Tesla Motors Inc. is offering up to $1,000 to people who uncover security problems on its website.

Tesla’s “bug bounty” — $25 to $1,000 a “bug”—is on Bugcrowd, a security crowdsourcing company based in San Francisco. Security researchers have found 22 bugs for Tesla and have been paid for their finds, although Bugcrowd hasn’t published information about their payouts.

On its website, Tesla TSLA, +4.42% does not mention the money, but says it “values the work done by security researchers in improving the security of our products and service offerings.”

The company is “committed to working with this community to verify, reproduce, and respond to legitimate reported vulnerabilities,” and encourage others to participate in a “responsible reporting process,” it says.

That means security researchers need to provide their contact information and comply with a set of rules that include making good-faith efforts to avoid privacy violations, data destruction, and a disruption of services, all pretty standard policies.

The researchers are also asked to not modify or access any data from someone else and give Tesla “a reasonable time” to correct the issue before making any information public.

Tesla even has a “Security Researcher Hall of Fame” to recognize their work.

Bugcrowd researchers have compiled a list of vulnerability reporting programs for several companies, with some offering money and “hall of fame” perks like Tesla.