So You Want To Be a Zero Day Exploit Millionaire? 36
gManZboy writes "There's a thriving trade in zero-day vulnerabilities, predicated on keeping knowledge of these vulnerabilities out of the public domain. For security researchers with knowledge of a bug that's not worth much, or for researchers who question the ethics of selling any bug information, there are alternatives. Vulnerability information service Secunia launched its Secunia Vulnerability Coordination Reward Program, which formalizes what Secunia says it's been doing informally for some time: It acts as a go-between for security researchers that have discovered a vulnerability in a product, and the vendor of that product. Do such practices jeopardize security for the many, while safeguarding just the few? It's still unclear whether Stuxnet's authors discovered the zero-day vulnerabilities themselves, procured them from a legal market, or bought them on the black market. If you're going to cash in, you face some tough ethical questions."
I cannot spend ethics (Score:4, Insightful)
I cannot spend ethics, cash however is always welcome.
Re:I cannot spend ethics (Score:4, Insightful)
Besides that. "Ethics"? what a crock. That's something for Disney movies.
what does "ethics" have to do with it? (Score:5, Insightful)