A simple hack gave the owner of a new DJI Romo access to a global army of 7,000 robovacs, and the security flaw has not been completely fixed



  • The owner of a DJI Romo has exposed a huge security flaw
  • Gained access to a global network of 7,000 robovacs
  • DJI says it is busy fixing security vulnerabilities

DJI’s first robot vacuum cleaner, the DJI Romo, is expanding into more markets after launching last year, but it apparently comes with some pretty big security holes that led to one amateur hacker gaining control of 7,000 of the machines.

As The Verge reports, DJI Romo owner Sammy Azdoufal was trying to get his PS5 controller to operate his new robovac when he inadvertently took over thousands of devices. The Azdoufal remote control app, created with the help of Claude Code, went through some pretty basic security measures on DJI’s servers.



Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *