TP-Link Probed for Allegedly Allowing Beijing Access to US Consumer Data
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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has launched an investigation into a China-founded network equipment maker over potential violations of state law, alleging that the company may have shared consumer data with China’s communist regime.
In addition to concerns about the company’s ownership structure, Paxton’s office said the investigation will examine whether TP-Link products contain vulnerabilities—such as back doors—that could allow Beijing to access “consumers’ network traffic and run bot networks.”
The investigation will also determine whether the company’s products “improperly collect or disclose consumer data in violation of Texas privacy law,” the attorney general’s office stated.
“If Big Tech is giving Chinese communists access to Americans’ data, there is no question that they’re using that data against us,” Paxton said in a statement.
“I will not allow any company to sell us out to our greatest geopolitical enemy. If TP Link is violating Texas law and jeopardizing Americans, my office will do everything in our power to hold them accountable.”
Paxton’s office said the investigation became necessary after TP-Link “failed to provide an adequate response” to its warnings in May.
In response to an email inquiry from The Epoch Times, TP-Link Systems dismissed Paxton’s concerns and stated that it is “prepared to cooperate fully with the Attorney General.”
TP-Link Ties Probed
Congress expressed concerns about TP-Link devices earlier this year.“TP-Link’s deep ties to the [CCP], use of predatory pricing to eliminate trusted U.S. alternatives, and role in embedding foreign surveillance and destructive capabilities into our networks render it a clear and present danger,” they stated in the letter.
Their letter suggested that the Federal Communications Commission take the immediate action of “prohibiting any new sales of TP-Link routers.”
“Multiple TP-Link routers have been added as to the National Institute of Science (NIST) National Vulnerability Database for containing a directory traversal vulnerability, allowing unauthenticated remote attackers to access sensitive files by sending specially crafted requests,” the April letter reads.
Joyce noted that TP-Link has gained a significant share of the U.S. retail market for Wi-Fi systems and home office routers.
“Imagine these routers in the homes and businesses across America as a PRC platform to launch society-panicking cyber attacks during an invasion of Taiwan,” he said, using the acronym for China’s official name under the CCP, the People’s Republic of China.
“We cannot have the software for these prolific devices be written, updated, and controlled by a Chinese company,” Joyce said. “By law, such a company is subject to the direction of the PRC Intelligence apparatus. This is a threat we cannot ignore.”
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