Field Note · Blog

Disclosure in Action: The Quiet Part of Disclosure

The quiet stretch between private notification and public publication. What you do with a verified finding when discipline says wait.


Disclosure in Action Late March 2026 – CompleteTech LLC

Field Note 04 – Remediation Window

The quiet part was part of the work.

After the private report went out, the correct move was not to keep digging. It was to preserve the evidence, avoid new access, and give the vendor space to remediate.

This is the part of disclosure that is easy to understate. There was no reason to expand the scope once the issue was reportable. More probing would have created more risk without improving the core finding.

I kept the timeline organized, preserved the static-analysis evidence, and started thinking about what a public version could say without publishing material that would enable misuse.

That redaction work is part of the disclosure process. It forces the question: what helps other builders learn, and what only helps someone exploit an old mistake?

PreserveKeep the evidence, dates, observed versions, and source locations organized.
Do not expandAvoid turning one reportable issue into unnecessary additional testing.
PrepareDraft public material with redactions and a clear explanation of research limits.

The remediation window is a trust exercise. My job was to be precise, patient, and ready to publish responsibly after the issue was addressed.

CompleteTech LLC – Innovation at Every Integration Public disclosure series – 2026