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Bug bounty businesses bombarded with AI slop

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Why This Matters

The surge of AI-generated, low-quality bug reports is disrupting traditional bug bounty programs, forcing companies to reconsider their approaches to cybersecurity testing. While AI tools can accelerate vulnerability discovery, their misuse is creating noise that hampers effective security assessments, potentially impacting the overall integrity of software security efforts. This shift highlights the need for the industry to adapt to AI-driven challenges in cybersecurity practices.

Key Takeaways

Companies that pay hackers to find flaws in their software are being inundated with low-quality reports generated by AI, forcing some to suspend the programs altogether.

Businesses that run “bug bounty” schemes have long relied on independent security researchers to spot vulnerabilities. But the rise of AI tools is now overwhelming them with spurious submissions.

Bugcrowd, whose customers include OpenAI, T-Mobile, and Motorola, said the number of reports it received more than quadrupled over a three-week period in March, with most proving to be false.

Curl, a widely used tool to transfer data across the internet, suspended its paid bug bounty program in January, citing an “explosion in AI slop reports” and lower-quality submissions.

Cyber security experts say advances in generative AI are reshaping the economics of bug bounty programs. While the tools allow experienced researchers to find flaws more quickly, they are also lowering the barrier to entry, triggering a flood of automated or erroneous submissions that companies must sift through.

The big increase in poor-quality AI reports was “quickly becoming a major problem,” said Ross McKerchar, chief information security officer at cyber security group Sophos. “Bug bounties are going to stay [but] they’re going to have to change,” he said.

Bug bounties have grown in popularity since the early 2000s, with schemes offering six-figure payouts for the biggest discoveries. Google’s program disbursed a total of $17 million last year, up from $7.5 million in 2021. It paid its largest individual reward of $605,000 in 2022 to a user who spotted a vulnerability in its Android mobile operating system.

McKerchar said the rise in poor-quality submissions came from both amateurs trying to find bugs for the first time and existing researchers who were “sometimes getting led on by the [AI] agents.”