The past year was a big one for bug bounties, with more programs offering more money to more researchers. Bug bounty programs grew 40% year-over-year, the average payout per vulnerability rose 73% to reach $781, and the number of Bugcrowd researchers grew by 71%. . These new numbers come from Bugcrowd's 2018 State of Bug Bounty, its fourth annual report on crowdsourced security. Analysts pulled data from more than 700 managed crowdsourced security programs from April 1, 2017 through March 31, 2018. Over the year they saw more than 37,000 submissions, 69% of which were valid - a 21% increase from the prior year. The link for this article located at DarkReading is no longer available. . Unveil HackerOne's 2019 analysis showcasing a spike in vulnerability reward schemes and compensation for security issues.. Bug Bounty Programs, Payout Growth, Cybersecurity Research, Crowdsourced Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
It's bound to happen: you create a cool, forward looking incentive program designed to tap the "wisdom of the crowd" and help make your products better, only to find out that, in fact, the "crowd" isn't all that wise - and now wants you to pay cold, hard cash for their tepid ideas.. That's the experience that Google appears to have had since announcing that it would extend its bounty program for bugs from its Chromium platform to the various Web applications that the company owns in early November. In an updated blog post this week, the company said that it has already committed to some $20,000 in bounties, but also provided some "clarification" to the terms of the reward program, saying that - in essence - not all bugs are equal and that researchers dumping low priority vulns shouldn't expect to get much in return. The link for this article located at ThreatPost is no longer available. . The security initiative by Google encounters hurdles in managing minor vulnerability reports, while also outlining clearer criteria for compensation to contributors.. Google Bug Bounty, Vulnerability Rewards, Security Incentives. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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