The company Wednesday issued an email requesting customers discontinue use of its egg-shaped charging case.
The company says it launched an investigation following a “single complaint” of a charging issue from a customer.
Humane is far from the first consumer electronics company to ship products with potentially hazardous batteries.
According to the note, the Charge Case is the only Humane product affected by this news.
Neither its Battery Boost or Charging Pad have been singled out by the company.
U.S. cybersecurity agency CISA is warning Sisense customers to reset their credentials and secrets after the data analytics company reported a security incident.
CISA said it urges Sisense customers to “reset credentials and secrets potentially exposed to, or used to access, Sisense services” and to report any suspicious activity involving the use of compromised credentials to the agency.
Founded in 2004, Sisense develops business intelligence and data analytics software for big companies, including telcos, airlines and tech giants.
Companies like Sisense rely on using credentials, such as passwords and private keys, to access a customer’s various stores of data for analysis.
With access to these credentials, an attacker could potentially also access a customer’s data.
The chip battle between the U.S. and China is escalating, with the Chinese Cyberspace Administration investigating a U.S. memory chip maker in response to Trump’s tariffs on Chinese imports. This…