PhreakByte the Octopus
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nieldk.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
PhreakByte the Octopus
@nieldk.infosec.exchange.ap.brid.gy
About Me

I’m Niel, a father at first, working as a Cloud Security Specialist and drive my own business doing penetration tests and Security advisories.

My […]

🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://infosec.exchange/@nieldk, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
Way too many people at the #sailfishos booth yesterday! Today I managed to squeeze through for a minute. The new #jolla Phone seems to attract attention!

#fosdem #fosdem2026 #linuxonmobile
February 1, 2026 at 6:36 PM
Summer 2013
January 31, 2026 at 5:10 PM
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
If you're a pretty awesome #devops #clouddevops and you have an EU passport, feel free to send me a DM #fedihired
January 30, 2026 at 3:43 PM
created a tool to automate the extraction of vulnerability data from a Nessus Professional instance. It generates organized, multi-tabbed Excel reports for individual scans and provides a combined "Master" report for high-level oversight. https://codeberg.org/nieldk/nessusparser
nessusparser
This tool automates the extraction of vulnerability data from a Nessus Professional instance. It generates organized, multi-tabbed Excel reports for individual scans and provides a combined "Master" report for high-level oversight.
codeberg.org
January 29, 2026 at 12:08 PM
created a tool to automate the extraction of historical vulnerability data from Nessus (Pro) , calculates remediation/improvement rates, and generates professional Excel reports for individual scans and a master summary overview. https://codeberg.org/nieldk/nessus-trend-reporter
nessus-trend-reporter
This tool automates the extraction of historical vulnerability data from Nessus, calculates remediation/improvement rates, and generates professional Excel reports for individual scans and a master summary overview.
codeberg.org
January 29, 2026 at 8:26 AM
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
Fortinet would like you to know that they've released a patch that let any forticloud account access any other fortinet device that used forticloud for authentication. You may express thanks now.

https://fortiguard.fortinet.com/psirt/FG-IR-26-060
PSIRT | FortiGuard Labs
None
fortiguard.fortinet.com
January 28, 2026 at 6:33 PM
Rutte is on a roll embracing facist regime, yes, #trump is who I refer to 🤮
January 26, 2026 at 4:48 PM
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
RE: https://mstdn.dk/@kbhpoliti/115961983108199384

