So you now can be absolutely certain that Netgear is actively and openly giving fascist authoritarians what they want.
At least before you could be fairly certain it was just the secretive three letter guys that roughly knew what they were doing at least. Now it’s even the blatant dumb fucks in charge.
Definitely will have no backdoor or monitoring installed as default.
It’s not clear what makes Netgear’s currently foreign-made routers safer than, say, an Amazon Eero 7 or a Google Nest WiFi Pro.
This is all evidence that it’s not really about safety. It’s a clumsy attempt to strongarm tech companies into setting up factories in the USA. It may also be an attempt to create an environment in which it’s easier to install US government backdoors on every home router.
But how hilarious it is that Google and Amazon, already bending the knee to the emperor, did not get a pass.
It’s a clumsy attempt to strongarm tech companies into setting up factories in the USA
Evidently not since Netgear has zero factories in the USA and plans to bring zero factories to the USA in the future.
It may also be an attempt to create an environment in which it’s easier to install US government backdoors on every home router.
It’s this one.
As well as a clumsy attempt to thwart foreign back doors. Unless they’ve paid for them. Or are Israel.
Control of the routers
Control of online identity
What could go wrong?
It could be worse… we could be living the alternate watchdogs legion timeline… where Albion wins.
This seems awfully convenient for everyone, but the consumer.
The cool thing is that you can make basically any combination of parts into a router if you install Linux or BSD on it. Not terribly helpful for end user consumers that will get shafted by this, but at the end of the day it’s just a small computer.
Otherwise, smuggle some “foreign routers” in from Mexico or Canada like it’s the prohibition era?
TrendNet is far superior and based on Torrence anyway. Netgear and Linksys are junk anyway. Get yourself an open hardware platform, or something that can run OpenWRT. Skip the corporate manufacturers who all kind of suck.
MikroTik over here.
I second mikrotik
And looks like netgear is off my list of trustworthiness. Used them for 20 years. Best get looking for a new one.
Mikrotik just released a new overkill router with wifi7 and 2.5G Ethernet. Might pick one of those up in order to avoid the inevitable fuckery for the next few years.
I have an apology to make. I did a knee jerk reaction. I already have an ASUs running. I was using netgear 30 years ago then switched to ASUs 20 years ago…. Been replacing it since. Brain fart yesterday. I have a netgear in the cupboard that the isp sent me. Getting flung.
ASUS is nice
It’s french for “she sucks”.
Joking aside, I only get ASUS for my residential needs, and Ubiquiti for commercial use.
Yeh I also have an ASU’s. Gonna dig it out.
You can build your own router fyi
Do they run openwrt?
I have 2 of them running openwrt, one is my main router. WiFi radio doesnt work though because of broadcom.
Not the ones with Broadcom chips.
Every netgear router I own does.
Netgear is the one hardware company I have an absolute and complete avoidance for. If someone gave me anything from Netgear for free. It would go straight into the electronics recycling bin at my local dump and I’d go pay full price for a different brand.
Not even a funny OpenWRT flash?
I wouldn’t disrespect OpenWRT like that.
Build your own. Fuck these people.
Sounds like a non-tariff barrier to trade that other countries should bring up in trade negotiations.
The very same trade negotiations where all other countries have basically taken the stance that “we’ll just grin and bear it and wait for three years until he’s gone”. The EU is currently accepting 15% tariffs on their goods and mandating no tariffs in return.
Still need to wait for more details on what Netgear agreed on with the FCC to get the conditional approval. Otherwise it is hard to evaluate if this is a good or bad thing.
Found the details: $$$
boy, I wonder what palantir backdoors they definitely won’t have.
Not surprising . . . . .and this still does nothing to help domestic network device production in the US, since Netgear outsources their manufacturing to Taiwan.










