Netgear and Eero Wi-Fi routers displayed with an FCC exemption document in a professional office setting.
Netgear and Eero Wi-Fi routers displayed with an FCC exemption document in a professional office setting.
Imagem gerada por IA

Netgear e Eero obtêm isenções da proibição da FCC a roteadores estrangeiros

Imagem gerada por IA

A Federal Communications Commission (FCC) concedeu isenções à Netgear e à Eero em relação à proibição de novos roteadores Wi-Fi fabricados no exterior. A medida segue a ordem original de 23 de março, que visava dispositivos com fabricação ou design fora dos Estados Unidos. As atualizações de firmware para modelos existentes continuarão até pelo menos 1º de janeiro de 2029.

A FCC anunciou a proibição em 23 de março, citando riscos à segurança nacional vinculados a ataques cibernéticos, incluindo o Salt Typhoon. Quase todos os roteadores vendidos nos EUA envolvem componentes estrangeiros, mas as isenções permitem que a Netgear e a Eero vendam novos modelos enquanto transferem seus processos de fabricação para o território nacional.

O que as pessoas estão dizendo

Os usuários receberam bem as isenções para a Netgear e a Eero, permitindo a continuidade das vendas nos EUA e atualizações de firmware até 2029, vendo-as como um alívio prático diante da proibição da FCC. Algumas postagens destacaram a Netgear como a primeira a receber a aprovação e a Eero logo na sequência, classificando a notícia como positiva para os consumidores. Outros expressaram ceticismo sobre as aprovações seletivas e questionaram por que a mudança da fabricação para os EUA não foi exigida. Contas de tecnologia neutras observaram o abrandamento da proibição com a extensão dos prazos, mas recomendaram cautela em novas compras.

Artigos relacionados

Illustration depicting FCC ban on new foreign-made routers due to security risks, featuring banned router, US flag, and production shift to America.
Imagem gerada por IA

FCC bans new foreign-made routers as security risk

Reportado por IA Imagem gerada por IA

The Federal Communications Commission announced on March 23, 2026, that new consumer-grade routers manufactured outside the US pose an unacceptable national security risk and will be added to its Covered List. The ban applies to sales of new models but spares existing and previously authorized routers. Manufacturers may seek exemptions by planning to shift production to the US.

Following the FCC's March 23 announcement banning sales of new Wi-Fi routers with major foreign manufacturing due to security risks, companies like TP-Link and Netgear have responded with production shift plans, while experts cite threats like Salt Typhoon and warn of update cutoffs after March 1, 2027. No exemptions granted yet; Starlink routers appear unaffected.

Reportado por IA

One week after the FCC banned sales of new foreign-made Wi-Fi routers over national security risks, new details emerge on implicated cyberattacks and growing criticism of the broad policy's effectiveness.

Zyxel has issued a warning about a critical remote code execution (RCE) security flaw that could affect more than a dozen of its routers. The company has addressed a handful of concerning vulnerabilities in its devices. This update comes as part of ongoing efforts to secure networking equipment.

Reportado por IA

After testing 34 routers, CNET Labs found Wi-Fi 7 models deliver the highest throughput at 3,169Mbps across bands, far surpassing Wi-Fi 6E's 1,309Mbps. The author, once skeptical, now recommends tri-band Wi-Fi 7 routers for future-proofing amid rising data use. Prices have dropped, with good options under $200.

Colorado's Senate Business, Labor, and Technology committee unanimously advanced bill SB26-090 on Friday, which would exempt information technology equipment for critical infrastructure from the state's consumer right-to-repair laws. The measure modifies a 2024 law effective this year, drawing support from tech firms like Cisco and IBM amid opposition from repair advocates. The bill now heads to full Senate and House votes, possibly next week.

Reportado por IA

On rooftops in Havana, Matanzas and Santa Clara, affluent Cubans are secretly installing Starlink dishes to access stable internet, bypassing the state ban and Etecsa's monopoly. Professionals like programmers rely on smuggled equipment powered by solar batteries amid blackouts and unreliable connections. Elon Musk confirmed on March 16 that the service works in Cuba, though it is not authorized.

terça-feira, 12 de maio de 2026, 01:05h

US issues software reprieve amid ongoing DJI drone ban

domingo, 10 de maio de 2026, 02:50h

FBI urges router security steps after Russian GRU attacks

sábado, 09 de maio de 2026, 13:15h

FCC extends updates for banned drones and routers until 2029

sábado, 02 de maio de 2026, 16:49h

FCC ruling boosts SpaceX Starlink capacity sevenfold

quinta-feira, 30 de abril de 2026, 20:40h

Google rolls out Nest Wifi update amid US router ban

segunda-feira, 20 de abril de 2026, 20:44h

China warns of retaliation to EU's cybersecurity crackdown on Huawei, ZTE

terça-feira, 14 de abril de 2026, 23:48h

Congress debates renewal of FISA Section 702 as deadline nears

sexta-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2026, 17:02h

Wisconsin removes VPN ban from age verification bill

sexta-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2026, 00:26h

Texas sues TP-Link over suspected Chinese ties

quarta-feira, 18 de fevereiro de 2026, 06:03h

Digital rights advocates urge Wisconsin to reject VPN ban bill

 

 

 

Este site usa cookies

Usamos cookies para análise para melhorar nosso site. Leia nossa política de privacidade para mais informações.
Recusar