| Not the best response from the vendor: > March 19, 2018: Contact Qualcomm Product Security with issue; receive confirmation of receipt > April, 2018: Request update on analysis of issue > May, 2018: Qualcomm confirms the issue and begins working on a fix |
Yet they struggled to get headcount for people to respond to security researchers, and despite having seemingly trained the executives there was a regular "Oh man I contacted legal we should sue this guy!" type email every few months.
Meanwhile they had a separate technical support team who knew how to respond to customers in a timely fashion, make people feel like they're being listened to, but for some reasons they had to reinvent the wheel / fail repeatedly at dealing with security researchers as if nobody had ever done basic customer service before. I was on the support team and I sat next to the security guy(s) and I would show them what to do and how to keep a customer or security researcher on track. It wasn't rocket science, but nobody thought to teach them that.
And that was beyond training engineering to stop with the "well you're using it wrong" type responses.
The scale of, incompetence in the security field is astounding as a lot of folks with security written all over their resume don't know jack squat. And the scale of incompetence just DEALING with security researchers is also bizzaro world terrible, even among companies that should know better.