Under current laws, ‘white hat’ bug hunters could be prosecuted for their work, even though their intentions are demonstrably ‘good’ - they currently exist in some kind of legal limbo.
The formation of a global partnership to ensure legal protections for good faith (bona fide) zero day researchers has been enacted by the Paris-based not-for-profit Cybersecurity Advisor Network (CyAN), with such research illegal in some jurisdictions, putting modern life at serious risk. We speak to Peter Coroneos, CyAN VP, to find out more.
The formation of a global partnership to ensure legal protections for good faith (bona fide) zero day researchers has been enacted by the Paris-based not-for-profit Cybersecurity Advisor Network (CyAN), with such research illegal in some jurisdictions, putting modern life at serious risk. We speak to Peter Coroneos, CyAN VP, to find out more.
A Danish-based startup is taking a fresh approach to security testing, recruiting white hat hackers to test vulnerabilities for a reward.
What do you do when Facebook's security team ignores a bug you've found? Post it to Mark Zuckerberg's wall, of course.
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