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Rewarding web application security research

1 November 2010
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31 comments :

Oscar said...

This is a really good approach. It rewards people for pushing the boundaries of the software and finding issues with it. I wish the Diaspora guys had something like this in place.

1 November 2010 at 16:00
Unknown said...

Excellent effort by Google (clap clap clap)

1 November 2010 at 16:49
Unknown said...

I was just talking to someone about the recent vulns found in the android kernel from HTC being a good argument for "no more free bugs". This is great news. I look forward to them expanding the program to android.

1 November 2010 at 16:58
Anonymous said...

Rewards programs like this are legally interesting. I don't know if it's legally possible to participate in this program without breaking an "attempted computer intrusion" law.

1 November 2010 at 17:20
Unknown said...

I'm sure the young hackers among us will be interested in precisely what you mean by
"This program is also not open to minors", in particular, what jurisdiction applies in determining the age or majority.

1 November 2010 at 18:11
rjwalltech said...

Mark, they probably mean the age in which a person is allowed to vote. In the U.S. this means 18.

1 November 2010 at 18:47
Maxwell said...

Is there a reason for the no-minors restriction?

1 November 2010 at 19:51
jcwayne said...

Maxwell, in many (most?) jurisdictions there are various legal restrictions regarding how companies interact with minors (especially when money is involved). I'm sure the intent here is to avoid the need to involve lawyers in validating the legality of giving an award in any particular case. That said, I would suggest any minor looking to claim a reward simply have a parent or other trusted adult apply on their behalf.

1 November 2010 at 21:21
Arthur said...

@oscar Diaspora is software in pre-alpha state, it's open sourced, it has no current user base, no revenue stream, it's currently being supported entirely by donations it received, and there's only 4 people at the company. This model of paying for security bugs has absolutely no feasibility or relevance at this point to Diaspora.

1 November 2010 at 21:38
Unknown said...

Do, *.blogger.com is included... but is *.blogspot.com?

2 November 2010 at 01:48
Anonymous said...

There is a large section of the community who see bug hunting for money as a diss and are not interested in it and will not associate with any company offering money.

This programme won't help your plight, but send people walking further away.

Google should not be limiting their scope to draw in good bug hunters, but this is exactly the effect offering money will have.

This is not in the best interest of security.

Andrew

2 November 2010 at 07:57
Unknown said...

Are vulnerabilities in the reCaptcha service elegible for the reward?

If so, what is the scope in this case about what would be considered a vulnerability?

2 November 2010 at 08:05
Unknown said...

You have some "buggy links" on the Hall of Fame page:
For most of the HOF entries, clicking on the bug number takes me to the report page. However, some of the bug numbers take me to a page promoting Google Project Hosting. I didn't check all numbers but here are the problematic ones I found: 51630, 48283, 51070. There are probably others too.

By the way, searching the HOF page or the other related linked pages, I didn't see any directions on how to contact anybody to report such issues about the web pages. That's why I'm posting it here. It would be nice to add some contact info to those pages.

2 November 2010 at 14:11
Unknown said...

This is still pathetic and ridiculous, "$3,133.7 dollars" that is it!!! a company as big as Google and only pays $3K and not just for any bugs, the "severe and unusual" are you serious?! , a severe and unusual bug would be sold somewhere else for thousands, and EAP/ZDI/iDefense pays more than $3K (if you provide accurate details for the bug) for the not severe and unusual ones.

so why again would Google bother and announce this?

2 November 2010 at 15:17
Chris Evans said...

@Selim: I think the Chromium Hall of Fame links are ok. You're not seeing a promotion page, but a login page. Some of the bugs are still "hidden" when they are fixed in Chromium but might still affect the products of other vendors which use the same underlying libraries.

@Netdev: as clearly stated, the rewards can be donated to charity. This gives hackers who get their buzz via non-monetary means to make the world better in two different ways at once.

2 November 2010 at 15:19
Anonymous said...

I don't see how would finding bugs in software would ever make the world for a better place.

This 3K offer might be pathetic but for some minor XSS problems and other stuff it well worth it if you put into 10-20 hours work.

Anyway now that they announced it to the public and thousands of newsportals advertising it this bughunt will also exhaust. Like any other opportunities online to make money eg: elance.

Even if you find some bugs theres a good chance someone did it already and you wasted your time, google wont pay for it.

2 November 2010 at 17:39
Muhammad Huzaifa Ali said...

I have found a bug in Google Buzz this bug also indirectly effect Google Adsense program which results in false clicks and google TOS breach.

I do not know whether google buzz is included in this program.

2 November 2010 at 23:33
Unknown said...

I bet Apple would do the same thing.

3 November 2010 at 15:14
test12563 said...

great.. I'll try ;)

6 November 2010 at 14:27
Unknown said...

I just passed the "Gmail Security Verification" questionnaire in Russian, and found one small mistake:

on the last step there I see Romanian "Selectaţi „Rămâneţi conectat(ă)” numai dacă vă conectaţi de pe un computer personal.", that cannot be understood by Russian. Please fix it.

Thanks

11 November 2010 at 04:11
Jay said...

Thanks for your report, GeniU$. We have passed your comment to the appropriate team to investigate and make a correction.

Google Operations Team

11 November 2010 at 13:31
Adriano Morgon said...

Hi, i'm from Brazil, here the version 8.0.552.224 of Google Chrome returns many pages using orkut.com, it's very unconfortable. Thank You, and sorry for the worst english ):

30 December 2010 at 19:52
Pedro said...

Hi, i send one email about google adsense bugs, its a very dangerous bug make 5 day and google dont have-me send any feedback, i just whait google fix to publish on some security blogs, sorry bad english

3 January 2011 at 00:44
Unknown said...

Hey blackmind

Can you please post the ID number you received in the auto-reply? It should be in the subject header.

thanks,
Adam

4 January 2011 at 12:30
Pedro said...

Hi adam, the id is 740250882

Tks

4 January 2011 at 14:12
Kirk Gehman said...

I assume the cash reward is not available to Google developers :-)

7 February 2011 at 07:00
test2009 said...

Hello.

These sites are included in the awards program ?

admob.com
googlestore.com
gizmoproject.com
gizmo5.com
picnik.com
on2.com
googleusercontent.com
opensocial.org
whatbrowser.org
googledeveloperday.com
zeitgeistminds.com

7 April 2011 at 04:35
jaumlucas said...

feedburner.com is on the scope of reward program?

31 May 2011 at 10:11
Sagan Marketing said...

It's a good idea but I agree that the money reward is not worth it... most hackers would be able to see such security bugs for more money than than in other markets... plus those of us who would be willing to invest time into finding such bugs would need a bigger reward than $500 with a chance of $3k... maybe if they did $3k with a chance of $10k... we live in a world where those of us with skills value our time very much... still I'll be on the lookout for anything I can spot indirectly...

13 February 2012 at 01:30
Anonymous said...

Why do I have to have a cellphone?I've been asked for a mobile number again when I made it clear days ago I don't have a cellphone.

I was instead provided with a verification e-mail.

I can barely get the hang of the newer ones and I have trouble with using text on cellphones.

23 May 2012 at 10:38
Unknown said...

Hi.

What about Android platform? It's in the program or it isn't?

14 May 2013 at 10:26

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