Hacking a Vacuum Cleaner: Uncovering a Security Flaw in 7,000 Robots (2026)

Imagine this: a simple experiment with a vacuum cleaner and a gaming controller leads to a shocking discovery—unintentional access to thousands of robots worldwide. But here's where it gets controversial... Could your smart home devices be secretly spying on you? Meet Sammy Azdoufal, a software engineer whose curiosity turned him into an accidental hacker. Age? Irrelevant. What matters is his modern-day tale of innovation and unintended consequences.

Azdoufal, head of AI strategy at a holiday rental company, decided to connect his DJI Romo vacuum cleaner to his PS5 controller—just for fun, as he told The Verge. Using Claude Code, an AI coding assistant, he reverse-engineered how the vacuum communicated with DJI’s cloud servers. And this is the part most people miss... He didn’t stop at controlling his own device. He stumbled upon a backend security bug that granted him access to live camera feeds, audio recordings, and maps from nearly 7,000 robot vacuums across 24 countries. Yes, you read that right—he became an unwitting spy, exposing a vulnerability that could turn everyday gadgets into surveillance tools.

What did he do with this power? He alerted The Verge, whose reporter tested the vulnerability by sharing a vacuum’s serial number. Within minutes, Azdoufal could watch the device clean the reporter’s living room, check its battery life, and even map the house. Terrifying? Absolutely. Here’s the kicker: DJI initially claimed the issue was ‘resolved,’ but Azdoufal insists not all vulnerabilities were fixed. Since then, DJI has reiterated the problem is solved, but the incident raises alarming questions about smart home security.

This story isn’t just about one man’s discovery—it’s a wake-up call. Are hackers already exploiting these devices? Should we trust our ‘smart’ gadgets? While some might joke, ‘Henry, at least you can’t see me… right?’ others are left wondering: Who’s really watching us? What’s your take? Are smart devices a convenience worth the risk, or a ticking privacy time bomb? Let’s debate in the comments!

Hacking a Vacuum Cleaner: Uncovering a Security Flaw in 7,000 Robots (2026)
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