Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 20th Mar 2009 13:51 UTC, submitted by google_ninja
Privacy, Security, Encryption Fresh from winning the PWN2OWN contest yesterday, Charlie Miller has been interviewed by ZDNet. He talks about how Mac OS X is a very simple operating system to exploit due to the lack of any form of anti-exploit features. He also explains that the underlying operating system is much more important in creating a successful exploit than the bowser, why Chrome is so hard to hack, and many other things.
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RE[3]: Comment by sadyc
by Bounty on Fri 20th Mar 2009 16:18 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by sadyc"
Bounty
Member since:
2006-09-18

Sitting on an exploit for a year so you can get a free laptop and 15 min of fame is certainly black hat and is even nearly criminal.


What's the difference with what a salaried security researcher does? The negotiation up front? I'll guarantee you this guy is making less because he's doing it under his terms, working his own hours. He's not any more black hat than Microsoft that sits on known vunerabilities for more than 6 months. Also the fact that he knows something doesn't oblige him to do a damn thing.

"I have a new campaign. It’s called NO MORE FREE BUGS." "What’s the ballpark value of that Safari bug? It was probably more than that $5,000 prize I won."

Meaning he probably used to do this for free, nobody gave him a job or money. (read that to mean greedy Apple) Now he has a nice resume, industry recognition, and some money etc. I could spend my time walking around making sure old people get across the street for free. Instead I put food on the table. Are you evil because you know how to do something good, but don't? Ask yourself again next time you fire up Half Life instead of inviting homeless people into your house. He didn't sell to criminals! I believe Mozilla has a 500$ bounty on bugs. MS and Apple could easily put a 5000$ bounty on exploitable bugs. Put your hate where it belongs.

Reply Parent Score: 7