Comment by tptacek
4 hours ago
How's that? What do you think the purpose of a bug bounty is? If you think it's "to eradicate all bugs", no, very no.
4 hours ago
How's that? What do you think the purpose of a bug bounty is? If you think it's "to eradicate all bugs", no, very no.
I don't expect an unbounded scope but I do expect it to cover the big scary headline items like RCE. Additionally, this can be exploited without MitM if you combine with e.g. a DNS cache poisoning attack. And they can still fix it even if they're not willing to pay a bounty.
DNS poisoning is a MITM vector; in fact, it's the most popular MITM vector.
Really? I thought MitM was always intercepting/manipulating traffic from or to the victim.
2 replies →
This is the place they direct researchers to report bugs. If they don’t want to pay out for MITM, that’s fine, but they should still be taking out-of-scope reports seriously
+1 Bounty aside, this deserves attention. I wouldn't want to award bounties for MitM either if I made it so easy. They closed the issue as 'out of scope'... with no mention of follow-up (or even the bounty we don't care about).
I'm skeptical to say the least. Industry standard has been to ignore MitM or certificates/signatures, not everything.
A bug bounty should motivate exploitable bugs to be reported so that they can be fixed. IMO, if it refuses to accept certain kinds of bugs that can still be exploited, it's not working properly.
A bug bounty directs internal engineering efforts. It can't eradicate bugs; that's not how bugs work.
I wasn't agreeing with your example.