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  2. The Bountiful Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bountiful_Company

    The Bountiful Company is an American dietary supplements company. It is owned by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, which sold most of the company's brands to Pfizer in 2021. [2]It was originally known as Nature's Bounty, Inc. but changed its name to NBTY, Inc. in 1995.

  3. Vitamin World - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitamin_World

    Vitamin World, Inc. was founded in 1977 as a subsidiary of NBTY Inc, later the Nature's Bounty Company. [1] NBTY manufactured and sold vitamin and mineral supplement products under the "Vitamin World" label, sports nutrition products under their "Precision Engineered" label, and numerous National Brand label products at the stores.

  4. Bug bounty program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bug_bounty_program

    Google's Vulnerability Rewards Program now includes vulnerabilities found in Google, Google Cloud, Android, and Chrome products, and rewards up to $31,337. [ 38 ] Microsoft and Facebook partnered in November 2013 to sponsor The Internet Bug Bounty, a program to offer rewards for reporting hacks and exploits for a broad range of Internet-related ...

  5. UPDATE 3-Nestle in talks to buy Nature's Bounty vitamins - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/1-nestle-confirms-discussions...

    Analysts expect a price tag of $5-$7 billion for Bountiful, which makes Nature's Bounty vitamins, Osteo Bi-Flex joint-care supplements and Puritan's Pride vitamins and supplements, but Nestle in ...

  6. Perverse incentive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perverse_incentive

    The Great Hanoi Rat Massacre occurred in 1902, in Hanoi, Vietnam (then known as French Indochina), when, under French colonial rule, the colonial government created a bounty program that paid a reward for each rat killed. [3] To collect the bounty, people would need to provide the severed tail of a rat.

  7. Bounty (reward) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bounty_(reward)

    A bounty flyer offering rewards on behalf of the "Anti-Taliban Forces" in Afghanistan A bounty is a payment or reward of money to locate, capture or kill an outlaw or a wanted person . Two modern examples of bounties are the ones placed for the capture of Saddam Hussein and his sons by the United States government [ 1 ] and Microsoft 's bounty ...

  8. Loyalty program - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loyalty_program

    A loyalty program typically involves the operator of a particular program setting up an account for a customer of a business associated with the scheme, and then issue to the customer a loyalty card (variously called rewards card, points card, advantage card, club card, or some other name) which may be a plastic or paper card, visually similar to a credit card, that identifies the cardholder ...

  9. Bugcrowd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bugcrowd

    [1] [2] [3] It was founded in 2012, and in 2019 it was one of the largest bug bounty and vulnerability disclosure companies on the internet. [4] Bugcrowd runs bug bounty programs and also offers a range of penetration testing services it refers to as "Penetration Testing as a Service" (PTaaS), as well as attack surface management. [5] [6] [7]