Google's $20,000 was as safe at Pwn2Own Wednesday as if it had been in the bank. The search giant had promised to pay $20,000 to the first researcher who broke into Chrome on the hacking contest's opening day. . But no one took up Google's offer. "The first contestant was a no-show," said Aaron Portnoy, manager of HP TippingPoint's security research team, and Pwn2Own's organizer. "And the other team wanted to work on their BlackBerry vulnerability. So it doesn't look like anyone will try Chrome." The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . Surprisingly, nobody took up Microsoft's $25,000 offer to exploit Edge at the HackFest event. An unanticipated absence meant Edge remained secure.. Pwn2Own 2023, Chrome security, web browser exploits. . Alex
A music and technology forum that ran a $10,000 contest back in September challenging people to hack into copyright protection technologies said on Tuesday it was paying prize money to two hackers. The Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI) said it was . . . . A music and technology forum that ran a $10,000 contest back in September challenging people to hack into copyright protection technologies said on Tuesday it was paying prize money to two hackers. The Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI) said it was contacting two successful challengers, who will receive $5,000 each, for participation in the HackSDMI public invitation. The two challengers emerged from a field of 447 submissions as the only ones able to remove the protection systems and successfully disable one of five technologies currently under consideration for SDMI screening technology, the group said. The link for this article located at CNN is no longer available. . An art and innovation conference granted $10,000 to developers who pushed boundaries of digital security measures.. music technology contest, copyright protection hack, digital music initiative. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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