Agent skill

triage-validation

Finding validation before writing any report — 7-Question Gate (all 7 questions), 4 pre-submission gates, always-rejected list, conditionally valid with chain table, CVSS 3.1 quick reference, severity decision guide, report title formula, 60-second pre-submit checklist. Use BEFORE writing any report. One wrong answer = kill the finding and move on. Saves N/A ratio.

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Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/shuvonsec/claude-bug-bounty/tree/main/skills/triage-validation

SKILL.md

TRIAGE & VALIDATION

One wrong answer = STOP. Kill it. Move on.

"N/A hurts your validity ratio. Informative is neutral. Only submit what passes all 7 questions."


THE 7-QUESTION GATE

Ask IN ORDER. One wrong answer = STOP immediately.


Q1: Can an attacker use this RIGHT NOW, step by step?

Complete this template:

1. Setup:   I need [own account / another user's ID / no account]
2. Request: [exact HTTP method, URL, headers, body — copy-paste ready]
3. Result:  I can [read / modify / delete] [exact data shown in response]
4. Impact:  The real-world consequence is [account takeover / PII read / money stolen]
5. Cost:    Time: [X minutes], Capital: [$0 / $X subscription required]

If you CANNOT write step 2 as a real HTTP request → KILL IT.


Q2: Is the impact on the program's accepted impact list?

Go to the program page. Find "Vulnerability Types" or "Out of Scope."

Common tiers:

  • Critical: Any-user ATO without interaction, RCE, SQLi with data exfil, admin auth bypass
  • High: Mass PII exfil, privilege escalation, internal SSRF with data, stored XSS all users
  • Medium: IDOR on specific user non-critical data, XSS on sensitive page requiring click
  • Low: Non-sensitive info disclosure, clickjacking with PoC

If your bug maps to a listed exclusion → KILL IT.


Q3: Is the root cause in an in-scope asset?

Confirm:

  • Vulnerable domain is on the in-scope list (not *.internal.target.com)
  • It's a production asset (not staging/dev unless explicitly in scope)
  • It's not a third-party service the company just uses (not Stripe, Salesforce, Google Auth)

If out-of-scope → KILL IT.


Q4: Does it require privileged access that an attacker can't realistically get?

  • "Admin can do X" = centralization risk = KILL IT (on 99% of programs)
  • "Non-admin can do X that only admin should do" = valid
  • "Requires physical access / MFA device" = usually invalid
  • "Requires compromised victim account to work" = questionable, low severity at best

Q5: Is this already known or accepted behavior?

Search:

  1. Program's HackerOne/Bugcrowd disclosed reports: Ctrl+F endpoint name + bug class
  2. GitHub issues on target repo: is:issue label:security ENDPOINT_NAME
  3. Changelog/CHANGELOG.md — does it mention this behavior?
  4. API docs / design docs — is it documented as intended?

If acknowledged/design decision → KILL IT.


Q6: Can you prove impact beyond "technically possible"?

  • XSS → show actual cookie theft or session hijack, not just alert(1) or alert(document.domain)
  • SSRF → hit an internal endpoint that returns data, not just DNS ping
  • SQLi → show actual data exfil from a real table, not just error message
  • IDOR → show actual other-user's data in response, not just a 200 status code

If you can only show "technically possible" → DOWNGRADE severity, not kill.


Q7: Is this a known-invalid bug class?

Check the NEVER SUBMIT list below. If it's on this list without a chain → KILL IT.


4 PRE-SUBMISSION GATES

Run in sequence. ALL 4 must PASS.

Gate 0: Reality Check (30 seconds)

[ ] Bug is REAL — confirmed with actual HTTP requests, not code reading alone
[ ] Bug is IN SCOPE — checked program scope page explicitly
[ ] Reproducible from scratch — can reproduce starting from fresh session
[ ] Evidence ready — screenshot, response body, or video

Gate 1: Impact Validation (2 minutes)

[ ] Can answer: "What can attacker DO that they couldn't before?"
[ ] Answer is more than "see non-sensitive data" (unless program pays for info disclosure)
[ ] Real victim: another user's data, company's data, financial loss
[ ] Not relying on victim doing something unlikely

Gate 2: Deduplication Check (5 minutes)

[ ] Searched HackerOne Hacktivity for this program + similar bug title/endpoint
[ ] Searched GitHub issues for target repo
[ ] Read most recent 5 disclosed reports for this program
[ ] Not a "known issue" in their changelog or public docs
[ ] Google: "TARGET_NAME ENDPOINT_NAME bug bounty"

Gate 3: Report Quality (10 minutes)

[ ] Title: [Bug Class] in [Endpoint] allows [actor] to [impact]
[ ] Steps to Reproduce: copy-pasteable HTTP request
[ ] Evidence: screenshot/video of actual impact (not just 200 status)
[ ] Severity: matches CVSS 3.1 score AND program's severity definitions
[ ] Remediation: 1-2 sentences of concrete fix
[ ] NEVER used "could potentially" or "may allow"

NEVER SUBMIT LIST

Submitting these destroys your validity ratio.

