My router (TP Link) said it had a firmware update. I’m a responsible adult, so I update my firmware. When I log back in, I get this popup that they’d like to share my clients info.
cool…
One of two things happened:
- They implemented it just now, and it’s nice of them to ask Or:
- They’ve been doing it for years, and now legal told them they need to ask
It’s always #2
Weird, I must be seeing a different screenshot, because all I read here is “TP Link would like you to overwrite its firmware with OpenWRT.”
Maybe later
Fuck off to hell with this shit
I’ve never personally used that one, but it gets recommended a lot.
I’ve been using DD-WRT for 15+ years, but that’s for no particular reason other than It’s what I found first and haven’t had any reason to switch.
I was on DD-WRT back when WRT54G but the DD-WRT devs don’t really get it,
They make the bad compromises, and most of their initial contributors appears to have moved on to OpenWRT.At this point DD-WRT isn’t just another alternative, it’s very stale while OpenWRT is still evolving rapidly and has the larger contributor community. And they put as much emphasis on performance, bloat reduction and efficiency as they do new features.
I have a 8MB nvram TP link archer C7 and it’s actually faster in the latest version, that’s basically unheard of in all of software !
I used DD-WRT for 9 years and had no reason to switch until I was forced to. At some point after a firmware upgrade my routers began to occasionally lose their configurations after power failures. Months of troubleshooting, logging errors and recreating configs made no difference. I had been concerned for some time that the project seemed to rely on one guy, and although what he’s doing is amazing, it is not possible for him to thoroughly test each firmware release. When one of my routers lost its config when I was 200 miles away and I lost alarm monitoring I was forced to make a change.
Open-WRT has been a really pleasant surprise. It’s completely stable on the same routers and the feature set is unbelievably broad. The learning curve was a bitch though.
My story is very similar. I used DD-WRT for years until something broke. Then I switched to OpenWRT and never looked back. That was maybe ten years ago.
I’m using openwrt and it’s great
Maybe Later
I hate it here
Rapist’s mentality.
shares it anyway
Slap OpenWRT on that little trojan horse.
We won’t save your private information. But the third party services - some of which are owned by the same parent company as us - absolutely will.
We won’t save it, but we will pass it along to whoever gives us money.
tp link routers tend to run openwrt pretty well.
check yours.
tp link routers tend to run openwrt pretty well.
Of course, I have the TP-Link router that isn’t well-supported 😖
I kind of miss my old Linksys routers, which officially supported third-party firmware.
I am a fan of gl.inet stuff, they come with [a customized version of] OpenWRT preinstalled. I’m a industrial tech and I’ve used a couple of their products as hotspots when working on machines for years, I’ve even connected multiple together to work on 2-3 production lines on different subnets at the same time.
Very cool. Thanks for the recommendation.
What router do you have? I have the TP-Link Omada ER7212 and am not seeing this on the latest firmware
I doubt something like this will spillover to the professional line of products. We should be clear for a while with Omada.
Archer AX11000
Any chance of something like OpenWrt?
i ahve always wondered how this works from the legal point. what if you disagree, should you sue to get your money back? you are buying product with some expectations, they can’t just change that after you paid, can they?
it is similar with cars, what if you buy new car and the car’s infotainment asks you to accept some outrageous terms and conditions, you do bother to actually read them and then decline. can you get your money back? has anyone ever tried?
I love how they say they won’t save your private info, but nothing about whether the third party will
Cooool. Anyone know how to deaden this behavior?
Don’t use their software, use something like openwrt
…a third-party services…
Now, what is it, one or many!?
Yes!
Yes
Well, TP Link have never been trustworthy. Cheap and trustworthy rarely exist together.
I have the best smart plugs I could acquire - Kasa brand. They’re great adapters, but the moment their API call doesn’t get a response from their servers, they restart themselves every ten minutes. We all have to make some sacrifices in the journey to net security and independence, and keeping their API unblocked is one of mine.
If anyone wants smart plugs for monitoring purposes the Kasa brand is operable without the TP-Link app. Tapo is far worse. Never go full Tapo.
Kasa is owned by TP Link
I have kasa switches and everything is blocked on my firewall so they can’t phone home.
Overall they function fine. But I have 1 pesky switch that is constantly in a disconnected state (red light) no matter what I do. Every time I reconnect it it disconnects not too long later. It functions fine though, possibly because its a 3 way and the paired switch is fine.
I have another set of 3 way switches that have disconnected a few times but reconnecting them works just fine for a long while (years).
So my questions are, that pesky red light switch sounds kind of like your situation. When you say they reset themselves, do the lights go red?
Secondly, yours reset every 10 minutes? Most of mine seem fine. I’m not sure what’s different between our setups.
Yup, bought a bunch of TP-Link mesh towers. Turns out that they take down the whole WiFi when the main node looses internet connection. That’s just not acceptable, I might have an unstable internet connection but still want access to my local devices, such as my streaming server or router.
On that node, does anyone know of a brand of mesh towers that can survive unstable/no internet connections and don’t use custom firmware? DD-WRT works just fine, but I’m not gonna flash custom firmware onto friends’ devices.