Software engineer Sammy Azdoufal discovered a major security flaw in DJI robot vacuum cleaners, exposing data from about ...
A software engineer’s earnest effort to steer his new DJI robot vacuum with a video game controller inadvertently granted him ...
A software engineer discovered that he could gain control of thousands of internet-connected vacuum cleaners after attempting ...
Tokyo: All he wanted was to move his robot vacuum cleaner around with a PlayStation controller. But programmer Sammy Azdoufal ...
An innocent attempt by software engineer Sammy Azdoufal to control his new DJI robot vacuum cleaner with a video game controller unintentionally escalated into a large-scale privacy breach. Because of ...
A software engineer accidentally gained access to 7,000 devices after trying to operate his robot vacuum with a PS5 controller.
Man accidentally gained control of 7,000 robot vacuums in 24 countries when he tried to get creative
A man accidentally got access to thousands of robot vacuums of one company in several countries when he tried to link his own ...
All he wanted was to move his robot vacuum cleaner around with a PlayStation controller. But programmer Sammy Azdoufal claims ...
A major security flaw was accidentally discovered, exposing live cameras and home maps of 7,000 users worldwide.
Chinese manufacturer DJI said it has fixed a “vulnerability” detected in its software. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.
A software engineer, Sammy Azdoufal, accidentally gained control over nearly 7,000 DJI robot vacuums worldwide while developing a remote-control app.
A great debut into robot vacuums, the boldly designed DJI Romo P cleans and navigates efficiently, but security concerns linger.
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