Google has plugged 50 security vulnerabilities in the latest update to the Chrome browser.
Among the issues fixed in Chrome 37
are a number of bugs that can be used together to break out of the
Chrome sandbox and execute code remotely. That discovery earned the
researcher behind it a $30,000 bug bounty. Several other vulnerabilities
earned researchers between $500 and $4,000.
Here are some of the bugs fixed in the update and their associated rewards:
[$30000][386988]
Critical CVE-2014-3176, CVE-2014-3177: A special reward to
lokihardt@asrt for a combination of bugs in V8, IPC, sync, and
extensions that can lead to remote code execution outside of the
sandbox.
[$2000][369860] High CVE-2014-3168: Use-after-free in SVG. Credit to cloudfuzzer.
[$2000][387389] High CVE-2014-3169: Use-after-free in DOM. Credit to Andrzej Dyjak.
[$1000][390624] High CVE-2014-3170: Extension permission dialog spoofing. Credit to Rob Wu.
[$4000][390928] High CVE-2014-3171: Use-after-free in bindings. Credit to cloudfuzzer.
[$1500][367567] Medium CVE-2014-3172: Issue related to extension debugging. Credit to Eli Grey.
[$2000][376951] Medium CVE-2014-3173: Uninitialized memory read in WebGL. Credit to jmuizelaar.
[$500][389219] Medium CVE-2014-3174: Uninitialized memory read in Web Audio. Credit to Atte Kettunen from OUSPG.
"We would also like to thank Collin
Payne, Christoph Diehl, Sebastian Mauer, Atte Kettunen, and cloudfuzzer
for working with us during the development cycle to prevent security
bugs from ever reaching the stable channel," according to Google. "$8000
in additional rewards were issued."
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