Microsoft has launched a new AI bounty program. This program is the result of investments and learnings from recent months, including an AI security research challenge and an update to Microsoft’s vulnerability severity classification for AI systems. Lynn Miyashita, a technical program manager with the Microsoft Security Response Center, shared this information.
The Microsoft AI bug bounty program
By infosecbulletin
/ Friday , May 9 2025
Microsoft has fixed critical vulnerabilities in its core cloud services, including Azure Automation, Azure Storage, Azure DevOps, and Microsoft Power...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Thursday , May 8 2025
The cyber threat landscape is rapidly changing, with a notable increase in ransomware activity in April 2025, driven by the...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Thursday , May 8 2025
SonicWall has released patches for three security flaws in SMA 100 Secure Mobile Access appliances that could allow remote code...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Thursday , May 8 2025
From April 2024 to April 2025, Flashpoint analysts noted that the financial sector was a major target for threat actors,...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Thursday , May 8 2025
Cisco has issued a security advisory for a critical vulnerability in its IOS XE Software for Wireless LAN Controllers (WLCs)....
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Wednesday , May 7 2025
Attackers linked to the Play ransomware operation deployed a zero-day privilege escalation exploit during an attempted attack against an organization...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Wednesday , May 7 2025
Hackers are exploiting an unauthenticated remote code execution vulnerability in the Samsung MagicINFO 9 Server to take control of devices...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Tuesday , May 6 2025
CISA added the Langflow vulnerability, CVE-2025-3248 (CVSS score 9.8), to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog. Langflow is a popular tool...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Tuesday , May 6 2025
Google has released its monthly Android security updates, addressing 46 vulnerabilities, including one that has been actively exploited. CVE-2025-27363 (CVSS...
Read More
By infosecbulletin
/ Tuesday , May 6 2025
The Cyber Security Club, representing the Department of Computer Science and Engineering at the University of Asia Pacific (UAP), has...
Read More
Microsoft wants bug hunters to test AI-powered Bing features on bing.com using a browser. They also want them to test Bing integration on Microsoft Edge, including Bing Chat for Enterprise. Additionally, they want testers to check the Bing integration in the iOS and Android versions of Microsoft Start and Skype mobile apps.
They should report vulnerabilities that could be exploited to:
* Manipulate the model’s response to individual inference requests, but do not modify the model itself (“inference manipulation”)
* Manipulate a model during the training phase (“model manipulation”)
* Infer information about the model’s training data, architecture and weights, or inference-time input data (“inferential information disclosure”)
* Influence/change Bing’s chat behavior in a way that impacts all other users
* Modify Bing’s chat behavior by adjusting client and/or server visible configuration
* Break Bing’s cross-conversation memory protections and history deletion
* Reveal Bing’s internal workings and prompts, decision making processes and confidential information
* Bypass Bing’s chat mode session limits and/or restrictions/rules
Click here to read more