Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

C2 provides technology services and consultation to businesses and individuals.

T (818) 584 6021
Email: [email protected]

C2 Technology Partners, Inc.
26500 Agoura Rd, Ste 102-576, Calabasas, CA 91302

Open in Google Maps
QUESTIONS? CALL: 818-584-6021
  • HOME
  • BLOG
  • SERVICES
    • Encryption
    • Backups
  • ABOUT
    • SMS Opt-In Form
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Privacy Policy
FREECONSULT

The Government Just Banned Most Home Routers. What Does That Mean?

  • 0
Megan Donovan
Tuesday, 12 May 2026 / Published in Woo on Tech

A client forwarded me a message from her internet provider a few weeks back. It warned that certain router brands might have security issues and suggested she consider upgrading to a managed service. She wanted to know if she should be worried.

I looked at the message and told her two things. First, the warning is real and the underlying concern is legitimate. Second, the way this particular company wrote it was deliberately vague, designed to create just enough unease to push her toward paying for something she may or may not need. The two facts are not mutually exclusive, and that combination is worth unpacking.

What Started the Questions

On March 23, 2026, the FCC added all foreign-manufactured consumer-grade routers to its Covered List, which effectively bans new models from being imported or sold in the United States. The ruling cited documented cyberattack campaigns, most notably the Salt, Flax, and Volt Typhoon operations, where foreign-produced routers in homes and small offices were used as entry points to attack critical US infrastructure.

The brands affected read like a shopping list at Best Buy: TP-Link, Netgear, Asus, Linksys, Eero, Google Nest WiFi. All of them. Because virtually every consumer router on the market is manufactured outside the United States, the ban essentially covers the entire category of new product introductions until manufacturers either establish US-based production or receive individual conditional approval from the Department of Homeland Security.

Netgear has already received an exemption. Eero received conditional approval through October 2027. TP-Link, which holds roughly 65 percent of the US home router market, is still working through the process.

What This Does Not Mean

Before anyone calls me to ask if they need to throw their router in the trash, let me be direct: if you already own one of these devices and it is running fine, you are not required to do anything immediately. The FCC ruling grandfathers existing equipment. You can keep using your current router legally and indefinitely.

The ban prevents new foreign-made models from receiving FCC authorization going forward. What it does not do is criminalize the router sitting on your credenza right now.

There is, however, one real deadline buried in this that most of the coverage has glossed over. Manufacturers on the covered list have until March 1, 2027 to issue firmware updates to existing devices. After that date, unless they have secured a conditional approval, they cannot push software patches to devices already in the field. Which means a router that is fine today may gradually become a security liability as vulnerabilities emerge and fixes are no longer permitted.

Why This Matters for Your Business

What most business owners are not thinking about is the part I find most relevant for the professional services firms I work with.

The router sitting in your office is probably not the one that concerns me most right now. Business-grade networking equipment used in professional environments is generally managed differently and held to a higher standard than what you find in a consumer retail package.

What I am thinking about is the router in your employee’s home office.

You have probably had people working remotely for years now. They are accessing your systems, your client files, and your email through whatever networking equipment they set up in their living room. A lot of it is exactly the kind of foreign-manufactured consumer hardware that is now at the center of this national security discussion. Much of it has not been updated, assessed, or evaluated by anyone with any technical accountability for your business’s security.

I tell clients all the time: your security perimeter is not the four walls of your office anymore. It extends into every home where someone logs into your network. If that connection is running through a device with documented vulnerabilities and no path to a security patch after March 2027, that is a gap worth addressing.

My Honest Take

I have been watching the concerns around foreign-manufactured networking equipment for a long time. The documented attacks and vulnerabilities are real. Whether the current political moment is driving the timing of this particular ruling is a separate conversation I will spare you.

What I will say is that this is a good time to have someone take an honest look at your network, including your remote workers’ home setups, and give you a realistic assessment of where you actually stand. Not a sales pitch dressed up as a security warning. Just a straight answer about what you have, what the risks are, and what, if anything, you should actually do about it.

That is the conversation I am always happy to have.

Quick and Easy

The FCC banned new foreign-manufactured consumer routers in March 2026, citing documented national security threats. Existing devices are legally protected for now, but a March 2027 deadline for firmware updates means routers from affected manufacturers could become security liabilities. For professional services firms, the immediate priority is evaluating remote employee home networks, not just office infrastructure.

 

ASUScybersecurityEerofccFirmware Updateshome officeIT ComplianceNational SecuritynetgearNetwork Securityremote workRouter BanSmall Business SecurityTP-LinkVolt Typhoon

Pandemic Week 4: Get Equipped

  • 1
Christopher Woo
Tuesday, 07 April 2020 / Published in Woo on Tech
working from home

In case you haven’t already figured it out, the pandemic isn’t going anywhere, and as infections and deaths continue to rise in the US, you can probably count on having to work from home for at least another month, possibly longer. If you’ve been thinking about your home office situation as temporary, it may benefit you (and whoever you are living with at the moment) to instead think of it as a worthwhile investment to improve your well being and productivity.

