A security vulnerability affecting YouTube partner channels has been discovered and patched. The flaw allowed unauthorized actors to expose email addresses linked to partnered creators—a serious privacy and security concern.
The good news? A researcher caught it early and reported the issue responsibly. The platform responded quickly with a fix, and the researcher earned a $20,000 bug bounty for the disclosure.
This is a solid reminder of why security research matters. Responsible vulnerability reporting protects entire communities, and proper incentive structures encourage ethical hackers to come forward rather than exploit weaknesses.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
20 Likes
Reward
20
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
MetaverseLandlady
· 01-19 01:03
How much is 20k worth? With such a huge vulnerability on YouTube, this price really lacks sincerity.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropFatigue
· 01-18 11:35
Another vulnerability has been exposed on YouTube again. Fortunately, this guy isn't greedy; a $20,000 bug bounty is still pretty good.
View OriginalReply0
MeaninglessGwei
· 01-16 23:58
Ha, a $20,000 bug bounty... I really want to know how much those undiscovered vulnerability hackers have made.
View OriginalReply0
just_another_wallet
· 01-16 23:51
Damn, YouTube is in trouble again? Luckily, it wasn't discovered first by the black market gang.
View OriginalReply0
OfflineNewbie
· 01-16 04:08
It's another YouTube security vulnerability, this time almost exposing all creators' emails. Luckily, the response was quick enough.
A $20,000 bounty—this is the right way to incentivize security research.
Compared to those scumbags selling vulnerabilities on the dark web, this guy chose a responsible path, a conscience of the industry.
This time, YouTube has been quite effective, unlike some platforms that drag their feet before taking action.
Curious how this vulnerability was actually discovered... Is it really that obvious?
View OriginalReply0
LightningWallet
· 01-16 04:08
It's another YouTube glitch; luckily, the white hat discovered it in time.
View OriginalReply0
StealthDeployer
· 01-16 04:02
Speaking of the $20,000 bounty, it's a bit stingy. If it were me, I would have sold it on the black market already.
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketSunriser
· 01-16 03:58
This researcher is awesome, getting $20,000 for free, more than I make in a month trading haha
View OriginalReply0
WealthCoffee
· 01-16 03:47
YouTube has exposed a security vulnerability again, and creators' emails were leaked... Fortunately, white hats discovered it in time and earned $20,000. This is what responsible disclosure should look like.
A security vulnerability affecting YouTube partner channels has been discovered and patched. The flaw allowed unauthorized actors to expose email addresses linked to partnered creators—a serious privacy and security concern.
The good news? A researcher caught it early and reported the issue responsibly. The platform responded quickly with a fix, and the researcher earned a $20,000 bug bounty for the disclosure.
This is a solid reminder of why security research matters. Responsible vulnerability reporting protects entire communities, and proper incentive structures encourage ethical hackers to come forward rather than exploit weaknesses.