One year our entire family went to the dog track for New Year’s Eve. They had a really good dinner deal plus dancing with a great DJ, and of course gambling. At midnight, there was going to be a balloon drop. Each balloon had a strip of paper listing a prize in it. Most were small, like one free $2 bet, a free dessert, things like that. The grand prize was an all-expense paid trip for two to Durango, Colorado to ride a scenic railroad. Earlier that evening, I was on the dance floor, and happened to look up at the balloons. One odd thing stuck out to me… you could see the silhouettes of the paper strips inside the balloons. Most were small, around two inches long, but one right above my head was at least as long as my entire hand. I reasoned that that balloon HAD to have the grand prize in it, as it would take a lot of space to write out “All expenses paid trip for two to Durango, Colorado for a ride on a historic railroad”. I made sure to mark that balloon, and right as it turned midnight, got directly underneath it and watched it like my life depended on it. I grabbed the balloon, and sure enough, I was correct. I won a $2000 trip, but then I turned around and sold the trip on Ebay and got enough money to then buy my wife’s engagement ring. It worked out *really* well for me!
I had that air hockey table running for HOURS. We had kids lined up around the table. We even did a little tournament – it was so much fun.
When my family was about to leave I told one other kid the trick. Turns out I’m a pretty good judge of character. For 3 years we met back up and ran that Air Hockey table until one of the campground attendants caught on.
The 4th year the table was fixed and cost a dollar to play. The arcade was entirely dead. The thing is – kids would always play other games while they waited for air hockey. The campground decided it was better to have a dead arcade that made nothing rather than one that made a little and had free air hockey. That was when I learned the importance of a loss leader.
It’s most likely safe to say that, every once in a while, every one of us has a chance of encountering some overlook in the system that we usually get an opportunity to abuse for our own good. This is no less true when talking about the author of this post.
As Bored Panda found out by reaching out to the OP, u/Aarunascut, also known as Aaruna Njuguna, is a 34-year-old UK resident working as an e-commerce entrepreneur. As he told us himself, he’s a down-to-earth people person who is intrigued by diversity.
The author is a curious human being. He likes to ask questions and loves to get good replies, so she tries to time these posts to get the most responses possible. “It’s exciting reading some of the replies, and it’s kind of self-fulfilling when others say they like such threads.”
Aaruna was eager to make his own addition to the list and share his own loophole story, telling us that in his home country, some random tech-savvy people would post instructions with codes on the X platform. “I’d get 100GB+ internet bundles for free,” shared the poster.
The OP also told us that his favorite story from the comment section was about a student renting a store as a front for getting a deduction, which made it much easier for her to fund her tuition fees. “It got me thinking,” said Aaruna, praising the person for their smartness in coming up with this hack.
A well known bank offered a lucrative cashback reward points program for grocery store, gas station, and pharmacy purchases on a credit card they offered. The promotion only lasted the first six months of opening the card, but you could open multiple cards and get the same benefits again every time you opened a new one.
You know those prepaid debit cards you can buy at grocery stores? I maxed out the credit card every day buying those babies, then used them to pay off the credit card balance and just collected the cash from the reward points.
Made thousands of dollars a day doing this. It felt illegal, but it wasn’t. I effectively robbed the bank legally. And since credit card reward points are considered rebates it was all tax-free.
This eventually became my full time job. It got more difficult to pull off over time as the grocery store employees understandably became increasingly suspicious of me and reluctant to keep selling me their cards at such a high volume. I had to start driving longer distances to new stores that didn’t recognize me and work on charming store managers to dissuade them from hassling me. Still beat the hell out of any real job, though.
I rode this gravy train for a little under a year before the bank sent me a letter in the mail gently informing me that they were aware of what I was doing and kindly requested that I stop. I didn’t want to find out what would happen if I pressed my luck any longer so I quit while I was ahead. The bank has since closed the loophole.
