled) in the us' the cpu design is foreign, so is the ram, so are the network transceivers... and the pcb, and the firmware ... and the power supply
 
This anti-China sentiment is mostly neocon fantasy. China's not only the web, but it's the spider. You aren't unentangling it anytime soon.

As I've pointed out before: China is running point on the future of electric and digital/ surviellance infrastructure. America is so ridiculously far behind it's not even funny. We will never see America itself building all these devices. America is desperately searching for "the next slave" to pay slave wages and make our products so that our corporations can sell them at profit.

So you're gonna move to India? You mean that country that most phone/internet scams are linked to? Good luck with that one.

At the end of the day: the last thing they'll do is employ Americans.
Businesses are already moving out of China. Vietnam, Mexico, and a lot more. There are a lot of countries eager to replace China. And I assure you, a typical Apple fan won't notice a difference between Indian made Iphone or Chinese.
 
I trust my Xiaomi router with OpenWRT flashed on it infinitely more than any router from the biggest router brand in the US - CISCO (great bargain btw if you can find a Xiaomi 3000T revision supported by OpenWRT).

Old article but I doubt the NSA has changed their ways:

It's also been proven more than once that CISCO hardware has had backdoors in it. Meanwhile Huawei that got banned for supposedly having them... still haven't seen any proof. Still suspect Huawei got banned because their phones were getting in the way of Apple's profit margins.
 
Businesses are already moving out of China. Vietnam, Mexico, and a lot more. There are a lot of countries eager to replace China. And I assure you, a typical Apple fan won't notice a difference between Indian made Iphone or Chinese.
This. Exactly this. You can force companies out of China by putting tariffs on them and other stupid things, but they ain't coming back to America. They will simply move production to the next cheapest place after China. Oh you're going to tariff the next cheapest place too? Guess what, there are 100+ countries where it's cheaper to manufacture anything compared to the US.

In before what's-his-name comments how everything can be manufactured in the US. Yes, everything _CAN_ be manufactured there, just not profitably. And if you expect American companies to do it with razor thin margins or at cost then you don't know anything about capitalism and American greed.

So all the MAGA clowns can live in their little fantasy world where all the manufacturing jobs are coming back, but here in reality it's never going to happen. You can have your little celebration because Apple placated the Orange Turd by promising to invest $500 billion in America and then opened a tiny shop where they manufac...err, assemble certain high profit gadgets.

This is all you're ever going to get. Big promises from rich companies to bring back manufacturing, but that's all they are, big promises. If there was a way to pay lazy American workers $30+/hr with full benefits to push a button all day and still make hefty profits they would've brought everything back already and there would be no need to coerce them with tariffs.

Oh and I didn't even mention the fact that many of the jobs Americans are crying about no longer exist because they have robots doing them. And you can't even bring back the robot jobs because even those are cheaper to do in China and elsewhere.
 
According to the FCC's National Security Determination, allowing foreign-produced routers to dominate the US market poses "unacceptable economic, national security, and cybersecurity risks."

The only thing forcing the routers to be made in the US will do is increase their price. It won't make the software on them any more secure or any more well-supported; you won't get more security updates for them and people still won't install them even when they are available.

If you want to fix the security situation, start legislating for standards for the software on them. Things like firmware updates released in response to applicable CVEs, a certain minimum number of years of guaranteed updates, no hard-coded credentials built into the software shared between devices (e.g. a unique default admin password for each device, imprinted on the serial number sticker on the bottom of the device) so that it's not trivial to compromise them when (not if) people don't bother to change these credentials.

Stuff the UK is doing, for example.

What a farce.
 
I trust my Xiaomi router with OpenWRT flashed on it infinitely more than any router from the biggest router brand in the US - CISCO (great bargain btw if you can find a Xiaomi 3000T revision supported by OpenWRT).

Old article but I doubt the NSA has changed their ways:

It's also been proven more than once that CISCO hardware has had backdoors in it. Meanwhile Huawei that got banned for supposedly having them... still haven't seen any proof. Still suspect Huawei got banned because their phones were getting in the way of Apple's profit margins.
I run OpenWRT on an N3160, 8GB RAM and 128GB SSD (Samsung 840). I use an Intel chip as 0 and a Realtek 8125 as 1. Massively overpowered for what I need but it's far more powerful than an ARM router and not that much more expensive.

The 3000T is extremely cost effective and good enough for most people.
 
The only thing forcing the routers to be made in the US will do is increase their price. It won't make the software on them any more secure or any more well-supported; you won't get more security updates for them and people still won't install them even when they are available.

If you want to fix the security situation, start legislating for standards for the software on them. Things like firmware updates released in response to applicable CVEs, a certain minimum number of years of guaranteed updates, no hard-coded credentials built into the software shared between devices (e.g. a unique default admin password for each device, imprinted on the serial number sticker on the bottom of the device) so that it's not trivial to compromise them when (not if) people don't bother to change these credentials.

Stuff the UK is doing, for example.

What a farce.

That's not going to do much unless they force every manufacturer to open source
 
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