Cisco Systems pulled out of Russia: destroyed $23.42M worth of equipment

by rixraxon 4/5/23, 5:17 PMwith 65 comments
by donmcronaldon 4/5/23, 5:46 PM

> Three months later, the company refused to renew its licenses.

Does the equipment stop working?

I don’t understand how any country in the world is using equipment that can be turned off by the manufacturer. Infrastructure, communications, farming, etc. should all be run with non-revocable licenses. Make it the law.

by ss48on 4/5/23, 5:41 PM

> "By the end of 2022, Cisco Systems had reduced its workforce by a factor of 12 to five employees."

I think something got lost in translation here.

by RobotToasteron 4/5/23, 5:37 PM

So they destroyed three routers?

by stickfigureon 4/5/23, 6:04 PM

Related: What's the current status of iOS and Android devices in Russia? Are they still getting updates?

by g42gregoryon 4/5/23, 5:46 PM

This is very bizarre. All sanctions have carve-outs for exactly the Cisco products (so that customers can always safely get online!) Now it will all get replaced with Huawei products. How is this better?

by jokowueuon 4/5/23, 5:39 PM

Why not ship them or sell them over seas instead of destroying them ?

by thefzon 4/5/23, 6:20 PM

What a waste of rare earths, minerals and metals.

by perryizgr8on 4/5/23, 6:51 PM

Knowing Cisco's prices, $23 M must be only like 10-20 network appliances lol.

by cameron_bon 4/5/23, 6:18 PM

Cuirously, Putin has been photographed with Video Conferencing gear similar to what Cisco sells, but from competitor Polycom ( now known as Poly, but made when it was Polycom )

I can't imagine this is anything more than a good opportunity to cut bait and get a good pres release on the write-off

by drivingmenutson 4/5/23, 5:59 PM

The site is ostensibly in Ukraine. This may be propaganda. It might be disinformation.

Just FYI.