• by rootsudo on 12/7/2024, 6:49:49 AM

    They have an ecomm team and info sec team but they’re pretty unwilling to fix this. They do agile but no one wants to own this, especially in December since they have change freezes and this will affect the yearly and monthly issues.

    I would advise submitting this is the state of Washington and DOT federal and state.

    Technically this is a data breach. Atg.wa.gov I would submit a data breach notification this will force them to actively fix it this month otherwise they will sit on it and push it off per agile sprint and do it when it’s convenient for the airline. Post holiday rush.

  • by solardev on 12/7/2024, 5:30:32 AM

    Support won't know what to do. Have you tried their cybersec form? https://www.alaskaair.com/content/about-us/site-info/report-...

  • by Neff on 12/7/2024, 8:12:37 AM

    I have connections with people at Alaska. I will send this their way and hopefully someone will reach out. Make sure there is contact info in your bio

  • by madaxe_again on 12/7/2024, 7:59:30 AM

    You need to be very, very careful about posting this, depending on your jurisdiction - in most western countries this disclosure is illegal, and you can be criminally prosecuted for providing information about accessing personal information, and you are also admitting that you knowingly accessed the personal information of other customers - in fact, airline passengers, who there are additional privacy laws for.

    What you’ve done here is a criminal act according to the CFAA, and your exploration of their site could also be construed as wire fraud. As you’ve done this across state lines this is also a federal felony. You’re also in violation of the GLBA, as you’re disclosing the availability of airline customer information. You could also fall foul of the FTC and the wiretap act.

    I have seen people (Weev, Michael Brown, numerous others) go to prison for similar, and this lot could win you years in a federal penitentiary.

    Please, consider the legal consequences this could bring upon you.

    I would simply forget about it and promptly delete this - it’s their problem, not yours, and by posting about it here, they could decide to make it your problem.

  • by underdeserver on 12/7/2024, 6:36:26 AM

    They have a bug. Serious one, yes, but they listened and gave you points for reporting it. Seems to me at least the support staff are trying (even if they aren't quite able to get it fixed).

  • by StressedDev on 12/7/2024, 8:20:03 AM

    The OP can report the security problem by going to https://www.alaskaair.com/content/about-us/site-info/report-... . I think this is probably the best way to get Alaska Airlines to fix the problem.

  • by Terr_ on 12/7/2024, 5:28:16 AM

    Perhaps some sort of UUID collision in terms of cookies/sessions?

  • by Dalewyn on 12/7/2024, 7:20:39 AM

    >I'll refrain from posting it here so it's not as easy to exploit.

    I commend your ethics, but I'm going to be straight with you: Alaska isn't going to do anything until tangible harm and damage occurs. The cost to address the problem is higher than the cost to just ignore it. Alaska probably won't think this even is a problem yet, for that matter.

    If you still want to be an unwarranted gentleman, I would report this again but put a firm deadline to disclosure and say "No" is not an answer. Also have a lawyer handy if you choose to make this a problem for them.

  • by solardev on 12/10/2024, 11:33:43 PM

    OP did they ever write back?

  • by ratg13 on 12/7/2024, 7:20:05 AM

    load balancer / caching issues