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[-] WPSteam@lemmy.world 11 points 17 hours ago

Nightmare Eclipse 2.0 incoming. 10K for such a thing is absolutely nothing for companies like AMD. Why promise rewards if at the end, you don't intend to pay? This has been a growing trend in the bug bounty space. Many times a bug is marked as duplicate and is fixed secretly. Other times, they're straightaway rejected..

[-] Australis13@fedia.io 29 points 22 hours ago

This is how you create people like Nightmare Eclipse.

These people are going out of their way to responsibly disclose vulnerabilites to the bug bounty programs and being treated poorly as a result. Granted, AMD technically didn't have to pay since it was a MITM attack, but they could have at least handled the whole interaction better.

[-] Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe 8 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago)

And simply paid they guy out of appreciation.

I generally support the model we've had for bBug disclosure - it's about preventing zero days - which protects the users of these products.

But for AMD stuff now, go ahead and sell your discoveries, let the zero-days ruin AMDs marketing.

[-] pulsewidth@lemmy.world 21 points 22 hours ago

$10k is nothing to AMD. The middle-management bean counters making these decisions are actively harming their company's (and user's security.

[-] bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 15 hours ago

The flaw of not using HTTPS for the downloads is so basic it's shocking they didn't have internal tooling to raise this before it was shipped. I'm not familiar with AMD's bug bounty policy but they should have at least paid $1337 to the researcher for raising this to them.

this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2026
42 points (100.0% liked)

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