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rocket_surgeron

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rocket_surgeron
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
Yes.

A non-trivial number of them. Thousands, out of millions, at least.
rocket_surgeron
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
>Yeah, I’m not sure I buy their explanation about special development roombas since they offered zero proof.

It is simple for any person with even basic knowledge of networking to independently come to the conclusion that Roombas are not uploading video streams (or photographs) to the internet.

I know the IP (10.0.0.11) and MAC (50:14:79:1E:AB:6B) address of my Roomba and using the Insight Netflow Analyzer for OPNsense I can see how much data it has sent to the internet. In the last six months it has sent approximately 72MB of data outside my network. That's about 600KB per day.

It has received much more, presumably firmware downloads.

This is consistent with firmware update checks, notification traffic, and me periodically adjusting its schedule remotely.

That's just me clicking on some tabs in my router's web UI. Hundreds if not thousands of people globally are constantly reviewing and monitoring Roomba network traffic in fine detail in order to understand and/or reverse engineer it for research and other purposes.

So one of three things is happening:

1. All Roombas send photo and video streams to iRobot and they have thus far managed to hide this from the public and the thousands of eyeballs constantly monitoring the network traffic of their products, or

2. A subset of Roombas send photo and video streams to iRobot and they have thus far managed to hide this from the public and the subset of eyeballs monitoring the network traffic of their products

3. These are development devices like they claim.

Based on my own experience we can eliminate 1, based on the images accompanying the article option 3 is highly likely.
rocket_surgeron
·vor 4 Jahren·discuss
>I was baffled that we invented a bulb that could last 100 years over a century ago and I still have to change bulbs every year or two.

You need to buy better bulbs.

In 2015 my local utility subsidized the purchase of LED light bulbs and I replaced 59 light bulbs all at once from a variety of vendors including Cree, GE, and Philips.

I've had one, an overhead PAR (led equivalent) bulb in my shower, fail since then and that's almost certainly due to the repeated bouts of 100% humidity and frequent temperature changes.

Of course, I purchased higher-end bulbs knowing that the bargain basement ones are built to cost.

edit: it is actually really weird that you have to replace your bulbs so often because every manufacturer who isn't a ABOLENSKLONG (or something nonsensical like that) Shenzhen-special amazon drop shipper has a 5-10 year warranty and they'd drown in RMA requests if their products failed after a year.