Tag Archive for: airline

Teen fined by airline over ridiculous clothing baggage hack


This “runway” attire wasn’t going to fly.

Another day, another traveler with a bold new way to game the luggage fine system. An Australian teen was slapped with a fine after attempting to circumvent an airline baggage fee — by donning more than 13 pounds of clothing, as seen in a video blowing up online.

“I looked like a bear. I’m small and petite but I looked like the exact opposite,” Adriana Ocampo, 19, told South West News Service of her backfired travel hack, which she attempted to pull during a Jetstar Airways flight from Melbourne to her hometown of Adelaide.

The teen, who had just been on a girls’ trip with pal Emily Altamura, also 19, said she knew her luggage was over the airline’s 15-pound limit after she could “barely close” her bag in the hotel room.

Nonetheless, the duo schlepped their oversize load to the airport in the hopes that the crew wouldn’t have time to check — which proved not to be the case.

“When we went to board, we saw them pulling out a trolley with a scale,” rued Ocampo.


Adriana Ocampo.
“They said the fine was $65 and we didn’t feel like spending $65 so we went back and put more clothes on,” said Adriana Ocampo.
Kennedy News & Media

Adriana Ocampo and her friend Emily Atalmura.
Ocampo (right) and her friend, Emily Altamura.
Kennedy News & Media

That’s when she got an unorthodox idea.

“We thought the only way we can take the weight off our bags is if we put it on ourselves so we started putting on our jackets and coats,” said the gal, who was forced to do this routine a second time because her bag was still over the limit.

In the aforementioned footage, the Aussie can be seen laughing hysterically as she yanks all her clothing out of the suitcase and dons it until she’s wearing 15 different things, including an iPad stuffed in her pants.

Her friend, meanwhile, follows suit, until the two resemble Ralphie’s jacket-swaddled little brother from “A Christmas Story.”

“As well as layers of jackets and jumpers, I had baggy trousers on and I was stuffing t-shirts and my iPad in them,” described the human garment rack. “I had about six layers on and stuff in my pockets.”


Ocampo with an iPad stuffed in her pants.
Ocampo with an iPad stuffed in her…

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Hacker claims attack on U.S. airline, stolen no-fly list was out of boredom


The Transportation Security Administration is investigating cybersecurity chaos at CommuteAir after a hacker claimed to have accessed the regional airline’s systems and grabbed a no-fly list.

The hacker told The Washington Times they likely could have canceled and delayed flights and developed physical credentials for airline employees.

CommuteAir said it was not able to validate all of the hacker’s claims.

The hacker, who identifies as “maia arson crimew,” communicated with The Times via email. The hacker also explained the hack in a blog post titled “How to Completely Own an Airline in 3 Easy Steps.”

The hacker cited boredom as motivation and wrote that they were not responsible for the computer system failure that grounded all airlines in the U.S. on Jan. 10.

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Blacklisted Iranian airline targeted by cyber attack, hackers identified


Iran’s Mahan Air was reportedly hit by a cyberattack on Sunday morning, making it the latest in the series of hacking attempts that it has been targetted by. Notably, Mahan is the second-largest airline operating in the country and has been accused of “providing financial, material, or technological support to the IRGC-QF.” IRGC-QF, which stands for Islamic Revolutionary Gaurd Corps- Quds Force has been sanctioned by the US since 2011 for aiding terrorists. 

In the aftermath of the attack, Mahan issued a statement stating, “Mahan Air’s computer system has suffered a new attack. It has already been the target on several occasions due to its important position in the country’s aviation industry.”

Further, in its statement, the company claimed to have successfully thwarted the attack, however, a report in the Jerusalem Post stated that the group which claimed responsibility was successful in obtaining certain documents regarding IRGC. The same was confirmed by hacker group Hoosyarane Vatan, which in a Telegram Post, stated that people “deserved to know the truth behind money spent by IRGC abroad.” The group even went further to state that even after detecting the attack, the airlines were “never managed to drive us out of there, and our access to their network was never damaged.”

“We believe the public deserves to know the truth behind this cooperation and the money wasted on IRGC activities abroad while Iranian people suffer at home,” Hooshyarane-Vatan said in a statement. 

Iran targetted by multiple cyber attacks 

Late last month, a cyberattack targeted gas stations across Iran, leaving the motorists stranded in long queues for several hours as the government-issued electronic cards became non-operational. While it remains unclear what caused the major compromise and breach of security at the pumps that deliver subsidised fuel to the Iranians, the state media reported that the incident was aimed at directly challenging Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. 

The agency stated that the government-issued card punched in to buy fuel through the machines on Tuesday flashed back an error code with a message: “Cyberattack 64411.”…

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Security company finds some e-ticketing links exposed to hackers – Airline Ratings

Security company finds some e-ticketing links exposed to hackers  Airline Ratings

E-ticketing systems at some airlines are using unencrypted links that may expose customers’ personal information to hackers, according to threat experts at …

“mobile security news” – read more