Equipping your home office

We are working at home specifically for health reasons, so we should not be ignoring other facets of our well being especially when it’s relatively easy to maintain. Here are some products that I am confident will improve your home office setup, especially in the ergonomics department. Normally, I wouldn’t hesitate to provide you Amazon links to these items, but I’m doing so now with the caveat that if you purchase anything from them that you spend at least a few minutes providing some feedback to them on treating their workers better.

Note: I don’t receive any compensation from any of the links I provide below.

  • If you had a standing desk at work, or are looking to try one out, there are a lot of options out there, but if you’d rather not spend an arm and a leg, take a look at Autonomous.ai. I use the SmartDesk 2 Premium model all day long. Putting one together might take two people, but I love it, and it’s inexpensive enough that if you decide standing isn’t for you, it’s still a great sitting desk. Ikea sells a cheaper, hand-cranked version if you don’t mind applying elbow grease to move it up and down. If you’ve already got a desk that’s not going anywhere, but still want to give standing a try, have a look at something like a desktop version of the standing desk. Keep in mind that most traditional desks aren’t suited for modern day keyboard ergonomics to start, so these types of solutions, when in “sit mode,” raise your keyboard and mouse an additional inch, which may result in aggravating any existing discomfort or injuries.
  • Thanks to mass adoption of computers in the work place and monitors continuing to become lighter, bigger and cheaper, monitor arms have become very popular and affordable. I’ve used a number of different models, but the Amazon Basics models are dependable, sturdy and priced modestly for their quality. Keep in mind that your monitors must have VESA-compatible mounting holes on the back for most monitor arms to work properly. Make sure you pay attention to the mounting requirements – most models require some sort of lip to clamp onto, or a hole through the desk itself, and make sure your actual desk construction can withstand the concentrated weight of the stand and monitor. Hollow or lightweight desks may bend or even crack from the force. You can get stands that use a heavy base instead of clamps or holes, but they don’t offer as much stability or flexibility in placement.
  • If you are using a laptop and the built-in screen as your primary home office computer, you can (literally) elevate your whole computing experience by standing the laptop up on one of these devices. If you regularly move around, get a folding, portable one like this. Bringing your laptop screen closer to eye level is critical for proper ergonomics, but if you go this route, you should NOT be using the built-in keyboard and mouse, so make sure you account for that in your decision. See the next item for a solution to that problem.
  • Most laptop keyboards and trackpads aren’t built for long-term use, at least for most normal-sized humans. The keys are typically smaller and spaced closer together, and trackpad will give you RSI if you rely on mousing at all throughout your day. Treat yourself to a full-sized keyboard and separate mouse. Logitech’s wireless entry-level combo is surprisingly affordable, and will leave you money to get a decent wrist-rest. I use a full-length model like this all day long, and you know how much time I spend at my keyboard.
  • If you are using an older, smaller monitor, consider something newer and larger, especially if the bulk of your day is spent working on screen. The minimum I recommend is 20″ and it should have a resolution of at least 1920 X 1080. You don’t need to go 4K unless you have the eyes of a hawk or job functions that require that level of resolution, and buying something with a diagonal larger than 27″ may not work ergonomically with your home office setup, especially if space is at a premium. Not all monitors are created equal, and generally cheaper monitors may not be as crisp or as bright as you might want, so check the reviews carefully. Generally, my clients have been served well by Acers’ moderately priced monitors, like this 20″ model, but if your budget is more robust, the Dell Ultrasharp 24″ monitor is eye-poppingly gorgeous and highly recommended.

When discussing investments in your home office technology, I like to remind folks that equipping your home office should hold a similar level of consideration to that of choosing a mattress. You are going to be spending a lot of time on it, so why not spend accordingly?

Image by thedarknut from Pixabay

ergonomicshome officepandemic

Recent Posts

  • Backup

    Your Software Vendor Is Not Your Partner. Protect Yourself Anyway.

    Your software vendor does not care whether your...
  • Backup and recovery icons for computer overlaid on people working on computers

    Why Your ‘Off-Site’ Backup Isn’t Really Off-Site (And Why That Matters)

    I need to tell you about a conversation I had l...
  • The Government Just Banned Most Home Routers. What Does That Mean?

    A client forwarded me a message from her intern...
  • The AI That Was Too Dangerous to Release Just Got Leaked

    I have been saying for a while now that the AI ...
  • Remote worker on phone meeting and on computer

    Remote Work Security: What Actually Matters for Professional Services Firms

    Remote work is not a temporary arrangement that...

Archives

  • GET SOCIAL
Get Tech Support Now - (818) 584-6021 - C2 Technology Partners, Inc.

© 2016 All rights reserved.

TOP