Chromium Blog
News and developments from the open source browser project
Chromium Vulnerability Rewards Program: larger rewards!
2012年8月14日火曜日
The
Chromium Vulnerability Rewards Program
was created to help reward the contributions of security researchers who invest their time and effort in helping us make Chromium more secure. We’ve been very pleased with the response: Google’s various vulnerability reward programs have kept our users protected and netted more than $1 million dollars of total rewards for security researchers. Recently, we’ve seen a significant drop-off in externally reported Chromium security issues. This signals to us that bugs are becoming harder to find, as the efforts of the wider community have made Chromium significantly stronger.
Therefore, we’re making the following changes to the reward structure:
Adding a bonus of $1,000 or more on top of the base reward for “particularly exploitable” issues. The onus is on the reporter to provide a quick demonstration as part of the repro. For example, for a DOM-based use-after-free, one might use JavaScript to allocate a specific object type in the “freed” slot, resulting in a vtable dereference of 0x41414141.
Adding a bonus of $1,000 or more on top of the base reward for bugs in stable areas of the code base—see below for an example. By “stable”, we mean that the defect rate appears to be low and we think it’s harder to find a security bug in the area.
Adding a bonus of $1,000 or more on top of the base reward for serious bugs which impact a significantly wider range of products than just Chromium. For example, certain open source parsing libraries—see below for an example.
The rewards panel has always reserved the right to reward at our discretion. At times, rewards have reached the $10,000 level for
particularly significant contributions
. An extraordinary contribution could be a sustained level of bug finding, or even one individual impressive report. Examples of individual items that might impress the panel include:
Nvidia / ATI / Intel GPU driver vulnerabilities. High or critical severity vulnerabilities in the respective Windows drivers, demonstrated and triggered from a web page. Submissions on Chrome OS would also be interesting. Chrome OS typically runs on a device with an Intel GPU.
Local privilege escalation exploits in Chrome OS via the Linux kernel. Chrome OS has a stripped-down kernel, so a working exploit against it would certainly be worth examining. We reserve the right to reward more generously if the exploit works inside our “setuid sandbox” and / or our fast-evolving “seccomp BPF sandbox”.
Serious vulnerabilities in IJG libjpeg. For well over a decade, there hasn’t been a serious vulnerability against IJG libjpeg. Can one be found?
64-bit exploits. Any working code execution exploit on a 64-bit Chrome release. Sandbox escape not required.
Renderer to browser exploit. Any working browser code execution exploit, starting from the assumed precondition of full code execution inside a normal web renderer or PPAPI process.
Aside from the new bonuses, it’s worth recapping some details of the existing reward structure that aren’t as widely known:
Our reward program covers vulnerabilities in Adobe Flash as well as other well-known software such as the Linux kernel, various open-source libraries and daemons, X windows, etc.
Our base reward is $2,000 for well-reported UXSS bugs, covering both the Chromium browser and also Adobe Flash. (With the new reward bonus for exploitability, UXSS rewards will likely become $4,000.)
Our reward program already includes a bonus of $500 to $1,000 when the reporter becomes a more involved Chromium community member and provides a peer-reviewed patch.
We have always considered rewards for regressions affecting our Beta or Dev channel releases. It’s a big success to fix security regressions before they ship to the Stable channel.
To illustrate how the new reward bonuses will work, we’re retroactively applying the bonuses to some older, memorable bugs:
$1,000
to Atte Kettunen of OUSPG for
bug 104529
(new total: $2,000). We believe that our PDF component is one of the more secure (C++) implementations of PDF, hence the $1,000 top-up.
$3,000
to Jüri Aedla for
bug 107128
(new total: $4,000). There is a $1,000 bonus because this bug affects many projects via core libxml parsing, and we added a $2,000 bonus for exploitability: this is a heap-based buffer overflow involving user-controlled data with a user-controlled length.
We’re more excited than ever to work with the community and
reward their efforts
.
Posted by Chris Evans, Software Engineer
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