Missing CSP / HSTS / security headers
Missing SPF / DKIM / DMARC
GraphQL introspection alone (no auth bypass, no IDOR demonstrated)
Banner / version disclosure without working CVE exploit
Clickjacking on non-sensitive pages (no sensitive action PoC)
Tabnabbing
CSV injection (no actual code execution shown)
CORS wildcard (*) without credential exfil proof of concept
Logout CSRF
Self-XSS (only exploits own account)
Open redirect alone (no ATO or OAuth theft chain)
OAuth client_secret in mobile app (known, expected)
SSRF DNS callback only (no internal service access or data)
Host header injection alone (no password reset poisoning PoC)
Rate limit on non-critical forms (search, contact, login with Cloudflare)
Session not invalidated on logout
Concurrent sessions
Internal IP in error message
Mixed content
SSL weak ciphers
Missing HttpOnly / Secure cookie flags alone
Broken external links
Autocomplete on password fields
Pre-account takeover (usually — very specific conditions required)

CONDITIONALLY VALID — CHAIN REQUIRED

Build the chain first, prove it works end to end, THEN report.

Standalone Finding Chain Required Valid Result
Open redirect + OAuth redirect_uri → auth code theft ATO (Critical)
Clickjacking + sensitive action + working PoC Medium
CORS wildcard + credentialed request exfils user PII High
CSRF + sensitive action (transfer funds, change email, delete account) High
Rate limit bypass + OTP/reset token brute force succeeds Medium/High
SSRF DNS-only + internal service access + data returned Medium
Host header injection + password reset email uses injected host High
Prompt injection + reads other user's data (IDOR) High
S3 bucket listing + JS bundles contain API keys or OAuth secrets Medium/High
Self-XSS + CSRF to trigger it on victim without their knowledge Medium
Subdomain takeover + OAuth redirect_uri registered at that subdomain Critical
GraphQL introspection + auth bypass mutation or IDOR on node() High

CVSS 3.1 QUICK REFERENCE

Common Score Examples

Finding Score Severity Vector
IDOR read PII, any user, auth required 6.5 Medium AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:N/A:N
IDOR write/delete, any user 7.5 High AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:N
Auth bypass → admin panel 9.8 Critical AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H
Stored XSS → cookie theft, stored 8.8 High AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:C/C:H/I:L/A:N
SQLi → full DB dump 8.6 High AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:N
SSRF → cloud metadata 9.1 Critical AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:C/C:H/I:H/A:N
Race → double spend 7.5 High AV:N/AC:H/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:N
GraphQL auth bypass 8.7 High AV:N/AC:L/PR:L/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:N
JWT none algorithm 9.1 Critical AV:N/AC:L/PR:N/UI:N/S:U/C:H/I:H/A:H

Metric Quick Guide

What you have Metric Value
Exploitable over internet AV Network (N)
No special timing or race AC Low (L)
Free account needed PR Low (L)
No login needed PR None (N)
Admin needed PR High (H)
No victim action UI None (N)
Victim must click UI Required (R)
Reads all data C High (H)
Reads some data C Low (L)
Modifies all data I High (H)
Crashes service A High (H)
Affects only app S Unchanged (U)
Affects browser/OS/cloud S Changed (C)

KILL FAST RULES

The goal is to QUICKLY disqualify bad leads so you hunt real bugs:

  1. 5-minute rule: If you can't fill in Q1's template in 5 minutes → move on
  2. Precondition count: More than 2 preconditions simultaneously required → kill it
  3. Impact test: "What does attacker walk away with?" — if nothing tangible → kill it
  4. Admin bypass: "Admin can do X" is NEVER a bug → kill it immediately
  5. Design doc test: If it's documented behavior → kill it immediately
  6. Rabbit hole signal: 30+ min on Q6 with no reproducible PoC → kill it

