Comment Re:How stupid... (Score 3, Insightful) 84
No, the problem was the vacuum worked just fine with those IP addresses blocked. It had the maps to his house locally stored and vacuumed just fine.
Except when the company found out it wasn't getting that data from the vacuum, it sent the command to disable the vacuum.
In other words, it's a device that would work fine offline, but the manufacturer put some extra telemetry code in that uploads who knows what to their servers. And when they stopped getting that data, the manufacturer disables the device.
It's not a case where the device needs the cloud to work - it doesn't. If the manufacturer goes belly up tomorrow the vacuum would work just fine with what it has now until something that needs cloud functionality was required.
This is even worse that IoT devices - this is intentionally disabling a device that would work just fine offline simply because you didn't get the marketing data you wanted. In other words, it had a mandatory online component even when it wasn't necessary. Like video game single player modes that require you to be online to play.