ExpressVPN has updated its bug bounty program to make it more inviting to ethical hackers, now offering a one-time $100,000 bug bounty to whoever can compromise its systems.
ExpressVPN is one of the most widely used VPN (virtual private networks) products, which offers users web browsing privacy and the ability to bypass geo-restrictions.
This privacy is achieved by passing the user’s internet traffic through encryption tunnels, while the user’s actual IP address is hidden behind one provided by the VPN service.
Also Read: National Cybersecurity Awareness Campaign of Singapore: Better Cyber Safe than Sorry
As such, compromising the security of this type of system results in failure on one of the most critical selling points of these products, users’ privacy.
This is why ExpressVPN offers a bug bounty program, allowing security auditors and researchers to report vulnerabilities in the company’s infrastructure and software and receive monetary bug bounty rewards.
Today, ExpressVPN announced that they are now offering a $100,000 bug bounty for critical vulnerabilities in their in-house technology, TrustedServer.
“This is the highest single bounty offered on the Bugcrowd platform and 10 times higher than the top reward previously offered by ExpressVPN,” the company shared in an email to BleepingComputer.
The new $100,000 one-time bounty is offered with the following conditions:
ExpressVPN also invites security researchers to uncover possible ways to leak the actual IP address of clients and monitor user traffic.
Also Read: Revised Technology Risk Management Guidelines of Singapore
The bug bounty program is run through BugCrowd, which offers a safe harbor for researchers who attempt to breach ExpressVPN’s servers as part of the program.
TrustedServer is a custom-built operating system based on Debian Linux, featuring proprietary security enhancements that make it ideal for use in VPN infrastructure.
ExpressVPN follows a RAM-only approach for its servers and employs a periodic data wiping system that activates upon reboots.
The system has a build verification that prevents insider code tampering events and is patched every week with clean installations on every ExpressVPN server.
It will likely be hard to find bugs to leverage, especially after the bug bounty program has been available for the past six years, hence the hike in the payouts.
If you’re confident in your hacking abilities and interested in the above challenge, you can take part in the program from here.