ANTI-PATTERNS THAT LOSE MONEY

Writing a report before confirming the bug exists (most common)
Submitting theoretical impact without proof
"The API returns more fields than necessary" (sensitivity matters — is it actually sensitive?)
Chaining A+B into one report when they're separate bugs (two separate payouts)
Reporting B saying "similar to A in my other report" — fresh Gate 0 for every bug
Overclaiming severity — triagers trust you less next time
Under-describing impact — triager doesn't understand why it matters

Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.

shuvonsec/claude-bug-bounty

web2-vuln-classes

Complete reference for 20 web2 bug classes with root causes, detection patterns, bypass tables, exploit techniques, and real paid examples. Covers IDOR, auth bypass, XSS, SSRF (11 IP bypass techniques), SQLi, business logic, race conditions, OAuth/OIDC, file upload (10 bypass techniques), GraphQL, LLM/AI (ASI01-ASI10 agentic framework), API misconfig (mass assignment, JWT attacks, prototype pollution, CORS), ATO taxonomy (9 paths), SSTI (Jinja2/Twig/Freemarker/ERB/Spring), subdomain takeover, cloud/infra misconfigs, HTTP smuggling (CL.TE/TE.CL/H2.CL), cache poisoning, MFA bypass (7 patterns), SAML attacks (XSW/comment injection/signature stripping). Use when hunting a specific vuln class or studying what makes bugs pay.

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security-arsenal

Security payloads, bypass tables, wordlists, gf pattern names, always-rejected bug list, and conditionally-valid-with-chain table. Use when you need specific payloads for XSS/SSRF/SQLi/XXE/NoSQLi/command injection/SSTI/IDOR/path-traversal/HTTP smuggling/WebSocket/MFA bypass, bypass techniques, or to check if a finding is submittable. Also use when asked about what NOT to submit.

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shuvonsec/claude-bug-bounty

bb-methodology

Use at the START of any bug bounty hunting session, when switching targets, or when feeling lost about what to do next. Master orchestrator that combines the 5-phase non-linear hunting workflow with the critical thinking framework (developer psychology, anomaly detection, What-If experiments). Routes to all other skills based on current hunting phase. Also use when asking "what should I do next" or "where am I in the process."

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shuvonsec/claude-bug-bounty

web2-recon

Web2 recon pipeline — subdomain enumeration (subfinder, Chaos API, assetfinder), live host discovery (dnsx, httpx), URL crawling (katana, waybackurls, gau), directory fuzzing (ffuf), JS analysis (LinkFinder, SecretFinder), continuous monitoring (new subdomain alerts, JS change detection, GitHub commit watch). Use when starting recon on any web2 target or when asked about asset discovery, subdomain enum, or attack surface mapping.

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shuvonsec/claude-bug-bounty

report-writing

Bug bounty report writing for H1/Bugcrowd/Intigriti/Immunefi — report templates, human tone guidelines, impact-first writing, CVSS 3.1 scoring, title formula, impact statement formula, severity decision guide, downgrade counters, pre-submit checklist. Use after validating a finding and before submitting. Never use "could potentially" — prove it or don't report.

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shuvonsec/claude-bug-bounty

bug-bounty

Complete bug bounty workflow — recon (subdomain enumeration, asset discovery, fingerprinting, HackerOne scope, source code audit), pre-hunt learning (disclosed reports, tech stack research, mind maps, threat modeling), vulnerability hunting (IDOR, SSRF, XSS, auth bypass, CSRF, race conditions, SQLi, XXE, file upload, business logic, GraphQL, HTTP smuggling, cache poisoning, OAuth, timing side-channels, OIDC, SSTI, subdomain takeover, cloud misconfig, ATO chains, agentic AI), LLM/AI security testing (chatbot IDOR, prompt injection, indirect injection, ASCII smuggling, exfil channels, RCE via code tools, system prompt extraction, ASI01-ASI10), A-to-B bug chaining (IDOR→auth bypass, SSRF→cloud metadata, XSS→ATO, open redirect→OAuth theft, S3→bundle→secret→OAuth), bypass tables (SSRF IP bypass, open redirect bypass, file upload bypass), language-specific grep (JS prototype pollution, Python pickle, PHP type juggling, Go template.HTML, Ruby YAML.load, Rust unwrap), and reporting (7-Question Gate, 4 validation gates, human-tone writing, templates by vuln class, CVSS 3.1, PoC generation, always-rejected list, conditional chain table, submission checklist). Use for ANY bug bounty task — starting a new target, doing recon, hunting specific vulns, auditing source code, testing AI features, validating findings, or writing reports. 中文触发词:漏洞赏金、安全测试、渗透测试、漏洞挖掘、信息收集、子域名枚举、XSS测试、SQL注入、SSRF、安全审计、漏洞报告

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