A 'human error' made Google send $250,000 (approx. Rs.2 crore) to a self-proclaimed hacker, the company has said, after the mistake came to light when the beneficiary, Sam Curry, flagged it on Twitter, informing the tech giant about the 'random payment' received by him.
"It's been a little over 3 weeks since Google randomly sent me $249,999 and I still haven't heard anything on the support ticket. Is there any way we could get in touch @Google ?," Curry, whose profile on the social media platform describes him as a hacker and 'bug bounty hunter', tweeted on September 14.
A ‘human error’ made #Google send $250,000 (approx. ₹2 crore) to a self-proclaimed hacker, the company has said, after the mistake came to light when the beneficiary, Sam Curry, flagged it on #Twitter.
— Abhijeet Singh (@RealAbhijeetkr) September 18, 2022
Read here: https://t.co/AksRoGskdj pic.twitter.com/zJdxQeYYOX
"It's OK if you don't want it back," Curry added.
In a statement to NPR, Google said it intended to take the money back. "Our team recently made a payment to the wrong party as the result of human error. We appreciate that it was quickly communicated to us by the impacted partner, and we are working to correct it".
Meanwhile, Curry, who works with Yuga Labs as a Staff Security Engineer, told NPR though he occasionally does bug bounty hunting for Google and other companies, he was still unable to establish a link between his part-time work and the sum paid to him by the Mountain View-headquartered giant.
"While the money was available for me to spend, I was simply holding onto it just in case they tried to get it back", Curry further told NPR.
'Big bounty hunting' is when people are paid by firms and organisations to find vulnerabilities in their software.
This article has been adapted from its original source.