TechRadar boasts of its capabilities to simultaneously handle up to 50 devices, with a high level of security. It is also cloud-based, consequently minimising the amount of processing the hardware does. Additionally, it instructs the mobile device on what internet traffic to allow and block. Cujo AI recently published a cybersecurity trends report of its own based on perceptions of its customers. It positively contributed to the World Economic Forum Meeting held in Davos Klosters, Switzerland, from the 22nd to 25th of January.
The video shows how for example the API allowed anyone to intervene with anybody's schedule once exploited.
The article estimated over 7000 hardware affected by this flaw.
A further potential U-Boot vulnerability found in November last year was reported by anti-hacking online. U-boot is the bootloader used to boot the device’s operating system kernel. With the CVE vulnerability found, it was vulnerable to a buffer overflow which an attacker could use to execute arbitrary code on the system. The potential risk found was CVE-2018-18439 and CVE-2018-18440. The latter was the insufficient boundary checks in the filesystem image load. Cujo AI gave no comment at the time of the reporting.
Once the API flaw was reported Cujo confirmed it remediated the vulnerability by deploying a hotfix in PROD.