avatar
Bug bounty
Public

WGR Industries - Open Bug Bounty Program

WGR belongs to the VidaXL industrial sector and includes two factories in Ningbo and Vietnam. Its mission is to offer convenient products to customers, with good price and service. Following the value orientation of "Customer Focus, People Oriented, Continuous Innovation", WGR is committed to becoming the world's leading brand for affordable home furniture.

Reward

Bounty
Hall of fame
€50
Low
€50
Medium
€250
High
€800
Critical
€2,000

Program

Avg reward
-
Max reward
-
Scope
1

Supported languages
English

Hacktivity

Reports
4
1st response
< 1 day
Reports last 24h
2
Reports last week
4
Reports this month
4

WGR Industry holding

WGR Industries is a company that delivers many services to its customers.

We’re excited to invite security researchers, ethical hackers, and the broader infosec community to participate in our open bug bounty program. Security is a priority for us, and we believe that working together with the community is one of the most effective ways to ensure our systems, users, and data stay safe.

If you discover a vulnerability that could impact the confidentiality, integrity, or availability of our services, we want to hear from you. In return, we offer recognition, rewards, and our full cooperation in validating and resolving legitimate reports.

Scopes description

Everything you can find in relation to the listed domains.

Program Rules

Testing Policy, Responsible Disclosure

Please adhere to the following rules while performing research on this program:

  • Denial of service (DoS) attacks on WGR Industry holding applications, servers, networks or infrastructure are strictly forbidden.
  • Avoid tests that could cause degradation or interruption of our services.
  • Do not use automated scanners or tools that generate large amount of network traffic
  • Do not leak, copy, manipulate, or destroy any user data or files in any of our applications/servers.
  • No vulnerability disclosure, full, partial or otherwise, is allowed.
  • Make sure to apply hunting requirements policy (User-Agent, VPN...)

Reports of leaks and exposed credentials

In the context of this program, we do not intend to encourage, accept or reward reports of leaks that are not applicable to our program’s scope and identified outside of our program’s scope, such as:

  • Exposed credentials in/from an out-of-scope asset/source
  • Sensitive information exposed in/from an out-of-scope asset/source

Also, in order not to encourage dark and grey economies, in particular the purchase, resale and trade of identifiers or stolen information, as well as all types of dangerous behavior (e.g. social engineering, ...), we will not accept or reward any report based on information whose source is not the result of failure on the part of our organization or one of our employees/service providers.

This excludes, but is not limited to:

  • Stolen credentials gathered from unidentified sources (e.g. …)
  • Exposed credentials that are not applicable on the program’s scope
  • Exposed GitHub/GitLab (or similar) instance with no direct relation with our program’s scope
  • Exposed secrets (e.g. API tokens/keys or other technical credentials) that are not directly related to the program’s scope
  • Exposed PII on an out-of-scope asset

To summarize our policy, you may refer to this table :

Source of leak is in-scope Source of leak belongs to WGR Industries but is out-of-scope Source of leak does not belong to WGR Industries and is out-of-scope
Impact is in-scope (e.g. valid credentials on an in-scope asset) Eligible Eligible Eligible
Impact is out-of-scope (e.g. valid credentials for an out-of-scope asset) Not Eligible Not Eligible Not Eligible

Important precautions and limitations

As a complement to the Program’s rules and testing policy :

  • DO NOT alter compromised accounts by creating, deleting or modifying any data
  • DO NOT use compromised accounts to search for post-auth vulnerabilities (they won’t be eligible anyway)
  • DO NOT include Personally Identifiable Information (PII) in your report and please REDACT/OBFUSCATE the PII that is part of your PoC (screenshot, server response, JSON file, etc.) as much as possible.
  • In case of exposed credentials or secrets, limit yourself to verifying the credentials validity
  • In case of sensitive information leak, DO NOT extract/copy every document or data that is exposed and limit yourself to describe and list what is exposed.

Reward Eligibility

We are happy to thank everyone who submits valid reports which help us improve the security of WGR Industry holding, however only those that meet the following eligibility requirements may receive a monetary reward:

  • You must be the first reporter of a vulnerability.
  • The vulnerability must be a qualifying vulnerability
  • The report must contain the following elements:
    • Clear textual description of the vulnerability, how it can be exploited, the security impact it has on the application, its users and WGR Industry holding, and remediation advice on fixing the vulnerability
    • Proof of exploitation: screenshots demonstrating the exploit was performed, and showing the final impact
    • Provide complete steps with the necessary information to reproduce the exploit, including (if necessary) code snippets, payloads, commands etc
  • You must not break any of the testing policy rules listed above
  • You must not be a former or current employee of WGR Industry holding or one of its contractors.

