The first security technology bug bounty predated the Internet by over one hundred years: Alfred C Hobbs breaking an unbreakable lock at the Great Exhibition of 1851 for the princely sum of 200 Guineas. With the acceleration of technology adoption, unintended consequences, our adversaries, and the need to quickly understand how "unhackable" things really are, it's safe to say that things have escalated since then. In 2021, there as many who benefit from engaging the good-faith hacker community as there are folks who find themselves lost in a mish-mash of term confusion, unclear expectations, and general reservations - in spite of the increasingly obvious truth that "it takes an army of allies to overcome an army of adversaries". This breakout is for both. Casey John Ellis, the Founder, Chairman, and CTO of Bugcrowd, pioneer of the crowdsourced security as-a-service category, and co-founder of The Disclose.io Project will unpack the "family tree" of vulnerability disclosure, bug bounty, and crowdsourced security testing, frame up how we got here, and facilitate a discussion from the group about where it all goes next.