@fwrnr@hackadvisor And the restaurant example makes no sense. A bad restaurant review wont get you banned. A bad review about HackerOne or Bugcrowd can actually affect you.
@fwrnr@hackadvisor That is a platform and program problem not a bug hunter problem.
If a program cant handle reports it can just close or archive the program.
@fwrnr@hackadvisor If someone had a real experience good or bad why shouldn’t they share it
Companies can reply. Reviews can be challenged. The community decides who to trust.
@fwrnr@hackadvisor You keep saying only the top 1% should leave reviews.
By that logic 99% of researchers don’t matter.
Programs don’t work only with the top 1%. They work with everyone.
@fwrnr@hackadvisor I had to fight with Bugcrowd to prove my report was valid. They finally accepted it lol.
Then I left a negative review. What’s wrong with that?🫠
https://t.co/wtOQlo1zcW
@sw33tLie@stokfredrik Cool to see the interest in this! We actually built something similar at HackAdvisor — scope aggregation API, program insights, and even labs with real bug bounty reports. Check it out: https://t.co/40NSVuXHQp
Great to see more people working on tooling for the community 🤝
HackAdvisor Labs (MVP): https://t.co/cvlP6yU1gz
Goal: hands-on practice with real-world vulnerabilities from public bug bounty reports - spin up a lab → find the bug → submit the flag and cement the technique.
We’re looking for feedback, bug reports, and feature requests 🙂
HackAdvisor (~1y): x-platform bug bounty directory—reward ranges + community feedback, linking to source. @Hacker0x01@Bugcrowd@intigriti@yeswehack@StandoffBB@bizone_en open to a transparency collab? A small “listed on HackAdvisor” badge/link or tweet mention would help.