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Of course you understand it, but do you agree with it? If you seek out bugs in a company's code with the expectation that you'll be rewarded for it, and then the company fails to reward you, I can see that it might be perceived as unfair, especially if the company indicated that such an expectation was reasonable. If you happen across a bug in a company's code, and then publicize it because they aren't going to pay you money for it, that seems a little more like "blackmail." People really shouldn't orient their moral systems around money. |
A. Homakov could do nothing. This leaves Twitter in the same state that it is now, but it if everybody did this, it is likely that nefarious people would find and exploit bugs in Twitter
B. Homakov could donate his time, as a skilled and highly-trained professional consultant, to a $32bn publicly-traded company
C. Homakov could practice full disclosure
This isn't even close to blackmail. This is a security consultant publishing a vulnerability that he discovered on his own time, that apparently Twitter's internal security team missed. That might be embarrassing for Twitter, but tha'ts hardly homakov's problem as a third party.