The IT giant introduced the reward last year and is yet to have any successful submissions, according to Google’s Nathan Parker and Tim Willis. “That said, great research deserves great awards, so we’re putting up a standing six-figure sum, available all year round with no quotas and no maximum reward pool,” said the pair in a blog post on Monday US time. The company is also extending the reward program to include anyone that can bypass Chrome’s safe browsing download protection features. Google typically offers between US$500 and US$15,000 for reported bugs depending on the quality of reporting. Earlier in January, Google said that it paid well over $2 million (€1.8 million) as bug bounty rewards for security experts around the globe. Ever since the program started in 2010, Google said it paid researchers more than $6 million (€5.4 million).