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Security: mrhoodd/ibc-go

Security

SECURITY.md

Coordinated Vulnerability Disclosure Policy

The Cosmos ecosystem believes that strong security is a blend of highly technical security researchers who care about security and the forward progression of the ecosystem and the attentiveness and openness of Cosmos core contributors to help continually secure our operations.

IMPORTANT: DO NOT open public issues on this repository for security vulnerabilities.

Scope

Scope
All actively supported releases branches
main branch

All actively supported release branches (see table in section Stable Release Policy in RELEASES.md) of this repository are supported for security updates as well as the main branch. Security vulnerabilities should be reported if the vulnerability can be reproduced on either one of those.

Reporting a vulnerability

Reporting methods
GitHub Private Vulnerability Reporting
HackerOne bug bounty program

All security vulnerabilities can be reported under GitHub's Private vulnerability reporting system. This will open a private issue for the developers. Try to fill in as much of the questions as possible. If you are not familiar with the CVSS system for assessing vulnerabilities, just use the Low/High/Critical severity ratings. A partially filled in report for a critical vulnerability is still better than no report at all.

Vulnerabilities associated with the Go, Rust or Protobuf code of the repository may be eligible for a bug bounty. Please see the bug bounty page for more details on submissions and rewards. If you think the vulnerability is eligible for a payout, report on HackerOne first.

Vulnerabilities in services and their source codes (JavaScript, web page, Google Workspace) are not in scope for the bug bounty program, but they are welcome to be reported in GitHub.

Guidelines

We require that all researchers:

  • Abide by this policy to disclose vulnerabilities, and avoid posting vulnerability information in public places, including GitHub, Discord, Telegram, and Twitter.
  • Make every effort to avoid privacy violations, degradation of user experience, disruption to production systems (including but not limited to the Cosmos Hub), and destruction of data.
  • Keep any information about vulnerabilities that you’ve discovered confidential between yourself and the Cosmos engineering team until the issue has been resolved and disclosed.
  • Avoid posting personally identifiable information, privately or publicly.

If you follow these guidelines when reporting an issue to us, we commit to:

  • Not pursue or support any legal action related to your research on this vulnerability.
  • Work with you to understand, resolve and ultimately disclose the issue in a timely fashion.

More information

  • See TIMELINE.md for an example timeline of a disclosure.
  • See DISCLOSURE.md to see more into the inner workings of the disclosure process.
  • See EXAMPLES.md for some of the examples that we are interested in for the bug bounty program.

There aren’t any published security advisories