đ° Full Story
Netgear became the first retail consumer router company to secure a conditional exemption from the U.S. Federal Communications Commission, the company disclosed in an April 14 SEC filing.
The approval covers a broad swath of products â including Nighthawk and Orbi consumer mesh, mobile and standalone routers, selected cable gateways and cable modems â and runs through Oct. 1, 2027.
The FCC said the Department of Defense determined the specified Netgear devices do not pose unacceptable national security risks, but regulators have not explained the basis for that determination.
The agencyâs March rule had added virtually all foreign-made consumer routers to a âCovered List,â banning new imports unless firms win conditional approval and prompting a March 1, 2027 deadline for firmware-update assurances for other vendors.
Netgear noted its manufacturing is based in Southeast Asia and said its approval allows it to introduce new models and continue software updates so long as the conditional status remains.
Adtran also received a separate conditional approval; other major brands including TP-Link, Asus and Amazonâs Eero remain subject to the ban unless similarly cleared.
đ Based On
đ¤ Social Media Insights
Social Summary
The comments point to official FCC guidance clarifying a procedural conditional-approval route and note the exemptionâs practical effect â it keeps specified Netgear devices usable and compliant for federal work through Oct. 2027 â while warning that limited updates for non-exempt routers could force costly replacements and raise security concerns.






đŹ Commentary