Last week Apple made its belated entrance into the bug bounty market, announcing a top award of $200,000 for major flaws in iOS, but Cook & Co have been comprehensively outbid.
On Tuesday, exploit trading firm Exodus Intelligence said it is willing to pay $500,000 for a major flaw in iOS 9.3 and above – and the exploit to use it. Researchers can either take a lump sum or accept a smaller sum and quarterly payments until the exploit is found, which the company's founder told The Reg could add up to even more.
"The majority of our clients are defensive vendors, penetration testers, and red/blue teams," said Logan Brown, president of Exodus.
Apple exploits get the highest reward, reflective of their scarcity. Microsoft and Google's bug bounty programs will also need to up their rewards to match Exodus's prices.
[...] Security experts are worried that the hoarding of serious flaws will have a deleterious effect on overall security for everyone. Exodus attempted to reassure people on this front by beginning a vulnerability disclosure process back in February, but it only discloses after it has extracted the "maximum value for our customers."
(Score: 3, Insightful) by bob_super on Thursday August 11 2016, @09:20PM
Getting rewarded that much ought to attract the vultures, I mean the lawyers... Time to get some popcorn.
> hoarding of serious flaws will have a deleterious effect on overall security for everyone
Of course not, since Exodus will keep these under wraps, their suppliers will also not sell them to others, and the whole thing will be as secure as a Microsoft Golden Key.
Question: How many "agencies" and hacker groups are using unpatched zero-days to get Exodus's zero-day catalog without paying?