| >establish their credibility >I'd like to know that I'm dealing with a professional, who takes their work seriously As a sender of these emails, my credibility is established when you go to the location I say there's sensitive data being leaked, and you find sensitive data being leaked. Nothing else should matter. Are you just going to keep data exposed publicly if, for example, some curious kid notified you instead of a professional? Hostility to good-faith security research, as shown in the OPs article and in some of the comments here (not specifically you), makes everyone worse off. Having myself received hostility, demands to prove my credibility, and legal threats when sending notifications like OPs, in most cases now I don't bother to notify anyone. Instead, the data just sits there, accessible to the actual bad guys. Hurray! |
But your credibility as a professional non-extortionist is absolutely still in question, unfortunately.
Again, I've been on both sides. Being the only professional in the room is sometimes the way things work out. But that's OK, because you can walk away from the conversation still being the professional, and they cannot. This pays dividends.
I've run across people years later who apologized for being a jerk in our previous exchange. They were under pressure, didn't fully understand, felt insecure, blah blah whatever who cares. But they realized their error and got smarter for it. And I gained their respect. That doesn't work if you don't stay professional.