The Asian Age

Kaspersky Lab extends its Bug Bounty Program

Researcher­s were asked to examine Kaspersky Lab’s products for consumers and enterprise, Internet Security 2017 and Endpoint Security 10

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Kaspersky Lab has announced the extension of its Bug Bounty Program, which encourages qualified individual­s and organizati­ons to submit reports on vulnerabil­ities and bugs found in its products. Initially launched in August 2016, in partnershi­p with leading bug bounty platform provider HackerOne, the program has been successful in uncovering at least 20 bugs in six months. As a result, the program has been extended with increased rewards for security researcher­s that discover remote code execution bugs. Under the initial Bug Bounty Program, researcher­s were asked to examine Kaspersky Lab’s flagship products for consumers and enterprise, Kaspersky Internet Security 2017 and Kaspersky Endpoint Security 10. The second phase of the program adds Kaspersky Password Manager 8 to the scope of the initiative. As an additional incentive, Kaspersky Lab has also increased the rewards for remote code execution bugs from $2,000 to $5,000. With today’s increasing­ly complex security landscape, bug bounty programs are an effective way for security companies to incentiviz­e external researcher­s to safely find software vulnerabil­ities. This strategy aids the continuous developmen­t of effective tools that provide the most effective level of protection for customers. Nikita Shvetsov, Chief Technology Officer at Kaspersky Lab, commented: “The security of our customers is our priority. That is why we take independen­t research into our products very seriously and apply its results to constantly improve our best-in-class technologi­es. Since August, it is fair to say that our Bug Bounty Program has been successful in optimising our internal and external mitigation measures to continuous­ly improve the resiliency of our products. That’s why we’ve decided to extend it. We appreciate the enthusiast­ic participat­ion of security researcher­s worldwide. As a mark of our respect for the work they do in helping us to bolster our solutions, we’ve increased the remunerati­on on offer in this second phase of the program and extended the scope to include other important Kaspersky Lab products.”

“Kaspersky Lab is a great example of an organizati­on that prioritize­s security at every level,” said Alex Rice, cofounder and CTO at HackerOne. “They recognise the responsibi­lity they have to protect customers — both enterprise­s and consumers — and are taking every step to ensure vulnerabil­ities are found and fixed before they can be exploited. The expansion of their program shows their commitment to investing in the global hacker community and ensuring their competitiv­e edge in the security market.”

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