<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><author_name>Ava (npub1f6…azcka)</author_name><author_url>https://nostr.ae/npub1f6ugxyxkknket3kkdgu4k0fu74vmshawermkj8d06sz6jts9t4kslazcka</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://nostr.ae</provider_url><html>This is concerning.&#xA;&#xA;The FCC moved to deny authorization for new foreign-made consumer router models. That means upcoming models can’t legally be imported or sold in the U.S.&#xA;&#xA;It also issued only a temporary waiver allowing firmware/security updates for already-approved devices through March 2027. That creates a potential update cliff unless extended.&#xA;&#xA;Hardware trust isn’t a one-direction problem. Snowden documents described NSA “interdiction”—intercepting networking gear in transit, implanting surveillance tooling, then resealing and shipping it onward. Even Cisco publicly complained after those revelations.&#xA;&#xA;Snowden’s operational takeaway was basically:&#xA;• minimize trust in vendor firmware&#xA;• prefer open-source firmware where possible&#xA;• segment your network&#xA;• assume routers are hostile infrastructure&#xA;• disable remote management&#xA;• encrypt above the router&#xA;&#xA;There’s another issue: many privacy-friendly routers are foreign-made. Devices commonly used for OpenWrt and auditability—like GL.iNet_ models (Beryl, Slate, Flint)—are manufactured overseas.&#xA;&#xA;&#34;American” brands don’t necessarily solve this; companies like Linksys are foreign-owned and build hardware abroad.&#xA;&#xA;Routers are inherently high-risk supply-chain devices—regardless of origin.&#xA;&#xA;This policy doesn’t change that reality.&#xA;It just shifts which supply chain you’re being asked to trust.</html></oembed>