BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Why new FCC rules could leave millions stuck with outdated...
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Mon, 13 Apr 2026 08:22:02 -0500
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'71% of US households get routers from ISPs': Why new FCC rules could leave 
millions stuck with outdated, insecure hardware

Date:
Sun, 12 Apr 2026 20:05:00 +0000

Description:
FCC rules restrict new foreign routers, leaving ISP-controlled households 
stuck with existing devices despite security concerns and no immediate 
replacement options

FULL STORY
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has issued new rules intended
to address security risks posed by routers produced outside the United States.

A number of recent incidents have shown foreign routers are vulnerable to 
cyberattacks , with campaigns like Flax, Volt, and Salt Typhoon making 
headlines across the world. The new FCC rules require all new models of 
non-US-produced routers obtain a waiver before they can be sold to American 
consumers.  However this creates a direct
problem for the 71% of American households that receive their routers from 
internet service providers rather than buying their own equipment. 

Those consumers cannot simply go to a store and purchase a compliant router 
when rules change, because the hardware in their homes belongs to the ISP. 

Internet service providers operate on tight margins and typically replace 
customer routers only when necessary  especially for small business router 
needs amid rising costs 

To our knowledge consumer-grade Wi-Fi routers available in the U.S. are 
manufactured nearly exclusively in China, Taiwan, and Vietnam, said Claus 
Hetting, CEO of Wi-Fi NOW.

Foreign manufacturing cannot easily be relocated since it is typically based 
on long-term contracts with foreign manufacturing entities. Such contracts 
will be costly to terminate. 

Under the new FCC rules, ISPs must source compliant hardware for their 
millions of subscribers, but the supply chain for US-made Wi-Fi routers does 
not currently exist. 

Without compliant hardware to purchase, ISPs have little incentive to retire 
the routers already deployed in customers' homes.

"It is not possible to build a consumer router based entirely on U.S.
components; that part of the supply chain doesnt exist in the United States,"
added analyst Avi Greengart of Techsponential. 

Figures from Ookla claim roughly 28% of Speedtest results in the US came from 
devices connected via Wi-Fi 5, while approximately 7% used Wi-Fi 4 or older. 

These older standards typically lack the advanced security protocols of newer 
Wi-Fi generations, leaving them more exposed to the very threats the FCC aims 
to address  particularly for high-demand gaming router setups. 

The rules could paradoxically slow adoption of newer technologies like Wi-Fi 
6E and Wi-Fi 7, because ISPs facing compliance headaches may simply delay all 
router upgrades rather than navigate the waiver process for foreign-made 
equipment. 

The FCC's intention to secure American networks is clear, but the practical 
effect on several households could be the opposite of what it intends to do. 

Until the waiver process proves workable or domestic manufacturing 
materializes, these households may remain stuck with the same outdated, 
potentially insecure routers. 

The rules assume that restricting foreign-made equipment will improve 
security, but leaving old hardware in place longer may actually increase the 
high risk the FCC is trying to eliminate.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/71-of-u-s-households-get-routers-from-isps-why-n
ew-fcc-rules-could-leave-millions-stuck-with-outdated-insecure-hardware

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 * Origin: Capitol City Hub (1:2320/105)

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