FCC moves to block Chinese labs from certifying U.S. electronics
The FCC has unanimously voted to advance a proposal that would ban all testing labs in China and Hong Kong from certifying electronics sold in the US. This ruling is based on national security concerns and could affect up to 75% of devices entering the US market.
Key Takeaways
- The FCC vote was unanimous on Thursday.
- The proposal would strip testing labs in China and Hong Kong of certification authority for electronics sold in the U.S.
- The article says the ruling could affect up to 75% of devices entering the U.S. market.
- The FCC framed the action around national security concerns.
Why It Matters
If adopted, the proposal would force a major change in how electronics sold in the U.S. are certified, with China and Hong Kong labs removed from that role. That matters for the broader device supply chain because the article says as much as 75% of U.S.-bound devices could be affected. For streaming hardware vendors, the practical issue is certification capacity and timing rather than product design. What to watch next is whether the FCC turns this proposal into a final rule and how it defines the transition for existing lab approvals.
Read full article at tomshardware.com