Google Is Offering $200K To Hack Android Phones Using Email and A Phone Number (thenextweb.com) 49
Google is feeling so confident about the security of their latest Android 7.0 Nougat operating system that they're offering $200,000 to anyone who can remotely execute code on a Nexus 6P or 5X running Android 7.0. The Next Web reports: Today, Google is launching the Project Zero Security Contest and awarding over $300,000 in prizes to anyone who can hack Nexus 6P and 5X knowing only the devices' phone number and email address. To be eligible to win, contestants are required to dig up vulnerabilities that can be exploited remotely -- by sending a text message or an email, for instance. All winning participants will be invited to describe the bugs they've discovered in a short technical report that will appear on the Project Zero Blog. The winner will scoop $200,000, while the runner-up will receive $100,000. There's also another $50,000 in the prize pool for any additional winning entries.
temptation (Score:2)
is that enough money to temp state actors?
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Or even greedy local actors.
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Really? You don't need $200,000?
No, actually.
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no not the govt itself but the users of govt systems that exploit such things. Govt employees pay... anyway since a lot of these tools get sold to the third world regimes it is perhaps plausible?
I doubt it's about "confidence" (Score:3)
Google is feeling so confident about the security of their latest Android 7.0 Nougat operating system that they're offering $200,000 to anyone who can remotely execute code on a Nexus 6P or 5X running Android 7.0.
I suspect this has more to do with trying to proactively find any such vulnerability - and making it pay off well enough to induce the hacker to give Google the info rather than selling it to criminal or state organizations. Selling it privately might still bring in more money, but this might be enough so the hacker will say "this way I still get a good payday and also get credit for doing the right thing".
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The way the contest is setup requires you to report found bugs early, just to be eligible to use that particular bug in you exploit for the contest. In other words, Google can fix the problems even before the submissions for the exploits are due, and they can be assured the contestants will keep the bug a secret. Even better, a contestant does not even know if he can use the bug he found until he submits it to find out if he is the first.
Seems like it would be worth way more than $200K (Score:3)
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It would probably be less, given how few devices will run Android 7.0 in the short to medium term, and how many other Android vulnerabilities are out there to try first, making it cost very little.
Google's offering for $200K is about 10 times the going rate (again, taking into account how few devices run it, so the chances of actually running into a phone you need to crack running Android 7.0 are practically
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And iOS.
There's a reason there's a backlog of over 600+ iPhones in the LEO community they'tr trying to break, and under 20 Androids. And it's not because criminals prefer iPhones to Androids.
iOS vulnerabilities are much ha
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What's the going rate for getting a legal payoff and having a lot less to worry about? If I found an exploit like that, I'd sooner trade it to Google for a Starbucks gift card than I would try and negotiate with, like, Russia. How would you even start something like that? It sounds like suicide for your criminal record, surely every government has agents posing as agents of other governments to try and poach stuff like that.
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It's a trap! (Score:1)
If you do it they will remotely detonate your phone battery.
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What's hilarious is that, with a remote code execution bug, you probably could tell a system to overcharge the battery. I mean if the short term fix for the Note 7 is "cap battery charge at 60%", then I wonder what shenanigans you could do to other batteries?
What about premium sms exploitation? (Score:2)
Will they let someone test that out On a live phone?
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I'm sure nobody will complain if you test it against your own phone.
Look at it from Google's POV (Score:2)
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So what you're saying is, that Google's own employees - not one among the vast number of them - cannot find this type of exploit, or aren't allocated to this type of exploit finding, so basically Google has opted to contract that work out in the form of a "bounty program"?
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So what you're saying is, that Google's own employees - not one among the vast number of them - cannot find this type of exploit, or aren't allocated to this type of exploit finding, so basically Google has opted to contract that work out in the form of a "bounty program"?
It's not so much a question of having the technical smarts but rather Google has limited bandwidth to do this, so they can't cause every possible idea, and outside eyes may look at the problem differently and come up with something not apparent to Google's staff. One challenge people have is they tend to look at problems based on their knowledge and experience and may not approach it from a different angle and come up with something new; it's not a lack of smarts but becoming conditioned as to how to approa
3, 2, 1...... (Score:1)