Google announces $2.7 million bounty for hacking Chrome OS

Mave

TMS Founder
Administrator
Messages
236,004
Location
Belgium
Google announces $2.7 million bounty for hacking Chrome OS

Y0vnJPP.png


Google has reportedly announced a whopping 2.7 million dollars bounty if security experts are able to hack its Chrome browser-based OS at the Pwnium 4 hacking contest.

This year at the Pwnium 4, researchers would be allowed to choose between Intel- or ARM-powered laptops, while last year, they had to try to crack a Chromebook with an Intel processor. According to PC World, hackers would be paid prizes of 110,000 dollars and 150,000 dollars for exploiting the Chrome OS, and the highest bounty would be rewarded to those who deliver an exploit able to persistently compromise a Hewlett-Packard or Acer Chromebook.

Last year Google put 3.14159 million dollars in the contest, but paid out just 40,000 dollars to a prolific hacker who goes by “Pinkie Pie,” the contest’s sole participant, for what Google later called a partial exploit. Google said that it would consider larger bonuses to researchers who demonstrated a “particularly impressive or surprising exploit,” like one that could circumvent kASLR, a new variant of the better-known ASLR anti-exploit technology used by Apple, Microsoft and Chrome OS.

The report said that for hackers to qualify for the prizes or bonuses, they must provide functional exploit code and details on all the vulnerabilities put into play. Pwnium 4 is scheduled to take place on March 12 at the Canadian Security conference.

Source: http://www.bgr.in/news/google-announces-2-7-million-bounty-for-hacking-chrome-os/
 
Is there really anything much to hack in Chrome OS?
It's just Chrome with a few other things strapped to a Linux kernel. If this is limited to Chrome OS-only elements and Linux and browser-related things aren't counted, there's probably almost nothing.
OpenBSD is still the master of "nothing at all."
 
novokyiv said:
Is there really anything much to hack in Chrome OS?
It's just Chrome with a few other things strapped to a Linux kernel. If this is limited to Chrome OS-only elements and Linux and browser-related things aren't counted, there's probably almost nothing.
OpenBSD is still the master of "nothing at all."
I'm sure a rootkit/keyloggers could be used to snatch passwords and login data. Or turn it into a botnet zombie.
 
Back
Top Bottom