Linux is everywhere and it needs extra protection, according to Google. "We are constantly investing in the security of the Linux Kernel because much of the internet, and Google – from the devices in our pockets, to the services running on Kubernetes in the cloud – depend on the security of it," said Eduardo Vela from the Google Bug Hunters Team . . Google has kicked off a special three-month bug bounty targeting flaws in the Linux kernel with triple the rewards for security researchers. The new bounty, announced this week , looks to harden the Linux kernel in specific edge cases. It's offering up to $31,337 ( Leet ) to security researchers who can exploit privilege escalation in Google's lab environment with a patched vulnerability; and $50,337 for anyone who can finds a previously undisclosed or zero-day flaw, or for discovering a new exploit technique. . Google has introduced a quarterly bug bounty program targeting vulnerabilities within the Linux kernel, significantly enhancing incentives for security researchers.. Linux Kernel Security, Bug Bounty Program, Security Research, Exploit Techniques. . Brittany Day
It seems we exaggerated the innovation of Com/TippingPoint’s controversial Zero Day Initiative. The scheme pays vetted researchers to report vulnerabilities to the company in a responsible way, thereby avoiding these holes getting into the public domain and being exploited by criminals and hackers before patch has been written. . The link for this article located at HackInTheBox is no longer available. . The link for this article located at HackInTheBox is no longer available.. seems, exaggerated, innovation, com/tippingpoint’s, controversial, initiative. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A popular Internet privacy service that lets Web surfers visit sites anonymously has fixed several serious flaws, and now the service's founder is offering a reward to the finder of the bugs.. . .. A popular Internet privacy service that lets Web surfers visit sites anonymously has fixed several serious flaws, and now the service's founder is offering a reward to the finder of the bugs. Bennett Haselton, an Internet filtering activist who runs the Peacefire Web site, found the problems with Anonymizer.com, a five-year-old service that shields users from tracking by Web sites and their Internet providers. Haselton "came up with a new way of exploiting (Web) standards," Anonymizer president Lance Cottrell explained Monday. "They're pretty subtle." Many major commercial sites cringe when security researchers find a hole. But Anonymizer actually encourages it through a "bug bounty." Haselton's reward: three free years of the Anonymizer service, which costs $50 a year. Cottrell said the offer stands for anyone else who can find security holes in the service. The link for this article located at Associated Press / Yahoo is no longer available. . A well-known online privacy platform resolved critical vulnerabilities and incentivized bug findings to bolster its security measures.. Internet Privacy Service, Bug Bounty Program, Anonymizer Security, Privacy Flaws, Online Privacy Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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