"Hack the Pentagon 3.0 Bug Bounty Program to Focus on Facility Control Systems"

The US Department of Defense (DoD) is getting ready to launch the third installment of its "Hack the Pentagon" bug bounty program, which will focus on the Facility Related Controls System (FRCS) network.  Hack the Pentagon was first launched in 2016 on HackerOne when the DoD invited ethical hackers to find and report security defects in Pentagon's public web pages.  The DoD announced in 2018 a continuous Hack the Pentagon program running year-long on Bugcrowd and targeting vulnerabilities in hardware and physical systems and other high-value assets.  According to a draft solicitation released on Friday, as part of Hack the Pentagon 3.0, DoD will rely on ethical hackers to identify vulnerabilities in FRCS.  The DoD's FRCS includes control systems that are used to monitor and control equipment and systems related to real property facilities, such as HVAC, utilities, physical security systems, and fire and safety systems.  The DoD noted that the overall objective is to obtain support from a pool of innovative information security researchers via crowdsourcing for vulnerability discovery, coordination, and disclosure activities and to assess the current cybersecurity posture of the FRCS network, identify weaknesses and vulnerabilities, and provide recommendations to improve and strengthen the overall security posture.  The DoD will establish the eligibility criteria for the participating researchers, and participants will have to be able to perform reverse engineering, source code analysis, and network and system exploitation.  The bounty execution or challenge phase itself is expected to last no more than 72 hours in person.  

 

SecurityWeek reports: "Hack the Pentagon 3.0 Bug Bounty Program to Focus on Facility Control Systems"

 

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