The new reward is an addition to iDefense's controversial Vulnerability Contributor Program (VCP), which launched in 2005. "We want to get people excited [about VCP]," said Adam Greene, the assistant director of iDefense Labs. "And we want to encourage researchers to focus on things important to our clients."
The $10,000 research reward comes with a few strings. The offer ends March 31, said Greene, and it must be submitted exclusively to iDefense. If Microsoft eventually classifies it as a "Critical" fix -- the Redmond, Wash.-based developer uses a four-step rating system to rank patches, with Critical at the top of the chart -- iDefense will pay out the $10,000, which is above and beyond its usual VCP payouts. Although iDefense doesn't publish it usual reward rate structure, it paid out nearly $40,000 in its first three months.
Each quarter, iDefense will change the rules of the $10,000 bonus. "We haven't settled on next quarter's," admitted Greene. "But rather than a specific vendor, we're talking about targeting a certain class of vulnerability or class of product. Maybe Web browsers or e-mail."
"It's important to change it up a bit to keep people interested," he added.
A few other companies trade cash for vulnerabilities. TippingPoint, part of 3Com, has a similar program, dubbed Zero Day Initiative, while Mozilla pays $500 for bugs in its open-source software.
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