Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 20th Mar 2009 13:51 UTC, submitted by google_ninja
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Member since:
2008-03-05
What if paramedics worked like this? "Sorry sir, I can stop that bleeding gash in your head if you pay my fee." NO MORE FREE FIRST AID!
I fail to see where in that ZDnet interview where Charlie had a pompous attitude or an extortion type mentality. He very clearly says that Apple hires and pay people to find those exploits and that the work he does has market value. That is a statement of fact so I just don't see how you find that extorting or pompous?
Paramedics are a bad example because they may patch you up without charging up front, but they are damn quick to bill you $400 to $1000 just to put a bandage on you. You still are obligated to pay them and if you refuse they can sue you and garnish your wages. FIRST AID IS NOT FREE!
On the last part, did you even bother reading the interview before commenting? I am directly quoting Charlie now.
It was probably more than that $5,000 prize I won. It’s much less than the IE 8 vulnerability (exploited separately by Nils) by about a factor of ten. I could get more than $5,000 for it but I like the idea of coming here and showcasing what I can do and get some headlines for the company I work for (Independent Security Evaluators).
http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=2941
According to that post, Charlie works for a legitimate security firm and held on to the bug to display his talents and to promote his employer to gain business from companies like Apple. In fact, according to Charlie he lost money on this contest, not gained. That makes your entire criticism of what he did a moot point.
Edited 2009-03-20 22:07 UTC