Illustration depicting FCC ban on new foreign-made routers due to security risks, featuring banned router, US flag, and production shift to America.
Illustration depicting FCC ban on new foreign-made routers due to security risks, featuring banned router, US flag, and production shift to America.
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FCC bans new foreign-made routers as security risk

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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.

The FCC released a fact sheet and notice on Monday, March 23, designating any consumer routers with major manufacturing, assembly, design, or development stages outside the US as foreign-made and subject to the ban. This includes nearly all routers sold in the US, such as those from TP-Link, Asus, Netgear, D-Link, Eero, Razer, and even US-headquartered firms like Netgear and Google Nest that produce in Asia, including Taiwan. Retailers can continue selling models previously approved under prior policies, and devices on the Covered List may receive updates through at least March 1, 2027, with possible extensions. Previously purchased routers are unaffected and do not need replacement. FCC Chair Brendan Carr stated: “I welcome this Executive Branch national security determination, and I am pleased that the FCC has now added foreign-produced routers, which were found to pose an unacceptable national security risk, to the FCC’s Covered List.” The action aligns with the White House's 2025 national security strategy emphasizing US independence in core components for defense and economy. Companies can apply for conditional approval from the Department of War or Homeland Security by submitting plans to move some manufacturing stateside, though none have been granted yet. TP-Link has faced prior scrutiny over China ties, but the ban is broader. CNET and others sought comments from affected firms without immediate responses.

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Reactions on X to the FCC's ban on new foreign-made consumer routers highlight a divide: supporters praise it as essential for national security against Chinese-linked cyber threats like Salt Typhoon, while critics worry about supply chain disruptions, skyrocketing prices, and absence of domestic alternatives, potentially forcing consumers to enterprise gear or outdated hardware. Tech influencers debate brand impacts and advise checking router origins.

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Illustration of US Capitol with divided lawmakers and President Trump signing FISA Section 702 extension amid deadline tension.
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Congress approves 10-day extension of FISA’s Section 702 as lawmakers remain split on broader renewal

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The House and Senate approved a short-term extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act early Friday, moving the program’s expiration from April 20 to April 30 after longer renewal plans stalled amid divisions among House Republicans. President Donald Trump signed the extension on Saturday, setting up another high-stakes fight ahead of the new deadline.

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.

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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.

A key U.S. surveillance tool, Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, faces expiration on April 20 without congressional action. Lawmakers from both parties worry it enables warrantless spying on Americans' communications, while supporters highlight its role in counterterrorism and national security. The debate crosses party lines as reforms are pushed amid past abuses.

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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.

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