NCTA seeks waiver from foreign-router ban, citing memory and substrate shortages.
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I think our fuckwit leaders misspelled "great". They really meant "grate". Them being not too bright, they probably didn't know the difference.It is not amazing that arbitrary, trumped-up, panic-oriented, stupid moves result in a multitude of problems. Sic transit dumbasses. (Are we great now?)
Plausible deniability.I don't know why the NSA and FBI don't just come out and say this is so they can have back doors put in. The ENTIRE IT infrastructure of the government and its fascist tech-bro fanbase has moved to pure surveillance and mass data gathering. They have the technology for total information awareness now. By getting effortless access to home networks, they'll be able to easily exploit not just the web traffic, but countless Windows vulnerabilities to spy on pretty much everyone in real time.
All foreign made routers, as in hardware.Ignoring the dumb for a moment.
Would an OpenWrt One device fall under this? And how would they even prevent it if it is based in many countries, some of which do not fall under the restrictions? Similar question for other devices. What is to stop the manufacturer from continuing to provide update on their corporate support site that a user can download and use to upgrade?
I do not see how the restrictions for updates will be possible to enforce other than to take away ease of use via auto-updating or [Click Here To Update] being disabled? Yes, it will stop updates for most and be a security catastrophe for consumers in general, but for the technical I do not see anything preventing further use. Or even purchasing via an externally based vendor and shipping it here.
I mean, that's the lie put out by the US government, sure. But they're the ones actively starting wars around the world and murdering their citizens in the streets. As a US citizen, I don't worry about the Chinese government hurting me in any way whatsoever. Ours? I worry about getting killed going to a protest.Is that really a thing here? I thought it was primarily to avoid countries like China having hidden backdoors in millions of American homes in the event that there were ever a conflict.
FIFUOh but this has a simple solution to it. Just get the router companies to stump up more... ahem... donations to Trumps campaigns and the problem goes away...allegedly.....temporarily
The only thing that accomplished is it gave AT&T's suppliers another year to do nothing. When the waiver expires they will ask for another. And another.The FCC last month granted a one-year waiver to AT&T’s suppliers
as if the Amazon-produced one doesn'tIs that really a thing here? I thought it was primarily to avoid countries like China having hidden backdoors in millions of American homes in the event that there were ever a conflict.
Is that really a thing here? I thought it was primarily to avoid countries like China having hidden backdoors in millions of American homes in the event that there were ever a conflict.
Got to give those illegal alien detainees something useful to do. USA! USA! It will make me soooo proud.Behold the Trump Router, proudly painted gold in the US! And coming Real Soon Now.
Incorrect. This administration is in fact very serious about the grift and corruption. The cash must flow into Trump’s coffers; anything that stands in the way of this must be taken down.But we already know -- this administration isn't serious about anything.
Por qué no los dos?Is that really a thing here? I thought it was primarily to avoid countries like China having hidden backdoors in millions of American homes in the event that there were ever a conflict.
Shhhhh!The mass surveillance tech bros forget that software routers exist. There is no way I am ever using one of their "back door" routers in my network. Beyond that, I have 30 years of networking knowledge they don't have. This is trivial to work around.
Oh, the government has been keen on back doors in people’s secure communications for decades:Is that (back doors) really a thing here?
I mean, you're technically right, and a lot of people who spend time here probably can roll their own if they're so inclined. Our neighbors and extended family that don't have access to all the networking knowledge do depend on appliance routers, though.The mass surveillance tech bros forget that software routers exist. There is no way I am ever using one of their "back door" routers in my network. Beyond that, I have 30 years of networking knowledge they don't have. This is trivial to work around.
You do realize this story is about an administration policy, right? A particularly derpy one?Every story on this site eventually devolves into an echo chamber of whining about our current administration