Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

I think it depends on if the agreement is to delay the announcement, or hide the announcement forever.

If I were a researcher, I'd be happy to delay for 6 months for a reward, but I would consider it morally bad to delay forever for a reward.




If I were a researcher, I'd be happy to delay for 6 months for a reward

Really? What if a nation state actor has discovered the same bug. Do you want to keep the world vulnerable for a 6 month window?

Also, most European university researchers are funded through taxpayer money. They should do what is best for the general population, not what is best of some company's stock value.


> Do you want to keep the world vulnerable for a 6 month window?

There exist far more bugs than discovered bugs. By revealing it, I put some people at risk (those who fail to update), and by hiding it I put more people at less risk (everyone, but only if someone else discovers the bug).

It's a tradeoff, but 6 months is a good window for most people to update, while there still not being too much chance of the bug being independently discovered.


> most European university researchers are funded through taxpayer money

This is absolutely not a given. While it might be partially true, they are frequently also funded through corporate grants.


The only European country where I'm somewhat familiar with research funding is Sweden and at least there direct corporate funding is a tiny sliver of the overall university research budget. And even when companies do fund research projects much of the funding is things like letting their researchers work 'for free' on the project or giving free access to data, equipment and licenses rather than cash


I only really know two northwestern (European) countries and they are both not Sweden. Corporate funding there is "strings attached" money, both for direction and scope of the research (and in at least one case a final say on whether or not research gets published). Corporate funding is also somewhat expected, as working from just government money is a huge outlier (it is not enough).

It's interesting to see that policies differ so much even inside of the relatively wealthy parts of Europe :)


To clarify slightly. Corporate 'co-funding' and cooperation is not uncommon in projects (and is in fact a requirement for funding in many cases), but the amount of actual cash this adds up to is a tiny percentage of the overall national university research budgets.


It became morally bad to delay any longer once it was obvious that multiple teams were finding the same bugs. There's a crap ton of people listed as discoverers in the CVE's.

Who knows how many other actors discovered the same bugs and didn't say anything? Likely multiple, honestly.

We've finally run into a real life proof of why bug embargoes are bad. This is the first time I know of that multiple people independently discovering the same thing before the embargo period was over.


Saying something is "morally bad" doesn't really make sense unless you also define the moral framework that it is bad in. As you did not do so, it reads as if you expect the reader to understand what morality it is bad in (maybe even that it is obvious).


Hiding bugs that bad actors likely know about is morally bad in NY book


This money was also meant for downplaying the severity of the vulnerability, allowing intel to spin the discovery and lose less face. This is a politically charged bribe, their bug bounty program has been constructed to lend credibility to it.




Consider applying for YC's Spring batch! Applications are open till Feb 11.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: