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Security: JunaidPeer/autobahn

Security

SECURITY.md

Important Notice

Please DO NOT create a GitHub issue to report a security problem. Instead, please send an email to [email protected] with a detailed description of the attack vector and security risk you have identified.

Bug Bounty Overview

Mango Markets offers bug bounties for Mango Markets' on-chain program code; UI only bugs are omitted.

Severity Description Bug Bounty
Critical Bugs that freeze user funds or drain the contract's holdings or involve theft of funds without user signatures 10% of the value of the hack up to $1,000,000
High Bugs that could temporarily freeze user funds or incorrectly assign value to user funds $10,000 to $50,000 per bug, assessed on a case by case basis
Medium/Low Bugs that don't threaten user funds $1,000 to $5,000 per bug, assessed on a case by case basis

The severity guidelines are based on Immunefi's classification system. Note that these are simply guidelines for the severity of the bugs. Each bug bounty submission will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.

Submission

Please email [email protected] with a detailed description of the attack vector. For critical and moderate bugs, we require a proof of concept done on a privately deployed mainnet contract. We will reach out in 1 business day with additional questions or next steps on the bug bounty.

Bug Bounty Payment

Bug bounties will be paid in USDC or locked MNGO, after a DAO vote. The Mango DAO has never refused a valid bug bounty so far.

Invalid Bug Bounties

The following are out of scope for the bug bounty:

  1. Attacks that the reporter has already exploited themselves, leading to damage.
  2. Attacks requiring access to leaked keys/credentials.
  3. Attacks requiring access to privileged addresses (governance, admin).
  4. Incorrect data supplied by third party oracles (this does not exclude oracle manipulation/flash loan attacks).
  5. Lack of liquidity.
  6. Third party, off-chain bot errors (for instance bugs with an arbitrage bot running on the smart contracts).
  7. Best practice critiques.
  8. Sybil attacks.

There aren’t any published security advisories