In this article, Threatpost catches up with David Baker, the chief security officer at Bugcrowd, about the future of bug bounty programs. While bug-bounty programs may seem like a cure-all solution for companies looking discover vulnerabilities in their systems more efficiently, the fact remains that a program could overwhelm a firm’s internal security team and cause other major headaches if implemented the wrong way. . “You have to realize that the crowd is going to find a lot more vulnerabilities than your typical in-house pen-test team. So oftentimes, there’s this engineering push back, like hold on, we don’t have our internal processes set up,” David Baker, chief security officer at Bugcrowd told Threatpost. Threatpost caught up with Baker to discuss the right — and wrong — approaches for implementing a bounty program that can boost companies’ security effectively with minimal operational disruption. The link for this article located at Threatpost is no longer available. . Exploring strategies for successful bug bounty programs reveals the importance of clarity, communication, and community engagement in enhancing security and processes. Bug Bounty Programs, Security Approaches, Vulnerability Management, Crowdsourced Testing, Operational Efficiency. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The U.S. Department of Defense may have found a new way to scan millions of lines of software code for vulnerabilities, by turning the practice into a set of video games and puzzles and having volunteers do the work.. Having gamers identify potentially problematic chunks of code could help lower the work load of trained vulnerability analysts by "an order of magnitude or more," said John Murray, a program director in SRI International's computer science laboratory who helped create one of the games, called Xylem. The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . Having gamers identify potentially problematic chunks of code could help lower the work load of trai. department, defense, found, millions, lines, software. . Anthony Pell
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