Kan man få 19 dages fængsel for butikstyveri? Ja, åbenbart.
mstdn.dk
January 26, 2026 at 4:32 PM
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
The end of the curl bug-bounty
tldr: an attempt to reduce the _terror reporting_. **There is no longer a curl bug-bounty program.** It officially stops on January 31, 2026. After having had a few half-baked previous takes, in April 2019 we kicked off the first real curl bug-bounty with the help of Hackerone, and while it stumbled a bit at first it has been quite successful I think. We attracted skilled researchers who reported plenty of actual vulnerabilities for which we paid fine monetary rewards. We have certainly made curl better as a direct result of this: **87 confirmed vulnerabilities and over 100,000 USD** paid as rewards to researchers. I’m quite happy and proud of this accomplishment. I would like to especially highlight the awesome Internet Bug Bounty project, which has paid the bounties for us for many years. We could not have done this without them. Also of course Hackerone, who has graciously hosted us and been our partner through these years. Thanks! ## How we got here Looking back, I think we can say that the downfall of the bug-bounty program started slowly in the second half of 2024 but accelerated badly in 2025. We saw an explosion in AI slop reports combined with a lower quality even in the reports that were not obvious slop – presumably because they too were actually misled by AI but with that fact just hidden better. Maybe the first five years made it possible for researchers to find and report the low hanging fruit. Previous years we have had a rate of somewhere north of 15% of the submissions ending up confirmed vulnerabilities. Starting 2025, the confirmed-rate plummeted to below 5%. Not even one in twenty was _real_. The never-ending slop submissions take a serious mental toll to manage and sometimes also a long time to debunk. Time and energy that is completely wasted while also hampering our will to live. I have also started to get the feeling that a lot of the security reporters submit reports with a _bad faith attitude._ These “helpers” try too hard to twist whatever they find into something horribly bad and a critical vulnerability, but they rarely actively contribute to actually _improve_ curl. They can go to extreme efforts to argue and insist on their specific current finding, but not to write a fix or work with the team on improving curl long-term etc. I don’t think we need more of that. There are these three bad trends combined that makes us take this step: the mind-numbing AI slop, humans doing worse than ever and the apparent will to poke holes rather than to help. ## Actions In an attempt to do something about the sorry state of curl security reports, this is what we do: * We no longer offer any monetary rewards for security reports – no matter which severity. In an attempt to remove the incentives for submitting made up lies. * We stop using Hackerone as the recommended channel to report security problems. To make the change immediately obvious and because without a bug-bounty program we don’t need it. * We refer everyone to submit suspected curl security problems on GitHub using their _Private vulnerability reporting_ feature. * We continue to immediately _ban and publicly_ _ridicule_ everyone who submits AI slop to the project. ## Maintain curl security We believe that we can maintain and continue to evolve curl security in spite of this change. Maybe even improve thanks to this, as hopefully this step helps prevent more people pouring sand into the machine. Ideally we reduce the amount of wasted time and effort. I believe the best and our most valued security reporters still will tell us when they find security vulnerabilities. ## Instead If you suspect a security problem in curl going forward, we advise you to head over to GitHub and submit them there. Alternatively, you send an email with the full report to `security @ curl.se`. In both cases, the report is received and handled privately by the curl security team. But with _no monetary reward offered_. ## Leaving Hackerone Hackerone was good to us and they have graciously allowed us to run our program on their platform for free for many years. We thank them for that service. As we now drop the rewards, we feel it makes a clear cut and displays a clearer message to everyone involved by also moving away from Hackerone as a platform for vulnerability reporting. It makes the change more visible. ## Future disclosures It is probably going to be harder for us to publicly disclose every incoming security report in the same way we have done it on Hackerone for the last year. We need to work out something to make sure that we can keep doing it at least imperfectly, because I believe in the goodness of such transparency. ## We stay on GitHub Let me emphasize that this change does not impact our presence and mode of operation with the curl repository and its hosting on GitHub. We hear about projects having problems with low-quality AI slop submissions on GitHub as well, in the form of issues and pull-requests, but for curl we have not (yet) seen this – and frankly I don’t think switching to a GitHub alternative saves us from that. ## Other projects do better Compared to others, we seem to be affected by the sloppy security reports to a higher degree than the average Open Source project. With the help of Hackerone, we got numbers of how the curl bug-bounty has compared with other programs over the last year. It turns out curl’s program has seen more volume and noise than other public open source bug bounty programs in the same cohort. Over the past four quarters, curl’s inbound report volume has risen sharply, while other bounty-paying open source programs in the cohort, such as Ruby, Node, and Rails, have not seen a meaningful increase and have remained mostly flat or declined slightly. In the chart, the pink line represents curl’s report volume, and the gray line reflects the broader cohort. Inbound Report Volume on Hackerone: curl compared to OSS peers We suspect the idea of getting money for it is a big part of the explanation. It brings in real reports, but makes it too easy to be annoying with little to no penalty to the user. The reputation system and available program settings were not sufficient for us to prevent sand from getting into the machine. The exact reason why we suffer more of this abuse than others remains a subject for further speculation and research. ## If the volume keeps up There is a non-zero risk that our guesses are wrong and that the volume and security report frequency will keep up even after these changes go into effect. If that happens, we will deal with it then and take further appropriate steps. I prefer not to overdo things or _overplan_ already now for something that ideally does not happen. ## We won’t charge People keep suggesting that one way to deal with the report tsunami is to _charge_ security researchers a small amount of money for the privilege of submitting a vulnerability report to us. A _curl reporters security club_ with an entrance fee. I think that is a less good solution than just dropping the bounty. Some of the reasons include: * Charging people money in an International context is complicated and a maintenance burden. * Dealing with charge-backs, returns and other complaints and friction add work. * It would limit who could or would submit issues. Even some who actually find legitimate issues. Maybe we need to do this later anyway, but we stay away from it for now. ## Pull requests are less of a problem We have seen other projects and repositories see similar AI-induced problems for pull requests, but this has not been a problem for the curl project. I believe for PRs we have better much means to sort out the weed with automatic means, since we have tools, tests and scanners to verify such contributions. We don’t need to waste any human time on pull requests until the quality is good enough to get green check-marks from 200 CI jobs. ## Related I will do a talk at FOSDEM 2026 titled Open Source Security in spite of AI that of course will touch on this subject. ## Future We never say never. This is now and we might have reasons to reconsider and make a different decision in the future. If we do, we will let you know. These changes are applied now with the hope that they will have a positive effect for the project and its maintainers. If that turns out to not be the outcome, we will of course continue and apply further changes later. ## Media Since I created the pull request for updating the bug-bounty information for curl on January 14, almost two weeks before we merged it, various media picked up the news and published articles. Long before I posted this blog post. * The Register: Curl shutters bug bounty program to remove incentive for submitting AI slop * Elektroniktidningen: cURL removes bug bounties * Heise online: curl: Projekt beendet Bug-Bounty-Programm * Neowin: Beloved tool, cURL is shutting down its bug bounty over AI slop reports * Golem: Curl-Entwickler dreht dem “KI-Schrott” den Geldhahn zu * Linux Easy: cURL chiude il programma bug bounty: troppi report generati dall’AI * Bleeping Computer: Curl ending bug bounty program after flood of AI slop reports * The New Stack: Drowning in AI slop, cURL ends bug bounties * Ars Technica: Overrun with AI slop, cURL scraps bug bounties to ensure “intact mental health” * PressMind Labs: cURL ko?czy program bug bounty – czy to koniec jako?ci zg?osze?? * Socket: curl Shuts Down Bug Bounty Program After Flood of AI Slop Reports Also discussed (indirectly) on Hacker News.
daniel.haxx.se
January 26, 2026 at 7:25 AM
OK! Email sent 🤣

