Tech News
← Back to articles

Controversy Brews: US Government Targets Banning Top Wi-Fi Router

read original related products more articles

TP-Link routers might not be available for much longer in the US, according to a Washington Post report last week. A potential ban is looking increasingly likely, as more than half a dozen federal departments and agencies back the proposal,

The news first broke in December of last year, when The Wall Street Journal reported that investigators at the Departments of Commerce, Defense and Justice had all opened probes into the company due to national security risks stemming from its ties to China. Since then, news on the TP-Link front has been relatively quiet.

Now, the proposal has gained interagency approval.

Read more: I Asked 4 Cybersecurity Experts If They Would Still Use a TP-Link Router

Why are plans to ban TP-Link routers being pushed?

"Commerce officials concluded TP-Link Systems products pose a risk because the US-based company's products handle sensitive American data and because the officials believe it remains subject to jurisdiction or influence by the Chinese government," the Washington Post reported.

TP-Link's ties to the Chinese government are only allegations. The company -- technically called TP-Link Systems -- has strenuously denied to me in the past that it's a Chinese company.

"As an independent US company, no foreign country or government, including China, has access to or control over the design and production of our products," a TP-Link spokesperson told CNET.

The history of the TP-Link routers

TP-Link was founded in Shenzhen, China, in 1996 by two brothers, Jeffrey (Jianjun) Chao and Jiaxing Zhao. In October 2024, two months after members of the House Select Committee called for an investigation into TP-Link routers, the company split into two: TP-Link Technologies and TP-Link Systems.

... continue reading