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Apple Awards Bounty of $100,500 for Finding Flaws in MacBook

In 2021, Apple patched a set of MacOs vulnerabilities exposing the Safari browser to attack and letting threat actors hack users' online accounts, cameras, and mic. Cybersecurity expert Ryan Pickren, who found these vulnerabilities and reported back to company Apple, was given a $100,500 bug bounty, considering the critical scale of the vulnerabilities. These bugs exploit a set of security issues with iCloud sharing and Safari 15. 

It allows the hacker to control multimedia permissions and gain full access to all sites that the user has opened using the Safari browser. It also includes Gmail, iCloud, PayPal, and Facebook accounts. The problem is primarily concerned with ShareBear, it is an iCloud file-sharing platform that prompts users to open a shared document. Pickren noticed that the prompt doesn't ask the user to open a file after a user opened it once. 

Pickren concluded that this can allow a threat actor to play with the file's components if he has access to the files. "ShareBear will then download and update the file on the victim's machine without any user interaction or notification. 

In essence, the victim has given the attacker permission to plant a polymorphic file onto their machine and the permission to remotely launch it at any moment," explains Pickren in his writeup. In simpler terms, a .PNG format image file can have all its content and extension converted into an executable binary ("evil.dmg") once the user has opened the file. 

After this, one can launch the binary, which triggers exploit chain vulnerabilities that influence extra bugs found in Safari to control a system's mic and camera and steal local files stored in the device. It is not the first time Pickren disclosed bugs in iOS and macOS that allows a threat actor to gain access to a system and control its commands. 

The unauthorized access is gained when the victim opens a certain file type. He says "this project was an interesting exploration of how a design flaw in one application can enable a variety of other, unrelated, bugs to become more dangerous."

Big Bug Bounty Hunts by Cyber Giants Fetch Ethical Hackers Millions!





As a part of being more aware and secure in terms of cyber-crime and to stay clear off any possible hazards that may or may not come their way, organizations have started paying up millions to those people who find bugs in their systems.


Recently, a concerned cyber-space user received a message that allegedly said, “Hey, we’ve got some money for you. Do you want it?”

This message had come from Yahoo in response to a bug that the person had sent to the organization. As of now this bug-sending business has paid up a profit of $1.5m.

Yahoo like many companies pays up to people who find bugs and loopholes for them that could be potentially exploited by hackers or cyber-cons.

These ethical hackers sign-up with organizations like Bug Crowd, Synack, Hacker One etc. who conduct bug bounty programs on behalf of other organizations.

 To participate in this, a person need not even have a profound knowledge of coding and other technical skills cited the aforementioned user.

However, he had always been a part of the security industry where he learned deeply about the protocols regarding the swapping of data.

Nevertheless, there is a substantially enormous difference between the way professionals work on cyber issues and the way beginners do.




It’s been long since people actually felt inclined towards working in the cyber security industry even if they weren’t getting paid much.

Earlier and even now to some remote extent there exists an underlying need for more professionally oriented skillful hands in the cyber-security industry.

Many countries have government funded educational schemes for school kids to help them have a sense of the cyber-security.

With 25,000 school children as their intake UK’s scheme, Cyber Discovery had a fabulous first year. It’s an initiative to let kids know that the daily work of pros is fun.

Participants get points when they complete each section and the top performers get to attend residential courses that help them get better.

The big bug bounty hunts could be a great way to attract the attention of young minds and help them get a taste of what defeating bad guys feels like.

Anyone who wished to enter in the big bug bounties should contemplate the fact that it requires a lot more than sheer luck to work as an actual cyber-security guy.

“Also, companies should have their own set of defenses set against the cyber cons rather than letting the bounty hunters know what the inner situation is.”, said a source.

Nonetheless, it should always be more about being a concerned citizen, trying to solve problems, and make a better and safe cyber-world.