“Dear Mr. President,
Following your recent remarks regarding the defense of Greenland and your productive meetings in Davos, I am writing to suggest a bold, strategic move to further American interests in the Arctic.
To truly understand the "ground truth" of the territory and […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
January 24, 2026 at 2:13 PM
Idea! Invite #trump for a trip with Sirius Dog Sled Patrol, just for a few days (bonus if he gets lost)
January 24, 2026 at 1:34 PM
🤣 Dear Whitehouse, there are no Penguins on Greenland
January 24, 2026 at 7:22 AM
Signed up to get my license for #hamradio in may. Wish me luck this time 🤭
January 23, 2026 at 5:03 PM
Trump’s "Board of Peace" is a move toward "transactional diplomacy," where global power is sold to the highest bidder.

• Pay-to-Play Seats: Permanent seats on the board cost $1 billion, turning international conflict resolution into a private club for the wealthy rather than a system based on […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
January 22, 2026 at 1:10 PM
Mark Rutte and a few other European leaders are waiting in the hallway outside the Oval Office.

After a few minutes, Rutte walks out, looking incredibly satisfied.

One of the other leaders whispers, "Mark, be honest. We saw you in there. How far are you willing to go to keep him happy? People […]
Original post on infosec.exchange
infosec.exchange
January 22, 2026 at 12:49 PM
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
A Linux phone, nicely styled, with a replaceable battery and an emphasis on privacy — it even has a physical privacy/kill switch — sounds absolutely brilliant.

It's purely European as well (EU, UK, Norway and Switzerland) which is going to appeal to a lot of people. Or should. No dependence on […]
Original post on mastodon.scot
mastodon.scot
January 20, 2026 at 2:41 AM
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
"Vi foreslår, at frivilligt arbejde med open source-software anerkendes som en samfundsgavnlig indsats på linje med frivilligt arbejde i almennyttige foreninger."

@jarlcordua.bsky.social måske noget, der kunne slås et slag for?

www.borgerforslag.dk/se-og-stoet-...
Anerkendelse af frivilligt arbejde med open source som samfundsgavnlig indsats med juridiske og skattemæssige fordele
Vi foreslår, at frivilligt arbejde med open source-software anerkendes som en samfundsgavnlig indsats på linje med frivilligt arbejde i almennyttige f
www.borgerforslag.dk
January 11, 2026 at 12:40 PM
Reposted by PhreakByte the Octopus
Bluesky has seen a 40% rise of app installs in the past few weeks, which is consistent with the increase in activity that is visible in other metrics

Via @sarahp.bsky.social
Bluesky rolls out cashtags and LIVE badges amid a boost in app installs | TechCrunch
Bluesky adds new features to its app amid a boost in installs due to the deepfake drama on X.
techcrunch.com
January 18, 2026 at 9:44 PM
infosec.exchange
January 18, 2026 at 8:03 AM
The Trump administration has been called out, yet again, for using explicitly white supremacist verbiage in its increasingly aggressive social media strategy.

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/14/trump-administration-white-supremacist-language
January 17, 2026 at 7:23 PM
Where did they go? #caturday
January 17, 2026 at 7:12 PM