Laurel's Vulnerability Disclosure Policy
Vulnerability Disclosure Philosophy
Laurel believes effective disclosure of security vulnerabilities requires mutual trust, respect, transparency and common good between Laurel and Security Researchers. Together, our vigilant expertise promotes the continued security and privacy of Laurel customers, products, and services.
Security Researchers
Laurel accepts vulnerability reports from all sources such as independent security researchers, industry partners, vendors, customers and consultants. Laurel defines a security vulnerability as an unintended weakness or exposure that could be used to compromise the integrity, availability or confidentiality of our products and services.
In-Scope Targets:
- All digital assets owned by Laurel, including
*.
laurel.com
.
Out-of-Scope Targets & Vulnerabilities:
- Findings from physical testing or social engineering.
- Reports on outdated browser versions.
- Missing security headers or "best practice" configurations without a demonstrated vulnerability.
- Do not perform any actions that could disrupt our services, such as denial-of-service (DoS) or distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks.
- Do not access, modify, or exfiltrate any data that does not belong to you.
- If researchers encounter Laurel data in the course of their work, they must immediately notify the Laurel VDP contact and coordinate to ensure that the data is appropriately destroyed once the vulnerability has been remediated.
Our Commitment to Researchers
- Trust. We maintain trust and confidentiality in our professional exchanges with security researchers.
- Respect. We treat all researchers with respect and recognize your contribution for keeping our customers safe and secure.
- Transparency. We will work with you to validate and remediate reported vulnerabilities in accordance with our commitment to security and privacy.
- Common Good. We investigate and remediate issues in a manner consistent with protecting the safety and security of those potentially affected by a reported vulnerability.
What We Ask of Researchers
- Trust. We request that you communicate about potential vulnerabilities in a responsible manner, providing sufficient time and information for our team to validate and address potential issues.
- Respect. We request that researchers make every effort to avoid privacy violations, degradation of user experience, disruption to production systems, and destruction of data during security testing.
- Transparency. We request that researchers provide the technical details and background necessary for our team to identify and validate reported issues, using the form below.
- Common Good. We request that researchers act for the common good, protecting user privacy and security by refraining from publicly disclosing unverified vulnerabilities until our team has had time to validate and address reported issues.
Vulnerability Reporting
Laurel recommends that security researchers share the details of any suspected vulnerabilities across any asset owned, controlled, or operated by Laurel (or that would reasonably impact the security of Laurel and our users) using the web form below. The Laurel Security team will acknowledge receipt of each vulnerability report, conduct a thorough investigation, and then take appropriate action for resolution.