AI-generated reports overwhelm bug bounty programs
En resumen
- Bug bounty programs are struggling with a surge of low-quality reports generated by AI, leading some companies like Curl and Nextcloud to suspend their programs.
- While AI can help researchers find flaws faster, it has also lowered the barrier to entry, causing an influx of automated or erroneous submissions that are overwhelming security teams.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
Bug bounty programs, where companies pay independent researchers to find software vulnerabilities, are facing a new challenge from AI-generated reports. These programs have become crucial for cybersecurity, with companies like Google disbursing millions of dollars annually for discovered flaws. However, the ease with which AI can generate reports is overwhelming these systems.
Companies that pay hackers to find flaws in their software are being inundated with low-quality reports generated by AI, forcing some to suspend the programs altogether.
Businesses that run “bug bounty” schemes have long relied on independent security researchers to spot vulnerabilities. But the rise of AI tools is now overwhelming them with spurious submissions.
Bugcrowd, whose customers include OpenAI, T-Mobile, and Motorola, said the number of reports it received more than quadrupled over a three-week period in March, with most proving to be false.
Curl, a widely used tool to transfer data across the Internet, suspended its paid bug bounty program in January, citing an “explosion in AI slop reports” and lower-quality submissions.
Cyber security experts say advances in generative AI are reshaping the economics of bug bounty programs. While the tools allow experienced researchers to find flaws more quickly, they are also lowering the barrier to entry, triggering a flood of automated or erroneous submissions that companies must sift through.
The big increase in poor-quality AI reports was “quickly becoming a major problem,” said Ross McKerchar, chief information security officer at cyber security group Sophos. “Bug bounties are going to stay [but] they’re going to have to change,” he said.
Bug bounties have grown in popularity since the early 2000s, with schemes offering six-figure payouts for the biggest discoveries. Google’s program disbursed a total of $17 million last year, up from $7.5 million in 2021. It paid its largest individual reward of $605,000 in 2022 to a user who spotted a vulnerability in its Android mobile operating system.
McKerchar said the rise in poor-quality submissions came from both amateurs trying to find bugs for the first time and existing researchers who were “sometimes getting led on by the [AI] agents.”
He added there was a “third cohort” of “experienced AI builders” who had developed automated “end-to-end scanning and submission systems” that were “creating absolute carnage.”
Curl’s creator, Daniel Stenberg, wrote in a blog post that the “never-ending slop” had taken “a serious mental toll to manage and sometimes also a long time to debunk.”
Software group Nextcloud suspended its bug bounty program in April because of the “massive increase of low-quality reports.” It said it hoped to resume the program once it had found a way to filter submissions effectively.
The surge in AI-generated reports comes as Anthropic last month launched Mythos, its new cyber AI model, which it says can find software flaws faster than humans.
Companies running bug bounty programs have started to introduce more stringent background checks to combat the problem, as well as building AI agents to triage submissions.
HackerOne, whose bug-reporting platform serves Goldman Sachs, Google, and the US Department of Defense, said it had “introduced new agentic validation capabilities” this year to “help organizations manage high volumes of findings,” such as those generated by models like Mythos.
The company said submissions had jumped 76 percent in the year to March. But it said the share of reports flagging legitimate vulnerabilities had remained steady over the past year at 25 percent.
HackerOne chief executive Kara Sprague said it had in recent weeks seen a rise in “higher quality” reports that had used AI. She added that the rise in AI-generated submissions was “not a strong reason to say we don’t want them” altogether, given that hackers were using the technology to spot more flaws.
Bugcrowd chief Dave Gerry said developments such as Anthropic’s Mythos would assist human bug bounty hunters, not replace them. “AI is going to help with a lot of things but we’re never going to replace that human creativity,” he said.
© 2026 The Financial Times Ltd. All rights reserved. Not to be redistributed, copied, or modified in any way.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
Bug bounty programs will implement more sophisticated AI-driven filtering and validation systems.
Muy probable · En meses
The economics of bug bounties will shift, potentially leading to tiered reward systems based on the quality and novelty of AI-assisted findings.
Probable · Medio plazo
There will be a rise in specialized AI detection services for bug bounty platforms.
Posible · Medio plazo
Preguntas abiertas
- How will companies effectively filter AI-generated reports in the future?
- What new strategies will bug bounty programs implement to ensure quality submissions?
- Will the cost of bug bounties increase due to the need for more sophisticated AI detection and human review?
- What is the long-term impact of AI on the cybersecurity research landscape?






