Mozilla pays 12-year-old $3,000 for finding critical Firefox flaw

Uh... define "normal 12 year old". Not everyone should or does fit into your preconceived notion of what a normal 12 year old does or is.

Nobody is the same. People can be similar, but likely never the same.

His chosen and other young people should have their chosen trade nurtured so that we might compete with the world in science, math, and possibly innovation again.
 
gratz to the kid, personally im impressed that a 12 year old kid noticed a flaw that most programmers missed
as for increasing the reward to $3000, it certainly is a big incentive but i can imagine people examing every line of code mozilla has now just for an easy chance at some money
 
Thanks Alex! I use FF. I think you should get more than that ( future job / help with school, college $) because if it had spread, crashed users browsers and potentially run arbitrary code on their computer, it would have cost more to fix, then again being great full is a good thing too and you definitely have a bright future ahead of you man, keep up the good work dude.
 
Frenzoff said:
gratz to the kid, personally im impressed that a 12 year old kid noticed a flaw that most programmers missed
as for increasing the reward to $3000, it certainly is a big incentive but i can imagine people examing every line of code mozilla has now just for an easy chance at some money

its not really ez money, if you've ever done any programming, its really hard to find errors in code, especially if u didn't write it.
 
zecias said:
Frenzoff said:
gratz to the kid, personally im impressed that a 12 year old kid noticed a flaw that most programmers missed
as for increasing the reward to $3000, it certainly is a big incentive but i can imagine people examing every line of code mozilla has now just for an easy chance at some money

its not really ez money, if you've ever done any programming, its really hard to find errors in code, especially if u didn't write it.

I have done a few programming. And i often spend hours to find a bug, in my own written code. This kid really amazed me. I guess there is still many things we need to learn in the programming world
 
Good for him, i bet some day, if he keeps going he could be the next Bill Gates, or a Facebook, or Google, or Myspace, CEO... Billionare... Congrats man... :)
 
That is an amazing story. Who says you need a degree to be a Computer Engineer? lol
I would have been frustrated after a half hour of not finding anything. Well done, sir.
 
Mozilla should have given the kid a bigger prize... I mean $3,000 for a security flaw. I'm sure the money they saved from finding the security flaw is worth more than a measly $3k.
 
When I was 12 and now are 2 completely different things. I might understand if he was a blob of a kid sitting in front of his computer all day banging away at WOW or something. (everyone has see the youtube video of the fat kid getting his WoW taken away) From the looks of it tho, he is doing something more that most 12 Year-olds. Lets see go out and play... What is that for a 12year old now? going to the mall, being an annoyance to everyone? Spray painting walls. Doing drugs? Good Job Kid you got my 2 thumbs up.
 
This is an awesome testament to the power of the internet and the open source community that a seventh grader is already contributing to the world. We do indeed live in an amazing world.
 
so im not the only one who thought he would be perfect for playing a young bill gates if there is ever gonna be a movie on him.
 
for one thing this kid has the brain and dedication, and he looked like bill gates' long lost child. i think that hair cut is what won me over.
 
I wish my brain was as enhanced as his at the age of 12, shoot I'm still learning about this world of technology! - Keep up the good work kid.
 
I found and posted a couple - never got anything. Mozilla doesn't care about bugs or security - they care about bells and whistles. That's where they spend all their time.
 
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