Breaking 09:44 Iran and Russia sign $25 billion nuclear cooperation deal amid US talks stall 09:30 FIFA and Netflix team up to launch official World Cup 2026 video game 09:15 Bengio warns world is building uncontrollable artificial intelligence systems 09:09 Trump’s “Crazy” remark deepens strain with Netanyahu at sensitive political moment 08:54 Google rolls out Gemini avatar for AI video clones 08:19 Microsoft pushes in-house AI as Anthropic costs come under scrutiny 07:53 Anthropic warns AI may soon build its own successors 07:36 Engine shortages ground hundreds of aircraft worldwide 07:30 Petro criticizes U.S. support for rival candidate ahead of Colombia’s presidential runoff 07:19 Bitcoin outperforms Nasdaq despite sharp correction, says Raoul Pal 07:19 Spielberg returns to sci-fi with alien thriller Disclosure Day 07:15 United States expands sanctions against Cuban president and Castro family members 12:45 T-Mobile launches new tech center in India, plans nearly 1,000 jobs by 2027 12:15 United States considers new tariffs targeting Morocco over forced labor allegations 11:45 Amazon unveils new AI warehouse robot as part of $12 billion expansion in Europe 11:05 Bankless cofounder exits ether positions after thesis shift 11:00 Netanyahu says US and Israel ready for renewed Iran strikes 11:00 One killed and three injured in shooting during graduation ceremony at California high school 10:57 Zakaria El Ouahdi left behind in Morocco after visa issue delays World Cup 2026 travel 10:00 Broadcom falls after revenue miss raises doubts over AI Boom expectations

DJI Romo vacuum hack reveals global security risks

Monday 09 March 2026 - 11:50
By: Dakir Madiha
DJI Romo vacuum hack reveals global security risks

Spanish software engineer Sammy Azdoufal modified his DJI Romo robot vacuum to respond to a PlayStation 5 controller. He used AI tool Claude to reverse-engineer the DJI app's MQTT communication protocol with company servers. A backend authentication flaw let his device token access roughly 7000 vacuums and power stations across more than 20 countries.​

Azdoufal viewed live camera streams, microphone audio, 3D floor plans, precise locations, battery levels, cleaning progress, and obstacle reports from strangers' homes. A Verge journalist shared a test vacuum's serial number; Azdoufal pulled its real-time data within minutes, including room scans. In one demo, about 6700 devices reported current rooms, cleaning operations, hurdles faced, and charging spots.

Azdoufal alerted DJI, which patched the main vulnerability by February 24, 2026, blocking cross-device access. The company revoked his token, including for his own unit, and pulled the Romo model from its store two days later. Some issues persist, like PIN overrides for camera views.​

The flaw used weak device-agnostic authentication in MQTT messaging. No misuse occurred, but experts warn connected home gadgets with cameras and mics pose privacy threats. Prior incidents include 2024 Ecovacs Deebot hacks in U.S. cities, where intruders remotely drove vacuums and played slurs.​


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.