Exploit Vendor Zerodium Puts $100,000 Bounty On Flash's New Security Feature (softpedia.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Zerodium, the company that buys zero-day bugs from security researchers and then sells them forward to government intelligence agencies, has put out a new bounty, this one on Adobe's Flash Player. The exploit vendor is offering $100,000 to the first researcher that finds a similar zero-day bug, capable of avoiding Flash's newly-released isolated heap memory protection feature. Previously, Zerodium offered $1 million to a security researcher for a zero-day bug in Apple's iOS 9 operating system.
I'll put up a $100,00 bounty for anyone who wants to have sex with a Slashtard.
Time to make friends with someone who works at Adobe then. An easy $50,000 sounds nice.
i seem to get the hint that adobe flash vulnerabilities is used as a backdoor to gain access to people's computers???
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
The most value from such an exploit...
... would be being able to accumulate a list of the users stupid enough to still have Flash installed! (Or allowing it to be run indiscriminately))
(If you do have it, please use a flash blocker, so that you then only click on the button to run the flash on trusted sites.)
No matter what security improvements Microsoft and Google have helped Adobe make to Flash, it's better to uninstall Flash. It reduces the attack surface and avoids the security problems in the first place. Flash had 316 security bugs in 2015 as compared to Firefox's 178. So why take the risk of 494 security bugs when it's so simple to reduce the risk to 178?
... in Flash that compromises security... they would be bankrupt within a week!
With all the security holes in Flash these days, I dont get why browsers haven't made "click to play" for flash videos the default. No flash videos would run unless you activated them.
For all the ridiculous arms export regulations around encryption historically, this actually seems much more like serious arms sales. Explicitly selling vulnerabilities, other than in a bug bounty program, is organized crime.
Pretty sure they pocket at least 5-10x that $100k for every sale they make to a governmental organization...
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This is like their "we paid out (pinky in mouth) $1 million for an Apple iOS 9.1 bug".
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2433087/zerodium-pays-out-usd1m-for-ios-91-untethered-jailbreak
Except there's no evidence they did, but it was handy marketing for them. If they had, Apple could sue them and obtain the bug details (and $$$ in compensation) on a "tortuous interference in business" claim.
So take it with a pinch of salt.
How is it that this is legal? Looking for ways to crack people's computing systems and then making a profit off of it?
I guess it's because the clients of this profiteer are governments. If these people were selling to non-government entities, I would think that government would be raiding the office and throwing them all in jail. But since the government benefits from this company's practices, it's all above-board.
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