Alias Robotics
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Analysis says Unitree G1 humanoid robot can be used for espionage and cyber attacks
Alias Robotics says its analysis found Unitree G1 humanoid robots can be taken over via a Bluetooth provisioning flaw, use weak, shared encryption for configuration files, and continuously transmit sensor and telemetry data to servers in China, creating risks for covert surveillance and network attacks.
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Researchers disclose root takeover vulnerability in Unitree robots
Security researchers published a public exploit called UniPwn that they say allows root takeover of multiple Unitree robot models via a Bluetooth Low Energy Wi‑Fi setup interface, warning the flaw could enable wormable infections and urging short‑term mitigations such as disabling BLE and using isolated networks.


