Have your say on the FCC’s plan to lock down WiFi routers
You may know that you can replace your WiFi router’s software with an open source version like DD-WRT or Tomato to make it more secure or powerful. However, the US wireless regulator (FCC) only seems to have figured that out recently, and is not happy with your ability to boost the signal power on such devices. As such, it proposed changes to regulations, with one document suggesting it may ban or restrict third-party software altogether. That caught the eye of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), which created an online petition asking the FCC to make changes.
The EFF petition says that “router manufacturers are notoriously slow about updating their software — even with critical security fixes on the way. Under the FCC’s proposal, you could have no alternative to running out-of-date and vulnerable firmware.” It’s referring, in part, to an FCC demand that manufacturer’s “describe in detail how the device is protected from ‘flashing’ and the installation of third-party firmware such as DD-WRT.”
The FCC is proposing rules that could wipe out free software on wireless devices. https://t.co/Darkq5rUyQ pic.twitter.com/BggiK4YF5Y
— EFF (@EFF) October 6, 2015
For its part, the FCC gave a statement to Ars Technica that “versions of this (open-source) software can be used as long as they do not add the functionality to modify the underlying operating characteristics of the RF [radio frequency] parameters.” In addition, it told TechDirt that it clamped down in the first place because “we had problems with illegally modified equipment interfering with terrestrial doppler weather radar at airports. Naturally, the FAA freaked out, and the FCC responded to this actual real-world problem.”
Many folks are concerned that the overly broad wording will force manufacturers to just lock out DD-WRT and other open-source programs and be done with it. Others believe that with recent net-neutrality decisions, the FCC is on a pro-consumer tear and won’t take any draconian actions. If you’ve got concerns, why not express them on the EFF’s petition, where they’ll be “viewable online one day after being submitted to the FCC public docket?” “This is, of course, why the FCC does notices of proposed rulemaking and seeks comment from the parties and affected stakeholders,” as the FCC itself put it.
Via: EFF (Twitter)



