Not long ago, Mark was driving a truck across the country when he received a call from home.
His wife had collapsed and been rushed to the hospital.
The bill arrived the next day: $11,000.
At the same time, the same companies tracking every move on his smartphone were earning billions selling user data.
Mark assumed there was nothing he could do.
Until a chance encounter with a software engineer who helped design the algorithms behind those data systems.
The engineer revealed something surprising.
The same network that extracts value from your phone can also be forced to send small credits back to the user.
He showed Mark a simple process that takes about three minutes on any smartphone.
The first time Mark tried it, his phone displayed a notification:
Payment received – $312
Within weeks, the deposits continued appearing.
Other people began reporting similar results:
$487
$640
$980
The engineer says the loophole was never intended for public use — which may explain why the video explaining it keeps disappearing online.
"I tried it just to prove it wouldn't work. Then I saw $342 show up the same night."
- Mark D.,
Arizona
"I can barely send photos on my phone. If I can do this, anyone can."
-Sandra L.,
Michigan
"After the third day I realized it was actually happening."
- Robert P.,
Texas
"I just run it once a day and leave it alone."
-Linda K., Florida