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One man accidentally gained access to thousands of robot vacuums, exposing the AI cyber nightmare risk facing millions of Americans

  • 2 days ago
  • 1 min read


When software engineer Sammy Azdoufal sat down to steer his new DJI Romo robot vacuum with a PlayStation 5 video game controller, he didn’t expect to accidentally commandeer a global surveillance network. 


Using an AI coding assistant to reverse-engineer how the vacuum communicated with DJI’s remote servers, Azdoufal extracted a security token meant to prove he owned his specific device. Instead, as reported by Popular Science, the backend servers treated him as the owner of nearly 7,000 robot vacuums operating across 24 countries.


With a few keystrokes, Azdoufal discovered he could tap into live camera feeds, activate microphones, and even compile 2D floor plans of strangers’ private homes.


While he responsibly reported the security bug (to The Verge) rather than exploiting it, this staggering vulnerability highlights a terrifying reality: The rapid, unchecked integration of automated systems is creating a massive and unprecedented security gap.


Read the full story  |  FORTUNE




 
 
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