UN Information Security Hall of Fame
To improve the protection of its Information Communications Technology resources, the United Nations encourages the public to assist with its efforts by disclosing vulnerabilities in the United Nations’ publicly accessible information system.
Following are individuals and organizations that helped the United Nations in improving the security of the Organization's systems, data, and ICT resources by reporting security issues and vulnerabilities discovered.
United Nations Responsible Disclosure and Reporter Acknowledgment Policy
To improve the protection of its Information Communications Technology resources, the United Nations encourages the public to assist with its efforts by disclosing vulnerabilities in the United Nations’ publicly accessible information system. The manner by which such assistance may be made available to the United Nations is set forth below.
What to Report to the United Nations
Security incidents and details of vulnerabilities associated with publicly accessible United Nations (UN) Secretariat information communications technology (ICT) resources, including websites.
Out of scope vulnerabilities include the following:
- Clickjacking on pages with no sensitive actions or no authenticated actions
- XMLRPC.PHP with no admin page exposed to the Internet
- Software version disclosure/Banner identification issues
- Missing email best practices (invalid, incomplete, or missing SPF/DKIM/DMARC records etc.)
- Missing best practices in SSL/TLS configuration
- Any activity that could lead to the disruption of our service (DoS)
- Open redirect – unless an additional security impact can be demonstrated
- Cross-Site Request Forgery (CSRF) on unauthenticated forms or forms with no sensitive actions
Vulnerability Reporting Policy:
The UN will accept disclosures of vulnerabilities under the following conditions:
- The vulnerability is related to the United Nations (UN) Secretariat ICT resources.
- The vulnerability should be reported to the UN as quickly as possible after its discovery.
- The vulnerability findings must remain confidential for at least 90 days following the date the vulnerability was reported to the UN or until public disclosure of the vulnerability has been made on this website.
- The severity of a vulnerability finding is assessed by the UN at its own discretion.
- The name and contact information of the reporter may be disclosed to affected technology vendor(s) unless otherwise requested by the reporter.
The UN reserves the right to accept or reject any security vulnerability disclosure report at its discretion.
A reporter will only be acknowledged on this page if the vulnerability report is related to a United Nations (UN) Secretariat ICT resource.
Individuals or entities who wish to report security vulnerability should follow the procedures set forth below:
- Findings, including contact details, should be sent to infosec@un.org.
- Note: For vulnerabilities affecting the following non-UN Secretariat entities, please contact them directly:
- If the vulnerability is related to a WHO domain, send it to: vulnerability@who.int
- If the vulnerability is related to a UNESCO domain, send it to: cybersecurity@unesco.org
- If the vulnerability is related to a UNWOMEN domain, send it to: Reporting a cybersecurity issue
- If the vulnerability is related to a International Labour Organization (ILO) domain, send it to: cybersecurity@ilo.org
- If the vulnerability is related to a International Organization for Migration (IOM) domain, send it to: https://www.iom.int/report-cybersecurity-issue
- If the vulnerability is related to a UNIDO domain, send it to: cybersecurity@unido.org
- If the vulnerability is related to a UNICEF domain, send it to: infosecurity@unicef.org
- If the vulnerability is related to a UNFCCC domain, send it to: secretariat@unfccc.int
- Note: For vulnerabilities affecting the following non-UN Secretariat entities, please contact them directly:
- The findings should be communicated using PGP encrypted messages using the public key (PGP Fingerprint: A001 EB04 2D38 7016 EEA8 CC54 798E 86D7 6B9A A810) available on this website.
- As much information as possible regarding the finding should be communicated to the UN to enable the Organization to reproduce and verify the vulnerability, in order to implement appropriate remediation actions.
- The vulnerability findings must remain confidential for at least 90 days following the date the vulnerability was reported to the UN or until public disclosure of the vulnerability has been made on this website.
If more information is required regarding a reported vulnerability, the UN may contact the reporter; therefore it is important to provide valid contact details, including email address and/or telephone number.
If the conditions listed above are satisfied, the UN will verify the existence of the vulnerability, notify affected parties, and implement actions to mitigate the vulnerability.
Once the vulnerability has been removed, the reporter will be acknowledged unless he/she wishes to remain anonymous, and listed (at his or her own discretion) on this page with a short description of the vulnerability reported.
By reporting vulnerability findings to the UN, the reporter acknowledges that such reporting is provided pro bono and without expectation of financial or other compensation. The reporter also affirms that neither he/she nor any entity that he/she represents is complicit in human rights abuses, tolerates forced or compulsory labour or use child labour, is involved in the sale or manufacture of anti-personnel mines or their components, or does not meet the purposes and principles of the United Nations.