The Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB) is committed to ensuring the security of the American public by protecting agency information technology systems. This policy is intended to give security researchers clear guidelines for conducting vulnerability discovery activities and to convey the DNFSB preferences in how to submit discovered vulnerabilities to the agency.
This policy describes what systems and types of research are covered under this policy, how to send vulnerability reports, and how long DNFSB asks security researchers to wait before publicly disclosing vulnerabilities.
DNFSB encourages members of the public to contact the agency to report potential vulnerabilities in agency systems.
If you make a good faith effort to comply with this policy during your security research, DNFSB will consider your research to be authorized; the agency will work with you to understand and resolve the issue quickly, and the DNFSB will not recommend or pursue legal action related to your research. Should legal action be initiated by a third party against you for activities that were conducted in accordance with this policy, the agency will make this authorization known to the third party. Guidelines Under this policy, “research” means activities in which you:
Once you have established that a vulnerability exists or encounter any sensitive data (including personally identifiable information, financial information, or proprietary information or trade secrets of any party), you must stop your test, notify the agency immediately, and not download, retain, or disclose this data to anyone else.
The following test methods are not authorized:
Testing must comply with Federal and State laws.
This policy applies to the following systems and services:
Any service not expressly listed above, such as any connected services, are excluded from scope and are not authorized for testing. Additionally, vulnerabilities found in systems from DNFSB vendors fall outside of this policy’s scope and should be reported directly to the vendor according to the vendor’s disclosure policy (if any). If you are not sure whether a system is in scope or not, contact the agency at vulnerability@dnfsb.gov before starting your research (or at the security contact for the system’s domain name listed in the .gov WHOIS).
Though the DNFSB maintains other internet-accessible systems or services, DNFSB asks that active research and testing only be conducted on the systems and services covered by the scope of this Policy. If there is a particular system not in scope that you think merits testing, please contact the DNFSB to request testing permission. DNFSB may increase the scope of this policy over time.
Information submitted under this policy will be used for defensive purposes only – to mitigate or remediate vulnerabilities. If your findings include newly discovered vulnerabilities that affect all users of a product or service and not solely the DNFSB, DNFSB may share your report with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, where it will be handled under their coordinated vulnerability disclosure process. The DNFSB will not share your name or contact information without your express permission.
We accept vulnerability reports through our bugcrowd program (<https://bugcrowd.com/dnfsb-vdp>) and questions can be directed to dnfsb-vdp@submit.bugcrowd.com.
In order to help the agency triage and prioritize submissions, DNFSB recommends that your reports:
When you choose to share your contact information with the DNFSB, we commit to coordinating with you as openly and as quickly as possible.
Questions regarding this policy may be sent to dnfsb-vdp@submit.bugcrowd.com. The DNFSB also invites you to contact us with suggestions for improving this policy.
This program crawled on the 2021-04-28 is sorted as cvd.
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