Reward amounts are based on:

  • Reward grid of the report's scope
  • CVSS scoring and actual business impact of the vulnerability upon performing risk analysis

Reward

Asset value CVSS
Low
CVSS
Medium
CVSS
High
CVSS
Critical
High
€50€250€800€2,000

Scopes

ScopeTypeAsset value
https://wgr-industries.com Other
High
Low
€50
Medium
€250
High
€800
Critical
€2,000

Out of scopes

  • All domains (and their subdomains) not listed in the above list of 'Scopes'

Vulnerability types

Qualifying vulnerabilities

  • SQL Injection (SQLi)
  • Cross-Site Scripting (XSS)
  • Remote Code Execution (RCE)
  • Insecure Direct Object Reference (IDOR)
  • Horizontal and vertical privilege escalation
  • Authentication bypass & broken authentication
  • Business Logic Errors vulnerability with real security impact
  • Local files access and manipulation (LFI, RFI, XXE, SSRF, XSPA)
  • Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) with real security impact
  • Cross-site Request Forgery (CSRF) with real security impact
  • Open Redirect
  • Exposed secrets, credentials or sensitive information on an asset under our control and affecting at least one of our scopes

Non-qualifying vulnerabilities

  • Broken Link/Social media Hijacking
  • Tabnabbing
  • Missing cookie flags
  • Content/Text injections
  • Clickjacking/UI redressing
  • Denial of Service (DoS) attacks
  • Recently disclosed CVEs (less than 30 days sinces patch release)
  • CVEs without exploitable vulnerabilities and PoC
  • Open ports or services without exploitable vulnerabilities and PoC
  • Social engineering of staff or contractors
  • Presence of autocomplete attribute on web forms
  • Vulnerabilities affecting outdated browsers or platforms
  • Self-XSS or XSS that cannot be used to impact other users
  • Any hypothetical flaw or best practices without exploitable vulnerabilities and PoC
  • SSL/TLS issues (e.g. expired certificates, best practices)
  • Unexploitable vulnerabilities (e.g. Self-XSS, XSS or Open Redirect through HTTP headers...)
  • Reports with attack scenarios requiring MITM or physical access to victim's device
  • Missing security-related HTTP headers which do not lead directly to an exploitable vulnerability and PoC
  • Low severity Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) (e.g. Unauthenticated / Logout / Login / Products cart updates...)
  • Invalid or missing email security records (e.g. SPF, DKIM, DMARC)
  • Session management issues (e.g. lack of expiration, no logout on password change, concurrent sessions)
  • Disclosure of information without exploitable vulnerabilities and PoC (e.g. stack traces, path disclosure, directory listings, software versions, IP disclosure, 3rd party secrets, EXIF Metadata, Origin IP)
  • CSV injection
  • Malicious file upload (e.g. EICAR files, .EXE)
  • HTTP Strict Transport Security Header (HSTS)
  • Subdomain takeover without a full exploitable vulnerability and PoC or not applicable to the scope
  • Blind SSRF without exploitable vulnerabilities and PoC (e.g. DNS & HTTP pingback, Wordpress XMLRPC)
  • Lack or bypass of rate-limiting, brute-forcing or captcha issues
  • User enumeration (e.g. email, alias, GUID, phone number, common CMS endpoints)
  • Weak password policies (e.g. length, complexity, reuse)
  • Ability to spam users (email / SMS / direct messages flooding)
  • Disclosed or misconfigured public API keys (e.g. Google Maps, Firebase, analytics tools...)
  • Password reset token sent via HTTP referer to external services (e.g. analytics / ads platforms)
  • Stolen non-valid secrets, credentials or information gathered from a third-party asset that we have no control over
  • Exposed secrets, credentials or information on an asset under our control that are not applicable to the program’s scope
  • Pre-account takeover (e.g. account creation via oAuth)
  • GraphQL Introspection is enabled

Hunting requirements

Account access

n/a


Hunters collaboration

When submitting new report, you can add up to 5 collaborators, and define the reward split ratio.

For more information, see help center.
Note: For reports that have already been rewarded, it is not possible to redistribute the rewards.

To submit a vulnerability report, you need to login with your hunter account.