A hobbyist accidentally hacked 7,000 DJI robot vacuums using a PlayStation controller, revealing major flaws in smart home security and device access control.
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 ...
A software engineer’s earnest effort to steer his new DJI robot vacuum with a video game controller inadvertently granted him ...
The system seemed to open up a much wider network, rather than just his own vacuum. hundreds of devices. Then thousands. In reality, the interface he created ...
Drone maker DJI will pay $30,000 to a researcher who discovered major security flaws in its robot vacuums. The vulnerabilities allowed remote access to thousands of devices, raising privacy concerns.
Reports confirmed that DJI has officially compensated software engineer Sammy Azdoufal for discovering a catastrophic backend vulnerability in the DJI Romo robot vacuum.
Half of UK adults worry about robots and are concerned about data centers too ...
Software engineers inadvertently gained control of 7,000 DJI robotic vacuum cleaners globally, exposing a security vulnerability in the smart home device.
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