DooKey
[H]F Junkie
- Joined
- Apr 25, 2001
- Messages
- 12,707
Over the last couple of years the Pentagon has been offering bounties to people that submit vulnerabilities and one hacker made a total of $15K by reporting multiple bugs. This worked out great for the DoD, but people kept submitting bugs after the various bug bounties were over. What they've decided to do now is have an open-ended Vulnerabilities Disclosure Policy that doesn't offer rewards, but will legally allow people to submit bugs any time related to public-facing websites and web applications owned by DoD. Over the last year 650 people have submitted almost 3,000 unique, valid vulnerabilities. Who says the DoD can't learn new tricks?
That newfound acceptance has spread. Over the last year, DoD has also run a few private bug bounties on more sensitive systems through the penetration testing firm Synack, which was awarded a contract to focus on assessing internal platforms. And outside the Department, the General Services Administration and Department of Homeland Security are both working on bug bounties as well.
That newfound acceptance has spread. Over the last year, DoD has also run a few private bug bounties on more sensitive systems through the penetration testing firm Synack, which was awarded a contract to focus on assessing internal platforms. And outside the Department, the General Services Administration and Department of Homeland Security are both working on bug bounties as well.