An ISP may want to control the modem, so you might have to phone them up to have them remotely put a unified model into bridged mode to turn off the router functionality. But there should be no opposition to having bridged mode turned on such that a user could add their own router behind it.
This is bullshit.
An ISP may want to control the modem, so you might have to phone them up to have them remotely put a unified model into bridged mode to turn off the router functionality. But there should be no opposition to having bridged mode turned on such that a user could add their own router behind it.