It was a pretty surreal year. I grew a huge beard, was baked at least half the time, ate way too much fast food, and went to the beach almost every day. Ultimately I was somewhat relieved when it came to an end, but I do have fond memories from that year.
Making mistakes is human, so there will always be things that are not supposed to be where they are, yet get overlooked and stay there regardless. But it’s also interesting to learn why we keep looking for these easy ways around certain things and where is the place that a line should be drawn.
Looking for answers to these questions, we came across an article by Lifehacker, which explained that loopholes are not inherently good or bad and exist in a pretty gray area. When they’re being exploited, the result will likely tip closer to one or another side. However, that depends on a wide number of various factors.
It’s good to know why we look for these cracks in the systems that can be used. And the very first stop on this list is laziness. Humans like comfort, and we’re often pulled to do as little as necessary to achieve what we want. It may be bad for us, and it might also push us to find better ways of doing something, but the statement is true regardless.
People also love free stuff. So when we find an opportunity to get some, possibly without any apparent consequences, it’s hard to pass on it. At the same time, it comes to the issues with the existing systems, whether to fix it or to get around it.
And lastly, we are curious, love feeling smart, and hate being told “no.” Knowing something that others don’t always make us feel good, doubly so if it brings us benefits. However, when we’re told we can’t do something, it only excites our curiosity more, making us push the limits and see how far we can really take things.
I had a LOT of cheap chocolate and soda.
When I was a little kid, my dad would volunteer at the Farm area of our State Fair every year. I’d go with him all the time, and just run around since there was nobody there in the morning hours before the fair opened for the day.
Across from the Farm area was a beer garden, with a big koi pond. Every morning I would go over to the (currently closed) beer gardens, wade into the pond, and collect like $20-30 in coins from the drunk fair goers the day before.
It was an insane amount of coins, and they were damaging to the fish anyway – so it was a total win-win scenario. I did this every day for the entire month of the fair… several years in a row.
Most things can be somehow justified, and it all usually comes down to our own personal ethics. However, there are some questions that people should ask themselves before exploiting some loophole to make it easier to consider the consequences and find where they believe a line should be drawn.
To start with, ask, “Is it breaking the law?” If it is, being caught can result in losing a lot more than gaining and can cause a lot of regret down the road.
Following that up, another viable question would be, “Is it affecting someone else?” Someone else could easily get in trouble for your actions and have no way to protect themselves. While you might not feel the consequence, that person definitely will.
After the first legitimately purchased beer I thought to my IT self: what if the swiping off animation of the coupon is on client side? If that’s the case, turning internet off before handing the coupon would prevent it from being voided. Then, turning internet on again and refreshing the web page should present it as new.
I was right. I got 7 free beers and a friend of mine 6.
If the previous two questions end up with an answer “no,” ask yourself this: “Is it worth the trouble?” Just like breaking the law, this can lead you to bigger losses than gains, or at the very least, cost you precious time.
Lastly, it’s a good idea to think about what someone you respect would think of you if you chose to do it. If the answer is negative and you’re still trying to justify it, you’re most likely already looking for a loophole to get to a loophole, which should be a definite stop sign.
Except, to scan a barcode, you don’t need to purchase it, you just need to have it. So if 1st day of the month you buy the chocolate bar, nothing is stopping you from scanning it again and again. You can even just take a picture of the barcode of the soda drink bottle next time you stop at the supermarket and actually never buy it.
And you can make a printable PowerPoint of it, to ease the task.
And you can open accounts to family and friends and share the Ppt.
It lasted a bit more than a year and it was very fruitful.
I noticed I was always getting like $1.50 returned to my account here and there and then I realized what it was
In the end, there really is no set officiator that could undeniably tell us what is wrong and what is right. Even when talking about abusing some system, agreement, or rule through its shortcomings abuse, there are ways to use that for both good and bad. It all comes down to our own morals, but as long as we don’t hurt anybody, at the very least, we get some good stories to share online or in person.
