chris_c_
Active Member
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2010
- Messages
- 666
- Reaction score
- 126
I believe the reason the FCC didn't ban existing installed routers, and new unopened routers already imported and stocked in warehouses inside the USA, is because banning them would cause an unfair and immediate huge financial cost, and burn a lot of capital, because there would be a rush on buying new routers, yet the FCC has not approved any new routers yet.@chris_c_: Not sure how you reach your conclusion that the "FCC ban is forcing router vendors to be transparent on their supply chains and beef up their security." Every existing home router is exempted from the new FCC mandate including all of the TP-Link and MicroTik routers which were compromised. So, if anything, this gives home users a false sense of security and not much else.
It's only fair for the FCC to impose these strict new security and transparency rules on new routers that have not yet been imported, with the strong encouragement to build them inside the USA so that chain of custody and source code can be more easily reviewed, scanned, and approved. And when a costly security incident using US SOHO routers as a botnet next happens, all parties - SOHO router manufacturers, SoC vendors, and firmware developers - will be located inside the jurisdiction limits of the USA, for potential federal legal consequences and class action lawsuits for cybersecurity claims.