For example, privacy violating linksys or netgear, or devices with components running improper firmware with a 14 year old vulnerability?

The reason that I ask, although I don’t want this to impact the quality of answers, is that I’m shopping for a new router that is secure and private but rather than paying commercial and industrial prices I would rather get a consumer router and overwrite it’s software.

  • @finitebanjoOP
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    3 months ago

    This solution might work great for very small homeservers or subnetworks where unusual configurations are required, but if a person just wants regular home wifi without added paranoia then clearly a $60 TP-Link with OpenWRT is the better budget option. You appear to have accidentally downvoted yourself earlier, please rectify.

    • @mvirts
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      3 months ago

      You’re right, and that’s definitely a difficult price to beat. Plus as far as I can tell if a tplink device is still evil after flashing openwrt there’s really no reason the same couldn’t be true of devices like the banana pi or raspberry pi.

      mvirts downvoted itself in its confusion

      • @finitebanjoOP
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        23 months ago

        You’re right, though, that Raspberry Pis are much more trustworthy as far as brand optics are concerned.

    • Leif Davisson
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      23 months ago

      @finitebanjo @mvirts

      I am running a tp link talon on openwrt 23. It runs great.I highly recommend it.It also has some additional ad blocker plugins and some other fantastic features. The only reason to not run openwrt. It’s because you need the absolute latest hardware. I would also not run in an enterprise environment where security is absolutely Paramount, and you need observability. As well as centralized management.