AARP Hearing Center
Key takeaways
- The FCC added foreign-made consumer Wi‑Fi routers to a list of products it says pose security risks.
- You can keep using current routers, get basic updates and buy previously authorized models.
- Supplies of routers may be short, and prices could rise, so shoppers may want to move quickly.
Your router — the indispensable box that distributes the internet signal to your computer, phone, TV, smart speakers, video doorbell and other Wi-Fi-capable electronics — is obviously a key component of any home network. But if you need to upgrade or replace your home router anytime soon, a sudden ban by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) on the import of all new consumer-grade routers made outside the U.S. — which is just about all of them — may mess with your shopping plans. The FCC’s move puts routers in a category with foreign-made drones, which were banned at the end of last year.
The FCC cited national security and supply chain concerns in its announcement of the new ban.
“Malicious actors have exploited security gaps in foreign-made routers to attack American households, disrupt networks, enable espionage, and facilitate intellectual property theft,” the agency wrote in a release.
The FCC added the routers to what is known as its Covered List of communications gear and services, “deemed to pose an unacceptable risk to the national security of the U.S. or the safety and security of U.S. persons.” Indeed, router vulnerabilities have been directly implicated in foreign cyberattacks over the last couple of years, including in the Volt, Flax and Salt Typhoon attacks that targeted U.S. infrastructure.
American hardware brands such as Netgear and Amazon-owned Eero are not exempt from the FCC’s action, since the products themselves are manufactured overseas.
Also affected is another prominent router company, TP-Link, which was founded in China, later spun into a standalone entity and is now based in Irvine, California. Although TP-Link had been in the U.S. government’s crosshairs for some time because of its Chinese ties, a much-speculated-on ban of the company’s products never materialized — until now.
By some estimates, China controls around 60 percent of the U.S. home router market, Reuters says. Prices for home routers vary widely, with many in the $80 to $200 range and some advanced models costing much more.
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