A hobbyist accidentally hacked 7,000 DJI robot vacuums using a PlayStation controller, revealing major flaws in smart home ...
When Sammy Azdoufal found he had access to data from robot vacuum cleaners around the world, he told a tech publication. But the implications could be mind-boggling ...
Then the internet erupted over an entirely different DJI device: The Romo robot vacuum. Thousands of Romo vacuums and their live cameras worldwide were reportedly hacked — and not by an evil ...
Instead of just using the app, he wanted to use his PlayStation 5 controller to drive the $2,000 machine like a car in a ...
Plus: The top US cyber agency falls into shambles, AI models develop an upsetting penchant for nuclear weapons, and more.
A software engineer’s earnest effort to steer his new DJI robot vacuum with a video game controller inadvertently granted him ...
A French programmer unwittingly gained remote access to 7,000 robot vacuums when he tried to move his own cleaner around with ...
Azdoufal uncovered a major DJI Romo robot vacuum vulnerability, accessing 7,000 devices across 24 countries. DJI has now resolved the issue.
Software engineers inadvertently gained control of 7,000 DJI robotic vacuum cleaners globally, exposing a security vulnerability in the smart home device.
A security flaw in DJI Romo robot vacuums allowed access to thousands of devices worldwide, raising concerns about IoT ...
First came the nanny cams and home assistants, then came the security doorbells, now it's the age of the hacked vacuums. First reported by ABC News Australia, owners of robot vacuums across multiple U ...
Sammy Azdoufal, a software engineer specialising in AI strategy, purchased a new DJI Romo – the company's first robot vacuum cleaner – and decided to tinker with it by connecting it to his PS5 ...