The recent Cambridge Analytica scandal rocked Facebook, prompting the company to examine more closely where its masses of user data ends up and how it’s utilized.
As part of those efforts, the social networking giant this week announced it’s expanding its bug bounty program to include third-party apps and websites that let people use their Facebook accounts to log in.
The company says it’s focusing on the access tokens that are uniquely generated for the specific user and app during login.
“The user decides what information the token and app can access as well as what actions can be taken … [but] a token can potentially be misused,” Dan Gurfinkel, Facebook security engineering manager, explained in a post announcing the expanded program.
Gurfinkel said it will pay at least $500 to anyone who spots vulnerabilities that involve “improper exposure of Facebook user access tokens.” The more serious the issue, the greater the amount
He added that Facebook is using the program in an effort to create a clear channel for people to report any issues they come across, “and we want to do our part to protect people’s information, even if the source of a bug is not in our direct control.”
Once an issue has been confirmed by Facebook’s own researchers, it will contact the app or website developer to help them fix their code, and they’ll be suspended from the platform until the issue has been resolved.
“We will also automatically revoke access tokens that could have been compromised to prevent potential misuse, and alert those we believe to be affected,” Gurfinkel said.
The security engineering manager pointed out that Facebook will only accept reports “if the bug is discovered by passively viewing the data sent to or from your device while using the vulnerable app or website.” In other words, researchers are not allowed to “manipulate any request sent to the app or website from your device, or otherwise interfere with the ordinary functioning of the app or website in connection with submitting your report.”
If a flaw is reported by two people working independently of each other, the payment goes to the person who submits the report first. And if the researcher is feeling generous and would like to donate the bounty to charity, Facebook will double the value of the donation.
The expansion of its bug bounty program comes four months after Facebook launched the Data Abuse Bounty Program, another consequence of the damaging Cambridge Analytica scandal in which a third-party app helped to harvest the data of up to 87 million
The Data Abuse Bounty program rewards users who discover and report any app or service connected to Facebook that misuses data, specifically, where “a
Facebook described its Data Abuse Bounty Program as an industry first.