When you have the family screaming about lag, and you’re staring at a blinking light wondering if you should just chuck the Router out the window. It’s a modern frustration, a digital migraine. But now, thanks to the FCC, that frustration might be accompanied by a little bit of…national pride?
Or at least, a whole lot of manufacturing shifts. The FCC just dropped a bomb – a digital one – essentially banning the import of new routers that aren’t made in the U.S. Existing routers are fine, but anything new hitting the market has to be stamped “Made in America.”
This isn’t some subtle tweak; it’s a full-on pivot, and it’s got a national security justification that sounds straight out of a spy thriller.
The National Security Angle? Seriously?
Apparently, those routers we’ve been happily plugging into our walls are also potential backdoors for Cyberattacks. The FCC is citing a “National Security Determination” – a fancy way of saying “we’re worried about hackers.” They’re pointing fingers at vulnerabilities exploited in past attacks, like the Salt Typhoon incident, suggesting foreign-made routers could be used to compromise American infrastructure. It’s a bit dramatic, sure, but the concern is that these devices could be leveraged to attack civilians directly.
My son, the high-spec gamer, would probably roll his eyes at this. He’s more concerned with his ping times than geopolitical espionage.
Supply Chain Shenanigans
This isn’t the first time the government has taken a hard line on foreign tech. Remember the drone debacle? This is bigger, though. Routers are everything these days. The shift in manufacturing will be massive, especially since most consumer routers currently come from places like Taiwan, Thailand, and Vietnam. The Trump-era trade wars already started moving production, but this FCC ruling is accelerating the process. Companies now have to disclose their entire supply chain and detail plans to manufacture routers in the U.S. to get that “Conditional Approval.”
Good luck with that paperwork. It’s going to be interesting to see how quickly companies can actually retool and move production.
The Fine Print & Future Fallout
The FCC keeps a “Covered List” of tech that poses a national security risk. Routers are now on it. FCC Chief Brendan Carr is practically doing a victory lap, praising President Trump’s “leadership” and promising to keep American cyberspace “safe and secure.”
It’s a bit of a political statement wrapped in a technical announcement, isn’t it? The real question is: will this actually make us safer, or just make routers more expensive? This move is a big deal, and it’s going to ripple through the tech world.
It’s a bold move, Cotton, let’s see if it pays off. It’s a bit dramatic, sure, but the concern is that these devices could be leveraged to compromise American infrastructure.













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