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Security: co-cddo/bimi

Security

SECURITY.md

Security Notice

What?

This is the security notice for all Cabinet Office Central Digital and Data Office (CDDO) repositories. The notice explains how vulnerabilities should be reported. At Cabinet Office there are cyber security and information assurance teams, as well as security-conscious people within the programmes, that assess and triage all reported vulnerabilities.

Reporting a Vulnerability

Cabinet Office and the CDDO are advocates of responsible vulnerability disclosure. If you’ve found a vulnerability, we would like to know so we can fix it. This notice provides details for how you can let us know about vulnerabilities, additionally you can view our security.txt file, here: https://vdp.cabinetoffice.gov.uk/.well-known/security.txt

You can report a vulnerability through our vulnerability disclosure programme at HackerOne. Alternatively, you can send an email to disclosure@digital.cabinet-office.gov.uk; if you do this you may get a response from Zendesk, which is our ticketing system.

When reporting a vulnerability to us, please include:

  • the website, page or repository where the vulnerability can be observed
  • a brief description of the vulnerability
  • details of the steps we need to take to reproduce the vulnerability
  • non-destructive exploitation details

If you are able to, please also include:

  • the type of vulnerability, for example, the OWASP category
  • screenshots or logs showing the exploitation of the vulnerability

Reach out via email if you are not sure if the vulnerability is genuine and exploitable, or you have found:

  • a non-exploitable vulnerability
  • something you think could be improved - for example, missing security headers
  • TLS configuration weaknesses - for example weak cipher suite support or the presence of TLS1.0 support

Guidelines for reporting a vulnerability

When you are investigating and reporting the vulnerability on a gov.uk domain or subdomain, you must not:

  • break the law
  • access unnecessary or excessive amounts of data
  • modify data
  • use high-intensity invasive or destructive scanning tools to find vulnerabilities
  • try a denial of service - for example overwhelming a service with a high volume of requests
  • disrupt our services or systems
  • tell other people about the vulnerability you have found until we have disclosed it
  • social engineer, phish or physically attack our staff or infrastructure
  • demand money to disclose a vulnerability

Only submit reports about exploitable vulnerabilities through HackerOne.

Bug bounty

Unfortunately, Cabinet Office doesn't offer a paid bug bounty programme. We will make efforts to show appreciation to people who take the time and effort to disclose vulnerabilities responsibly. We do have an acknowledgements page for legitimate issues found by researchers.


Further reading and inspiration about responsible disclosure and SECURITY.md

There aren’t any published security advisories