Aera
Aera is a treasury management protocol that aims to address existing shortcomings with controlling treasury funds.
ETH
Defi
Asset Management
Solidity
Maximum Bounty
$180,000Live Since
20 November 2023Last Updated
22 May 2024PoC required
KYC required
Select the category you'd like to explore
Assets in Scope
Impacts in Scope
Critical
Direct theft of any user funds, whether at-rest or in-motion, other than unclaimed yield
Critical
Permanent freezing of funds
Critical
Theft of unclaimed yield
Critical
Permanent freezing of unclaimed yield
Out of scope
Program's Out of Scope information
All Categories
- Impacts requiring attacks that the reporter has already exploited themselves, leading to damage
- Impacts caused by attacks requiring access to leaked keys/credentials
- Impacts caused by attacks requiring access to privileged addresses (governance, strategist) except in such cases where the contracts are intended to have no privileged access to functions that make the attack possible
- Impacts relying on attacks involving the depegging of an external stablecoin where the attacker does not directly cause the depegging due to a bug in code
- Mentions of secrets, access tokens, API keys, private keys, etc. in Github will be considered out of scope without proof that they are in-use in production
- Best practice recommendations
- Feature requests
- Impacts on test files and configuration files unless stated otherwise in the bug bounty program
Smart Contracts
- Incorrect data supplied by third party oracles
- Not to exclude oracle manipulation/flash loan attacks
- Impacts requiring basic economic and governance attacks (e.g. 51% attack)
- Lack of liquidity impacts
- Impacts from Sybil attacks
- Impacts involving centralization risks
- Best practice recommendations
The following activities are prohibited by this bug bounty program:
- Any testing on mainnet or public testnet deployed code; all testing should be done on local-forks of either public testnet or mainnet
- Any testing with pricing oracles or third-party smart contracts
- Attempting phishing or other social engineering attacks against our employees and/or customers
- Any testing with third-party systems and applications (e.g. browser extensions) as well as websites (e.g. SSO providers, advertising networks)
- Any denial of service attacks that are executed against project assets
- Automated testing of services that generates significant amounts of traffic
- Public disclosure of an unpatched vulnerability in an embargoed bounty