This is a valuable lesson for any manufacturer: never awaken the nerd sleeping inside your customer, because his wrath shall be terrible.

In this case the warning was quite literal.

The company annoyed a buyer enough to push him into full blown nerd mode. He tore the product apart, reverse engineered every part, and then published a step by step guide showing exactly how to disable "kill switch" that prevented the use of the product without the vendor spying on the user.

What started as a minor grievance became a public, technical exposé that left the maker exposed and embarrassed.

Moral of the story: underestimate your users at your own peril.

The Day My Smart Vacuum Turned Against Me

Update: This post seems to have struck a nerve and went very wide. As I will not be able to answer every comment, I want to add a few points:

  • The linked article was not written by me. It came to me on a different channel (Discord). I only wrote the post on Mastodon.
  • The top image in the article looks AI generated. It is no a good image, but in my view less irritating than an advertisement (which is far more common).
  • Some people suggest the article itself is AI generated. I don't think this is the case. I wouldn't rule out he author wrote the text in a different language and used AI for translation assistance.
  • The claims in the article are not fully backed by the linked repo, but the general statement is correct and IMHO important.
The Day My Smart Vacuum Turned Against Me

Would you allow a stranger to drive a camera-equipped computer around your living room? You might have already done so without even realizing it. The Beginning: A Curious Experiment It all started innocently enough. I had recently bought an iLife A11 smart vacuum—a sleek, affordable, and technologically advanced robot

Small World

@masek

When we were looking at vacuum robots I said I didn't want anything that needed to connect to WiFi to do its job because I remembered the babymonitors that used WiFi and griefers had "hacked" to terrify toddlers. So we got an Ecovacs Deebot and it'll go around in a frustratingly random way and not "see" things just next to it, but it gets the job done.

https://boingboing.net/2016/01/19/griefer-hacks-baby-monitor-te.html

Griefer hacks baby monitor, terrifies toddler with spooky voices

Remember how, back in September 2015, researchers revealed that virtually every "smart" baby-monitor they tested was riddled with security vulnerabilities that let strangers seize control over it, spying on you…

Boing Boing