My Mileage Plan Account Was Hacked
#1
Original Poster
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Austin, TX
Programs: AS MVP Gold 75K, ex-AA EXP, ex-UA 1K
Posts: 706
My Mileage Plan Account Was Hacked
This is a definite first: somebody managed to gain access to my Mileage Plus account on Friday and used it to purchase two tickets on QR! (for 140,000 miles) I received zero email notifications about it, which I'm guessing means the hacker changed my email address prior to making the award booking, but then subsequently changed it back. I also can't access the listed PNR: I'm assuming (especially since it's an international flight) that the ticket was booked under the thief's last name.
Has this ever happened to anyone else before?? (Worst possible timing, too, what with all the Alaska pilots on strike and customer service lines being inundated right now.)
Has this ever happened to anyone else before?? (Worst possible timing, too, what with all the Alaska pilots on strike and customer service lines being inundated right now.)
#2
A FlyerTalk Posting Legend
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Minneapolis: DL DM charter 2.3MM
Programs: A3*Gold, SPG Plat, HyattDiamond, MarriottPP, LHW exAccess, ICI, Raffles Amb, NW PE MM, TWA Gold MM
Posts: 100,111
The hacker would need to use either his/her own name for the award ticket or (more likely) the name of the passenger who bought the tickets through a mileage broker or other scammer.
#4
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Pacific Northwest
Programs: UA 1MM, AS MVPG, Bonvoyed Gold, Honors Dia, Hyatt Explorer, IHG Plat, ...
Posts: 14,893
https://www.alaskaair.com/content/mi...t-mileage-plan
I think when I book a ticket for someone else form my account the PNR appears in My Trips for my account.
Good luck, I think they will make you whole.
#5

Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: DCA - PDX - LAX
Programs: AA Gold, UA Silver, Marriott Titanium, AS 75k
Posts: 728
This hacking has happened to me before. They even added a credit card number to the profile. They reset my account, put the miles back in, then said I needed to add a pincode next time or they would not refund the issue in the future. They could not figure out how it happened. The way I found out was due to Awardwallet, as the "hacker" added a new e-mail address for confirmations.
#6
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 4,686
This hacking has happened to me before. They even added a credit card number to the profile. They reset my account, put the miles back in, then said I needed to add a pincode next time or they would not refund the issue in the future. They could not figure out how it happened. The way I found out was due to Awardwallet, as the "hacker" added a new e-mail address for confirmations.
#8
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: YVR
Posts: 1,464
Just happened to me too. I got an alert that my credit card was charged by Alaska. I have my credit card saved in my Alaska account. I logged in to my Alaska account and saw that miles were redeemed for a flight today on Aer Lingus, 2 x 60,000 miles, for names that I don't know. There were no emails from Alaska. I changed my Alaska password right away. Then I received the following email from "Alaska Revenue Protection":
Please call Customer Care at 1-800-654-5669 to verify your Mileage Account. There has been recent activity from your account that we suspect may have been done without your permission.
I called and it was a long hold before I could reach a live person. They put me on hold again, and then came back advising I will receive an email soon asking to send them my DL and PIN. They couldn't tell me if my credit card charged will be refunded, and told me I may need to contact my credit card and report fraud to get those charged removed. I got that email and sent what they asked. Now I cannot log in to my Alaska account. Waiting for the resolution.
Please call Customer Care at 1-800-654-5669 to verify your Mileage Account. There has been recent activity from your account that we suspect may have been done without your permission.
I called and it was a long hold before I could reach a live person. They put me on hold again, and then came back advising I will receive an email soon asking to send them my DL and PIN. They couldn't tell me if my credit card charged will be refunded, and told me I may need to contact my credit card and report fraud to get those charged removed. I got that email and sent what they asked. Now I cannot log in to my Alaska account. Waiting for the resolution.
#13
Join Date: Dec 2008
Programs: ba exec silver
Posts: 532
Someone hacked into the account...
So this is interesting.
For some reason, I have been unable to access my Alaska account and every time I requested a password reset or SMS... I never received anything.
After contacting customer support, they said that there is a "misspelling" on the email address - they added an extra letter.
They asked me to confirm some details before enabling the account again and asked me to check the trips/activity.
Sure enough, someone claimed 30K miles for a trip... using ROYAL AIR MAROC!
Never flew them. I am based in the US.
So they said they will credit the miles within 7-10 business days but I don't understand how they were able to get into the account (granted, leaks happen) and reclaim the miles.
Surely all the ticketing information will be taken from the account which would have my name on it? They would have to present some form of ID with the ticket?
Surely there must be a way to pursue the individual since they flew and bought the ticket and bring them "down" in some way when they know they did this illegally? Granted this may not even be possible but I mean... come on. We are always trying to pursue hackers and what not and bring them to justice of sorts. Yes, it's a small thing here in this context but that's besides the point.
Thoughts?
For some reason, I have been unable to access my Alaska account and every time I requested a password reset or SMS... I never received anything.
After contacting customer support, they said that there is a "misspelling" on the email address - they added an extra letter.
They asked me to confirm some details before enabling the account again and asked me to check the trips/activity.
Sure enough, someone claimed 30K miles for a trip... using ROYAL AIR MAROC!
Never flew them. I am based in the US.
So they said they will credit the miles within 7-10 business days but I don't understand how they were able to get into the account (granted, leaks happen) and reclaim the miles.
Surely all the ticketing information will be taken from the account which would have my name on it? They would have to present some form of ID with the ticket?
Surely there must be a way to pursue the individual since they flew and bought the ticket and bring them "down" in some way when they know they did this illegally? Granted this may not even be possible but I mean... come on. We are always trying to pursue hackers and what not and bring them to justice of sorts. Yes, it's a small thing here in this context but that's besides the point.
Thoughts?
#14
Join Date: Jul 2023
Posts: 4
That's the problem when sites don't use 2FA. It's a hassle for the user but it guarantees stuff like this doesn't happen. At least you'll get your points back, it'll probably be on them to pursue who essentially stole the points from them and it probably isn't even legally worth it.
#15
FlyerTalk Evangelist
Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Pacific Northwest
Programs: UA 1MM, AS MVPG, Bonvoyed Gold, Honors Dia, Hyatt Explorer, IHG Plat, ...
Posts: 14,893
So they said they will credit the miles within 7-10 business days but I don't understand how they were able to get into the account (granted, leaks happen) and reclaim the miles.
Surely all the ticketing information will be taken from the account which would have my name on it? They would have to present some form of ID with the ticket?
Surely there must be a way to pursue the individual since they flew and bought the ticket and bring them "down" in some way when they know they did this illegally? Granted this may not even be possible but I mean... come on. We are always trying to pursue hackers and what not and bring them to justice of sorts. Yes, it's a small thing here in this context but that's besides the point.
Thoughts?
Surely all the ticketing information will be taken from the account which would have my name on it? They would have to present some form of ID with the ticket?
Surely there must be a way to pursue the individual since they flew and bought the ticket and bring them "down" in some way when they know they did this illegally? Granted this may not even be possible but I mean... come on. We are always trying to pursue hackers and what not and bring them to justice of sorts. Yes, it's a small thing here in this context but that's besides the point.
Thoughts?
Do you use a password manager?
The passenger who flew the stolen flight might not have been the hacker; the hacker could have sold that flight to a 3rd party.