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How a College Student Got 15 Million Miles by Hacking United Airlines

By
Melanie Lieberman
Melanie Lieberman
and
Travel + Leisure
Travel + Leisure
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By
Melanie Lieberman
Melanie Lieberman
and
Travel + Leisure
Travel + Leisure
Down Arrow Button Icon
September 20, 2016, 9:59 AM ET
Inside Delta Air Lines Inc., Southwest Airlines Co., and United Continental Holdings Inc. Terminals At Los Angeles International Airport
Passengers check-in for flights at United Continental Holdings Inc. Terminal 7 of Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) in Los Angeles, California, U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2015. LAX is one of a handful of major U.S. airports where no one carrier dominates -- each of the four biggest airlines now holds market share between 14 percent and 18 percent. Photograph by Patrick T. Fallon — Bloomberg via Getty Images

Georgia Institute of Technology student Ryan Pickren used to get in trouble for hacking websites—in 2015, he hacked rival University of Georgia’s online calendar and almost spent 15 years in prison.

But now he’s being rewarded for his skills. Pickren participated in United Airlines’ Bug Bounty Program and earned 15 million United miles. At two cents a mile, that’s about $300,000 worth.

United’s white hat hacking program invites computer experts to legally hack their systems, paying up to 1 million United miles to hackers who can reveal major security flaws. At that rate, we can presume Pickren reported as many as 15 severe bugs.

The Points Guy noted that it’s potentially alarming that United’s systems “were so porous.”

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Pickren isn’t the only hacker who has recently discovered issues with the airline’s website: Last month, 19-year-old security researcher Olivier Beg earned 1 million frequent flyer miles by exposing 20 medium and low-severity issues (worth 250,000 and 50,000 frequent flyer miles, respectively).

The only drawback to all those free miles? Taxes. Having earned $300,000 of taxable income from the Bug Bounty Program, Pickren could owe the Internal Revenue Service tens of thousands of dollars.

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• The 100 Best Hotels in the World

He’s not keeping all of the miles, though: Pickren donated five million of them to Georgia Tech.

This article previously appeared on TravelandLeisure.com.

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