Noting that the only bounties were from some of the many 3rd party companies using Zendesk. Zendesk themselves did NOTHING.
As a commentor there said: "The best way to incentivize malicious activity is not to reward philanthropic behaviour. The next exploit for ZenDesk will be sold directly to the darkweb after having read this."
Lmao, Zendesk made their own post (edit: a troll account linked it acting as them, but the actual Zendesk post is still something else) saying the person who disclosed this violated ethical principles while also saying they (zendesk) discovered this issue.
It's a terrible way to take your company rank on these security forums.
When a company does that (pretend like they discovered the issue to avoid paying a bounty), they often end up on a shit list where bored hackers pentest them for funsies and then release the vulnerability in the wild.
Source: Im on the team at my job that pays hackers and their streams frequently broadcast shitty companies that refuse to pay.