A DJI Romo vacuum owner wanted to connect his device to a PS5 controller. He ended up revealing a huge security flaw.
Sammy Azdoufal, a Spain-based programmer, received US$30,000 from Chinese tech firm DJI after discovering vulnerabilities that allowed him to remotely access and control about 7,000 of its robot ...
This article covers a developing story. Continue to check back with us as we will be adding more information as it becomes available. One of the most acclaimed dramas of the past decade has found a ...
Reports confirmed that DJI has officially compensated software engineer Sammy Azdoufal for discovering a catastrophic backend vulnerability in the DJI Romo robot vacuum.
You probably didn’t know that DJI made a robot vacuum, and they might be wishing they didn’t. DJI’s Romo robot vacuum had pretty terrible security. How bad? A guy was able to remotely access thousands ...
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission. Credit: DJI February has ...
Air hockey is one of those sports that’s both incredibly fun, but also incredibly frustrating as playing it by yourself is a ...
DJI will pay Azdoufal $30,000 for one single discovery, according to an email he shared with The Verge, without specifying ...
One DJI Romo vacuum owner tried to code an app to control his vacuum with a PS5 controller. Insufficient authentication meant that he was able to access data streams from the entire fleet of DJI ...