ZeroSecurity - Information Security News
  • Home
  • Security
    • Exploits
    • Mobile Security
  • Malware
  • Breaches
  • Crypto
  • Privacy
  • Tech
    • AI
    • Downloads
      • Malwarebytes
      • Exploits
      • Paper Downloads
    • Reviews
No Result
View All Result
SUBSCRIBE
ZeroSecurity - Information Security News
  • Home
  • Security
    • Exploits
    • Mobile Security
  • Malware
  • Breaches
  • Crypto
  • Privacy
  • Tech
    • AI
    • Downloads
      • Malwarebytes
      • Exploits
      • Paper Downloads
    • Reviews
No Result
View All Result
ZeroSecurity - Information Security News
No Result
View All Result
Home Exploits

Bug in Flash – Researcher gets paid $10k

Paul by Paul
February 20, 2014
in Exploits, Security
Reading Time: 1 min read
flash money
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Internet Bug Bounty program, a supportive effort among security experts and companies, paid its very first $10,000 bounty recently for a serious Flash vulnerability. The exploit, which Adobe patched in December, had been a serious one that has been utilized in spear phishing attacks.

The Bug Bounty system, which started last November, is a program put in place by security researchers and supported by Microsoft and Facebook to reward experts who reveal bugs properly. Both Microsoft and Facebook also have have their own bounty programs that cover the basis of their products.

The Internet Bug Bounty program is designed to include some core Internet technology including DNS and SSL, in addition to widely deployed software such as Flash, Java,  Google Chrome and Internet Explorer.

You might also like

Hackers Exploit Maximum-Severity Cisco Zero-Day Bug Since 2023 (CVE-2026-20127)

How Hackers Still Manage to Compromise MFA

Anthropic Unveils Claude Code Security to Detect and Fix Critical Vulnerabilities

The group has been shelling out some smaller sized payouts, however, this would be the first five-figure payout from the group, which is understandable, due to the impact this vulnerability could have had.

David Rude, an iDefense Labs researcher who was been given the bounty, didn’t report the bug straight to the IBB, but to Adobe. He also did not discover it himself; he found attackers using the exploit, but was still paid the full amount.

Tags: Adobe FlashBug Bountyexploit
Previous Post

Hold Security Discovers Thousands of Compromised FTPs

Next Post

Namecheap hit by huge DDoS attack

Paul

Paul

Editor and chief at ZeroSecurity. Expertise includes programming, malware analysis, and penetration testing. If you would like to write for ZeroSecurity, please click "Contact us" at the bottom of the page.

Recommended For You

Photo of the CISCO logo and text saying "You have been hacked!"

Hackers Exploit Maximum-Severity Cisco Zero-Day Bug Since 2023 (CVE-2026-20127)

March 6, 2026
How Hackers Still Manage to Compromise MFA

How Hackers Still Manage to Compromise MFA

March 6, 2026

Anthropic Unveils Claude Code Security to Detect and Fix Critical Vulnerabilities

February 22, 2026

Phishing 2.0: How AI is Turning Cyber Attacks into a Science

January 7, 2025 - Updated on January 9, 2025

DoubleClickjacking – The Stealthy New Web Exploit Threatening User Security

January 1, 2025

Critical Vulnerabilities Exposed in Ruijie Networks Cloud Platform

December 25, 2024

Related News

Malicious Chrome Extensions Steal AI Data and Hijack Revenue in DarkSpectre Campaign

Malicious Chrome Extensions Steal AI Data and Hijack Revenue in DarkSpectre Campaign

January 30, 2026
KPMG Netherlands Listed as Victim by Nova Ransomware Group

KPMG Netherlands Listed as Victim by Nova Ransomware Group

January 24, 2026
RansomHouse Claims Breach of Key Apple Assembler Luxshare

RansomHouse Claims Breach of Key Apple Assembler Luxshare

January 20, 2026
ZeroSecurity - Information Security News

We cover the latest in technology news, Crypto, Artificial Intelligence, and the threat trends impacting these sectors.

Categories

Piracy

Tutorials

Programming

Malware Analysis

Downloads

  • Contact us
  • Press
  • Writers
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2026 ZeroSecurity, All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Security
    • Tools
  • Exploits
  • Data Breaches
  • Malware
  • Privacy
  • Mobile Security
  • Contact Us
    • Press
  • Privacy Policy

© 2026 ZeroSecurity, All Rights Reserved.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.