Grisu
Part of the Furniture
correct, but wont be changeable e.g. on 86U, thats only true for an RT-AC68U: https://www.snbforums.com/threads/solved-asus-rt-ac68u-change-chinese-to-english.55084/#post-468498
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If you go down this route you won't get any help on these forums and your posts will be deleted. That's partly what I meant by "if you want a simple life just buy a device made for your region".Just some nvram tweaks?
Why are these forums averse to buying routers from overseas and then making them compliant to local standards? I'm not looking to boost power, or do anything else that's illegal.If you go down this route you won't get any help on these forums and your posts will be deleted. That's partly what I meant by "if you want a simple life just buy a device made for your region".
I'm not going to repeat all the arguments for or against because this has already been discussed to death in hundreds of previous posts. At the end of the day it is the policy of the site owner, take it or leave it.Why are these forums averse to buying routers from overseas and then making them compliant to local standards? I'm not looking to boost power, or do anything else that's illegal.
Is there a thread that gives an overview?I'm not going to repeat all the arguments for or against because this has already been discussed to death in hundreds of previous posts. At the end of the day it is the policy of the site owner, take it or leave it.
It is and he wont tell you why, take it or leave it. And all postings he doesnt like (like THIS one) will be deleted ...But "policy of the site owner" is not convincing.
That's kind of what I was suspecting the answer was pointing towardsyou live in a world with global markets and players with their power, think about! There is nothing independent.
Honest question: How is it a "violation of manufacturer terms and conditions, government or regional laws or regulations or author copyright" to buy a router from overseas, and change its settings to make it compliant with local standards? nb where I live, parallel imports are 100% legal.First.
https://www.snbforums.com/help/terms
More to the point, SNBForums does not allow discussion of any techniques that enable users to modify routers in violation of manufacturer terms and conditions, government or regional laws or regulations or author copyright.
There are plenty of other places on the Net that provide this information. We don't and don't have to justify our policies to anyone.
As you have been partaking of this group for a day and have not read even close to enough of what shady has been attempted here over the past few years I suggest you accept what the group owner tells you. There are regulatory bodies that do monitor forums like this. Do I need to say more? While you may not feel you are breaking any laws others have to toe the line. Something like the speed limit on the highway...it is not a suggestion..but many do speed...and eventually do get caught.Honest question: How is it a "violation of manufacturer terms and conditions, government or regional laws or regulations or author copyright" to buy a router from overseas, and change its settings to make it compliant with local standards? nb where I live, parallel imports are 100% legal.
And I'm not asking anyone to "justify" the policies, I'm trying to understand how and why those policies are what they are. Again, I'd like to think that those policies are what they are for good reasons and in good faith, and I'm open to the possibility that I'm wrong in my understanding something simple... But iron-fisted reactions like "We don't have to justify our policies to anyone" is failing to convince me that the policies (or how they're being interpreted in this instance) are based on good reasons or good faith.
To put it another way, if someone can explain to me how buying a router from overseas and saving about 30% off the local price, then setting it up so it's compliant with local standards is illegal, immoral, or somehow in violation of manufacturer terms and conditions, then I'll have to seriously consider spending full retail price and buying locally; I'm willing to join your ideological team, if you can explain to me why I should. The more such explanation is lacking, the more I doubt the validity of that position.
To clarify, I should point out that the above quote seems 100% reasonable at face value. I'm not trying to challenge that policy.More to the point, SNBForums does not allow discussion of any techniques that enable users to modify routers in violation of manufacturer terms and conditions, government or regional laws or regulations or author copyright.
This policy is not about you. You're free to do what you want whether it's illegal/immoral in your country or not. The policy is (amongst other things) about protecting the owner of this site from the potential legal/financial consequences in his country of what people post. The main problem is that the same "instructions" that allow people to modify their routers to operate in a legal way are exactly the same instructions that people were abusing to make them operate in an illegal way.Honest question: How is it a "violation of manufacturer terms and conditions, government or regional laws or regulations or author copyright" to buy a router from overseas, and change its settings to make it compliant with local standards? nb where I live, parallel imports are 100% legal.
And I'm not asking anyone to "justify" the policies, I'm trying to understand how and why those policies are what they are. Again, I'd like to think that those policies are what they are for good reasons and in good faith, and I'm open to the possibility that I'm wrong in my understanding something simple... But iron-fisted reactions like "We don't have to justify our policies to anyone" is failing to convince me that the policies (or how they're being interpreted in this instance) are based on good reasons or good faith.
To put it another way, if someone can explain to me how buying a router from overseas and saving about 30% off the local price, then setting it up so it's compliant with local standards is illegal, immoral, or somehow in violation of manufacturer terms and conditions, then I'll have to seriously consider spending full retail price and buying locally; I'm willing to join your ideological team, if you can explain to me why I should. The more such explanation is lacking, the more I doubt the validity of that position.
@ColinTaylor - Your response is the closest I've seen yet to a reasonable and helpful one. Thanks for that; I'm going through it now.
Of course I'm just trying to make my devices compliant with local regulations, but it seems to me that instead of living in the US and being subject to US policies, I'm living outside the US and I'm still subject to US policies
It's a shame that these things have such a chilling effect not only on free speech (and "code", which is protected as free speech) but also a chilling effect on my ability to gain understanding into setting up hardware to be compliant with local standards.
Please, explain to me how making a router compliant with my local regulations is in violation of US law, or "disrespectful" of US law...Your free speech or anyone else's isn't being chilled. The site owner is merely following the laws of their country, which should be respected, period.
You are free to find a more helpful site elsewhere that doesn't have to adhere to the US laws, but I doubt that they will be half as friendly and or nearly as helpful as SNB is.
Please, explain to me how making a router compliant with my local regulations is in violation of US law, or "disrespectful" of US law...
Please, explain to me how making a router compliant with my local regulations is in violation of US law, or "disrespectful" of US law...
Also, I'm not counting responses such as this, or "we don't have to justify our policies to anyone" as "helpful". I'm actually finding such responses to be the opposite of helpful.
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