@_smile_hacker_ Due to Turing’s Halting Problem, given a program and its input, we cannot determine when it halts. Therefore how long I can stick to a program is undecidable.
@_smile_hacker_ If it’s a single domain - 3 days & if wildcard - few weeks
@_smile_hacker_ 2 years on a single program, 700000+ proxy history requests with 1900 repeater tabs. I think I should switch to something else now.
@_smile_hacker_ It took about 2 years, and then they started focusing too much on the budget. Every critical or high issue was downgraded to medium or low for ridiculous reasons, so I decided to leave it once and for all. Time to move on to the next one!
@_smile_hacker_ Until have exhausted all known techniques, nothing left to look out for, you know, all this depends on the kind of program one is hacking on.
@_smile_hacker_ Until I find bugs for sometime 😄
@_smile_hacker_ Until I deplete their budget ;p
@_smile_hacker_ From my experience, sticking to one program for months really helps. The more time you spend, the better you understand the product. Once you know it well, you will be able to catch business logic bugs. I even follow them on socials to catch new launches,it makes hunting easier.
@_smile_hacker_ Communication going well far from both sides Assets it was interesting and keep on adding Providing value to the thing ur doing and recognising u if anything missing better leave immediately
@_smile_hacker_ Depend on functions and scope, ive been sticking to few programs for three months now, and its doing good
@_smile_hacker_ one week if Iam not finding anything from there the more bugs I find the more I time I spend