

Quick
handling
When a vulnerability is found, it needs to get into the right hands quickly. We offer a fast and straightforward approach to disclosing your research and the quickest submission process out there.

Generous
rewards
We believe researchers' efforts should be compensated with the highest payouts. If a vendor doesn’t accept disclosures, we will still be interested in acquiring the vulnerability and reporting it.

Done
discreetly
Many of our researchers utilize our maximum privacy protection and choose to stay anonymous when submitting their findings. We take the privacy of our researchers very seriously and will never disclose any information to third parties (Customers included).
SSD provides the knowledge, experience and tools needed to find and disclose vulnerabilities and advanced attack vectors.
What We Do
01
Submit
The researcher sends us a brief description of the vulnerability for review
02
Signs
the researcher submits the full discovery details and exploits. our team tests aand verifies the findings.
03
validate
SSD signs a detailed contract – focused on protecting your research.
04
get paid
the researcher gets the full payout within a week
05
publish
the vulnerbility is disclosed and published. Full credit is given to the researcher.
Our targets of interest include a vast scale of software and hardware and is being updated constantly. We are always on the lookout for:
mobile
iOS baseband
web
browsers
Chrome (RCE or SBX)
Safari
Firefox (RCE)
SSD Advisory – MacOS Mozilla Firefox Download Protections were bypassed by .atloc / .ftploc Files
Summary A vulnerability in Mozilla Firefox has been found to not show an executable file warning when downloading .atloc and .ftploc files, which can run commands on a user’s computer. Credit Dohyun Lee, working for
Win32k User-Mode Printer Drivers StartDoc UAF
Summary A vulnerability in the UMPD (User-Mode Printer Drivers) allows local users to trigger a use-after-free vulnerability. The vulnerability works from Windows 8 and above, and is fairly easy to exploit on older Windows machines.
Apple Safari JavaScriptCore Inspector Type Confusion
A Type confusion vulnerability exists in the Apple Safari JSC Inspector. This issue causes Memory Corruption due to Type confusion. A victim must open an arbitrary generated HTML file to trigger this vulnerability.