Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Thought I was just buying a smart vacuum. Turns out, it was a little spy on wheels. Here’s the story of how my vacuum stopped working after I blocked its data uploads — and how I uncovered a hidden remote “kill switch.”


Hi, thanks for describing what you’ve found — but the details shared aren’t enough for the community to reproduce your findings.

What hostname/s did you block? What filename prevents auto-reboot? What firmware version is your device? Were any credentials necessary to access your robot’s internal syslogs? Was the remote always precisely 8*86400 seconds after you powered on the repaired model?

The repository contains only the barest “how to repurpose this device” details with no supporting material evident for your post’s topic, “what the OEM OS was doing”, which makes the final paragraph either wrong or misleading. Do you have a timeline in mind for when that will be published to GitHub?

The story is marginally interesting, but without the technical details, it’s more “this is completely unsurprising, see also nearly all in-home smart devices” and less “this is novel and interesting”. (I concur with the outrage, but outrage alone does not satisfy.)




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: