In January, the EU is launching bug bounties on Free Software projects to increase the security of the Internet! #FOSSA #bugbounty #35c3 https://juliareda.eu/2018/12/eu-fossa-bug-bounties/ …pic.twitter.com/ftIkp7lemZ
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Reverse engineer, Dolphin Emulator developer and maintainer. Infrastructure security engineer @ $employer.
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In January, the EU is launching bug bounties on Free Software projects to increase the security of the Internet! #FOSSA #bugbounty #35c3 https://juliareda.eu/2018/12/eu-fossa-bug-bounties/ …pic.twitter.com/ftIkp7lemZ
This is great, but to repeat @BenLaurie's words: maybe we should also reward people who fix bugs and people who make it hard for new bugs to be introduced. Not only people who find bugs.
As an example, the 89K€ going towards Drupal bounties could easily pay for one or two (depending on geo / seniority) developers working full time on Drupal security. I don't have data, but my gut feeling is that this would be a better use of everyone's time and money.
That would indeed be better, but the @EU_Commission can’t just dish out money to developers who haven’t gone through an onerous public tender process that favours large consultancies that specialize in bidding for tenders rather than Drupal development.
Maybe the next step could be to fix that broken process then? :)
It would be great if somebody did that, but it won’t be me. I prefer actually making some small progress next to the big intractable problems I’m already tackling. Bug bounties is something I can do with my limited time and energy, fixing the procurement process is not.
Fair enough. Thanks for making this progress, as a developer using or involved with the development of some of the listed tools, it means a lot.
And if we can't fix the procurement process, we can still act by creating a HackerOne-like doing The Right Thing™ (whatever that is) and that will be able to go through these processes. Or convince HackerOne to branch out, maybe :-)
Indeed!
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