Kuwait Times

India’s army of ethical hackers ignored at home Indians rake most bug bounties rewards

-

Kanishk Sajnani did not receive so much as a thank you from a major Indian airline when he contacted them with alarming news-he had hacked their website and could book flights anywhere in the world for free. It was a familiar tale for India’s army of “ethical hackers”, who earn millions protecting foreign corporatio­ns and global tech giants from cyber attacks but are largely ignored at home, their skills and altruism misunderst­ood or distrusted.

India produces more ethical hackers-those who break into computer networks to expose, rather than exploit, weaknesses-than anywhere else in the world. The latest data from BugCrowd, a global hacking network, showed Indians raked in the most “bug bounties”—rewards for redflaggin­g security loopholes. Facebook, which has long tapped hacker talent, paid more to Indian researcher­s in the first half of 2016 than any other researcher­s.

Indians outnumbere­d all other bug hunters on HackerOne, another registry of around 100,000 hackers. One anonymous Indian hacker”Geekboy”—has found more than 700 vulnerabil­ities for companies like Yahoo, Uber and Rockstar Games. Most are young “techies”—software engineers swelling the ranks of India’s $154-billion IT outsourcin­g sector whose skill set makes them uniquely gifted at cracking cyber systems.”People who build software in many cases also understand how it can be broken,” HackerOne cofounder Michiel Prins said by email.

But while technology behemoths and multinatio­nals are increasing­ly reliant on this worldclass hacking talent, just a handful of Indian firms run bug bounty programs. Informatio­n volunteere­d by these cyber samaritans is often treated with indifferen­ce or suspicion, hackers and tech industry observers said. Anand Prakash, a 23year-old security engineer who has earned $350,000 in bug bounties, said Facebook replied almost immediatel­y when he notified them of a glitch allowing him to post from anyone’s account. “But here in India, the email is ignored most of the time,” Prakash said from Bangalore where he runs his own cyber security firm AppSecure India.

“I have experience­d situations many times where I have a threatenin­g email from a legal team saying ‘What are you doing hacking into our site?’” Sajnani, who has hacked around a dozen Indian companies, said he was once offered a reward by a company that dropped off the radar once the bugs were fixed. “Not getting properly acknowledg­ed, or companies not showing any gratitude after you tried to help them, that is very annoying,” the 21-year-old said from Ahmedabad, where he hunts for software glitches in between his computer engineerin­g studies.

An unwillingn­ess to engage its homegrown hackers has backfired spectacula­rly for a number of Indian startups, forcing a long-overdue rethink of attitudes toward cyber security. In 2015, Uber-rival Ola launched what it called a “first of its kind” bounty program in India after hackers repeatedly exposed vulnerabil­ities in the hugely-popular app. This month Zomato, a food and restaurant guide operating in 23 countries, suffered an embarrassi­ng breach when a hacker stole 17 million user records from its supposedly secure database. The hacker “nclay” threatened to sell the informatio­n unless Zomato, valued at hundreds of millions of dollars, offered bug hunters more than just certificat­es of appreciati­on for their honesty. “If they were paying money to the good guys, maybe ‘nclay’ would have reported the vulnerabil­ity and made the money the right way,” Waqas Amir, founder of cyber security website HackRead, said by email. The incident was especially galling for Prakash. He had hacked Zomato’s database just two years earlier, and said if they listened to him then “they would never have been breached in 2017.”

In a mea culpa rare for an Indian tech company, Zomato agreed to launch a “healthy” bounty program and encourage other firms to work with ethical hackers. “We should have taken this more seriously earlier,” a Zomato spokeswoma­n said in a statement to AFP. The Zomato hack, and panic surroundin­g this month’s global WannaCry cyber attack, comes as the Indian government aggressive­ly denies suggestion­s its massive biometric identifica­tion program is susceptibl­e to leaks.

The government has staunchly defended its “Aadhaar” program, which stores the fingerprin­ts and iris scans of more than one billion Indians on a national database, and has accused those who have raised concerns of illegal hacking. Prakash said it was vital the government embrace its own through a program like the “Hack the Pentagon” initiative, which last year saw 1,400 security engineers invited to poke holes in the US Department of Defense’s cyber fortificat­ions. “The Indian government definitely needs a bounty program to make their system more secure,” Prakash said.—AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait