News:

Willkommen im Notebookcheck.com Forum! Hier können Sie über alle unsere Artikel und allgemein über notebookrelevante Dinge diskutieren. Viel Spass!

Main Menu

Post reply

Other options
Verification:
Please leave this box empty:
Shortcuts: ALT+S post or ALT+P preview

Topic summary

Posted by BarbaraBWynn
 - Today at 10:44:33
I get paid over $130 1 to 3 hours working from home with 2 kids at home. I never thought I'd be able to do it but my best friend earns over $27k a month doing this and she convinced me to try. The potential with this is endless.
Heress-------> www.giftpay7.vip

Posted by anan
 - Today at 10:23:56
Other articles mentioned that manufacturers can request an exemption "while they bring production to the US". This is just another way to force companies to manufacture in the US.
Posted by Codrut Nistor
 - Yesterday at 18:01:56
Quote from: Not to be taken seriously on Yesterday at 14:28:59Is this trolling? Banning all "foreign" made routers wouldn't just ban ones made in China but anything produced in any EU, Asia (including Taiwan) and Latin America (including Mexico).

Where is the US going to get routers from then? They don't make any.

This has got to be trolling and likely not actually followed through or taken seriously.
Starlink gear is made in the US. They just need to ramp up production a bazillion times to... oh, wait. I guess they can't.
Posted by jdrch
 - Yesterday at 17:36:33
A couple things to note here. The FCC has only spectrum licensing and spectrum use jurisdiction, not import jurisdiction. Thus, this "ban" is likely to fall apart in court.

Second, the "ban" is on "consumer-grade" routers, which means 1) all APs, switches, and enterprise routers aren't impacted 2) it would render consumer routers insanely expensive if followed through on. Unless, of course, you're using Starlink, who this "ban" seems to have been tailored to benefit.

In short, this isn't about cybersecurity, it's straight up cronyism.
Posted by Worgarthe
 - Yesterday at 15:45:53
Quote from: Not to be taken seriously on Yesterday at 14:28:59Is this trolling? Banning all "foreign" made routers wouldn't just ban ones made in China but anything produced in any EU, Asia (including Taiwan) and Latin America (including Mexico).

Where is the US going to get routers from then? They don't make any.

This has got to be trolling and likely not actually followed through or taken seriously.
All correct. But, are you expecting any sense from the US clownfest? 😁
Posted by Not to be taken seriously
 - Yesterday at 14:28:59
Is this trolling? Banning all "foreign" made routers wouldn't just ban ones made in China but anything produced in any EU, Asia (including Taiwan) and Latin America (including Mexico).

Where is the US going to get routers from then? They don't make any.

This has got to be trolling and likely not actually followed through or taken seriously.
Posted by Redaktion
 - Yesterday at 12:51:35
While the state sector has long restricted the use of foreign networking equipment, the Federal Communications Commission's recent actions mark a significant escalation. Now, "all consumer-grade routers produced in foreign countries" are banned from being imported to the US.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/US-bans-import-of-foreign-routers-due-to-security-concerns.1257521.0.html