Authors
Daniel Votipka, Rock Stevens, Elissa M Redmiles, Jeremy Hu, Michelle L Mazurek
Publication date
2018
Journal
2018 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP)
Pages
134-151
Description
Identifying security vulnerabilities in software is a critical task that requires significant human effort. Currently, vulnerability discovery is often the responsibility of software testers before release and white-hat hackers (often within bug bounty programs) afterward. This arrangement can be ad-hoc and far from ideal; for example, if testers could identify more vulnerabilities, software would be more secure at release time. Thus far, however, the processes used by each group - and how they compare to and interact with each other - have not been well studied. This paper takes a first step toward better understanding, and eventually improving, this ecosystem: we report on a semi-structured interview study (n=25) with both testers and hackers, focusing on how each group finds vulnerabilities, how they develop their skills, and the challenges they face. The results suggest that hackers and testers follow similar processes, but …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
D Votipka, R Stevens, E Redmiles, J Hu, M Mazurek - 2018 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP), 2018