Just as the title says; if I found a serious security issue (e.g. which makes it possible to use spam bots, sign in with fake OpenIDs etc...), what should I do?

  • Add a bug report on meta (which makes it possible for everyone to abuse it if they know the issue exists :-) )
  • Contact the Stack Overflow team (Jeff Atwood etc...)
  • Something different?

Thanks,

Oh, I don't say I found one, but, well, just in case...

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57% accept rate
You should use it to give me more rep then Jon Skeet! – Dexter Sep 15 '09 at 20:42
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4 Answers

E-mail team@stackoverflow.com

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...and put in your bid for the Hacker badge. – Bill the Lizard Sep 15 '09 at 19:52
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To @Adam's answer, I would also add that after giving the developers some time to fix the problem, if there is still no solution, I believe that it is appropriate to go public with it. As long as the developer is genuinely working with you to solve the problem and isn't simply invoking delaying tactics, I would hold off on going public. If they have had enough time and still haven't addressed it, then going public is a last resort to getting them to address a security issue. I wouldn't go so far as to give an implementation, but you should be able to give enough information that the problem is obvious to others.

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We encourage all security reports to be sent to team@stackoverflow.com and they are all followed up on.

That said I currently don't see any in the mailbox..

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Maybe he's just asking a hypothetical? Just in case though: everybody look for the hole! – TM. Sep 15 '09 at 21:47
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Falls into a hole. – Ólafur Waage Sep 15 '09 at 21:48
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Ólafur, look out for the hole. – Bill the Lizard Sep 16 '09 at 2:02
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In addition to the hypothetical angle, I have a feeling this is a "Future Reference" kind of question... – Margaret Sep 16 '09 at 11:50
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I agree with @tvanfosson in that if nothing is done, then you should bring the information public. This is in line with the classic Full Disclosure Policy (RFPolicy), which seems very reasonable, at least in my opinion.

This doesn't mean that the team must fix it right away, but it does mean that they must get back to you right away, and you should be satisfied that they are actively working to fix the problem.

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