Calling all bug bounty hunters - Google has expanded its challenge to V8 and Cloud
Put your skills to the test and earn some dough in the process
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Looking to put your bug hunting skills to good use and earn yourself a pretty penny in the process?
Googlehas launched its latest bounty challenge rewarding participants fordiscovering bugsand exploiting vulnerabilities in Chrome’s v8 JavaScript and Google Cloud.
The latest challenge, v8CTF, is a capture-the-flag based bug hunting challenge open to exploit writers.
The 0-day Lottery
As part of Google’s standardVulnerability Reward Program(VRP), lucky hunters can bag themselves tens of thousands of dollars for discovering and demonstrating the severity of a security vulnerability in any Google or Alphabet subsidiary.
Rewards are offered in the discovery of both known and new vulnerabilities, known as n-day and 0-day vulnerabilities respectively, with rewards available from both the VRP and the v8CTF reward program, with the latter offering $10,000 for each 0-day discovery and exploitation.
“We want to learn from the security community to understand how they will approach this challenge. If you’re successful, you’ll not only earn a reward, but you’ll also help us make our products more secure for everyone. This is also a good opportunity to learn about technologies and gain hands-on experience exploiting them,” Google software engineers Stephen Roettger and Marios Pomonis stated in the Google securityblog.
ViaInfosecurity Magazine
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Benedict has been writing about security issues for over 7 years, first focusing on geopolitics and international relations while at the University of Buckingham. During this time he studied BA Politics with Journalism, for which he received a second-class honours (upper division), then continuing his studies at a postgraduate level, achieving a distinction in MA Security, Intelligence and Diplomacy. Upon joining TechRadar Pro as a Staff Writer, Benedict transitioned his focus towards cybersecurity, exploring state-sponsored threat actors, malware, social engineering, and national security. Benedict is also an expert on B2B security products, including firewalls, antivirus, endpoint security, and password management.
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