Elon Musk offers teenager $5,000 to stop tracking his private jet
Being rich and famous comes with a few unexpected downsides. Because Elon Musk, co-founder and CEO of Tesla, one of the drawbacks of fame is having to give a 19-year-old college freshman $5,000 to stop tracking the movements of his private jet on social media.
Jack Sweeney, a student at the University of Central Florida, began tracking Musk’s jet – which, by the way, is not electric or has no emissions – in June 2020. Several apps allow anyone to have An internet connection tracks commercial flights, but ordinary private jet owners and operators try to fly under the radar (sorry, not sorry). Sweeney solved this problem by obtaining publicly available data from the Federal Aviation Administration, according to USA Todayand he created a bot associated with a Twitter account named ElonJet Post updates every time planes take off and land.
As of press time, the account has amassed 124,100 followers, and it caught Musk’s attention. He reached out to Sweeney and asked him to delete it. “Can you take this down? It’s a security risk,” he wrote, adding that “I don’t like the idea of being shot by an asshole” and he worries about “guys” crazy” tracking his every move. Sweeney replied that he was willing to close his account in exchange for Model 3, which has a base price of $44,990. Musk made the opposite offer: $5,000. Sweeney responded to the billionaire’s request for $50,000.
Musk has considered that, according to Protocol, but he ultimately decided that “didn’t feel right to pay to close this door.” Sweeney says he received Bitcoin offers from people who wanted him to keep the account open, which was surprising, but he ended up making another offer to Musk and asking for an internship. There is no word yet on whether he will receive it, what company he will join, or what he will do.
Until then, ElonJet is up and running. Musk’s plane landed in Austin, Texas, on January 26 after flying around Hawaii for several days.
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