What do you think of this list? Have you ever found and exploited any loopholes yourself? Well, don’t wait! Come down and share!
A long time ago when I was attending community college, I worked at an Imax movie theater in a mall. Next door was a two-story arcade that had promotion that if you brought in a ticket stub from the Imax theater or the movie theater, you’d get a $3 free play card. I’d assist in cleaning the theater and find lots of discarded tickets that I’d take to the arcade after my shift. None of the workers cared.
For my sons 4th birthday party we went to Chuck E Cheese, he got to stand in the ticket wind machine, imagine a circular phone booth and wind would rush in there and tickets would fly around. The birthday boy got 60 seconds in there to keep what he could catch.
I told him to hold his shirt out and stand there, he was 4000 tickets richer.
When I was a kid I was in the swimclub. It was a pool open for the general public, and we swam when it was closed. A section of lockers had turnstile combination locks, you’d put 50 cent in and choose your combination but they would frequently jam so the 50c wouldn’t come out again. People couldn’t be bothered to get someone from personell for 50c, so the money would pile up in the lock. People kept putting 50c in, the lock wouldn’t work so they’d move to the next one. We swimmers knew the trick of how to get the money back out so it was always a race to get there first. If you were lucky you could get 10 bucks in coins from all of them. That was a lot for a 10 year old 30 years ago, and you’d get yourself a frozen Marsbar, and if you had a big haul you’d buy your friends some to, that was the unspoken rule.
There were some nights I had to pay for metered parking, just so I could go to bed. One time though, I found a meter that was broken. Parked there the rest of the year, then never renewed my parking permit and parked there for another year. Saved a bunch of money and uncountable hours of driving time, never got a ticket
I worked a job where we would have to book clients very expensive last minute hotel rooms if their flights were cancelled. My coworker would book the hotels using his personal rewards account with the hotel. One particularly bad week, he racked up about $15k worth of Marriot reward points. Yes, in one week.
Never paid over $1/gal the entire time she worked there.
Years ago, my office had a Christmas party at a bar and restaurant in the city. Just dinner and drinks. The service was absolutely atrocious, forgotten orders, wrong orders, when offered a free round to apologise, they forgot to bring the free round. So we clearly complained.
Management gave us a call the next morning to apologise and to come in. Myself and a colleague went in and the management gave us a refund for one meal and one drink, and then gave us a voucher for $100 off the next time we were there.
The issue was, this voucher wasn’t numbered. It had no date on it. It had nothing to show that it was unique.
So, my colleague and I did what every good person who has access to a high colour copier would do. We copied the s**t out of it and drank there for free for nearly a year until we both got banned for life.
Thanks Jade Buddha in Brisbane!
ETA: it seems I need to check to see if my student e-mail still works LOL
Long, long time ago in school. No alcohol allowed in our dorm rooms and the administrators would check. No way to keep my booze stash. Discovered the admins didn’t track gym lockers. Set up one locker for liquor and one for beer. Problem solved and made extra cash selling to thirsty classmates.
Not quite a loophole but whatever. In the early days of the iTunes Music Store (04-05), Pepsi had a promo for free download codes with each bottle cap. I worked at a university, made little money, didn’t have the internet access to regularly steal music, so would just look in the recycling bins every time I walked in the halls for Pepsi caps. Also befriended a secretary who was addicted to Diet Pepsi that would just give me bags of bottle caps. I probably got at least a dozen albums with that promotion.
You could just buy the stickers of eBay and stick them on the redemption cards, worked out 5 pence a coffee.
Then they came out with the app 😭
Okay in the late 90’s the grocery store Albertson’s had a program called fresh or free where if you found an item on the shelf that was expired you got the expired one and a fresh one of the same item for completely free. They didn’t really advertise it but our friend worked there and told us. There were a few stores that were open till 1am so we would go in before midnight and scope everything set to expire that day and then at 12:01am start filling our grocery carts. Baked goods, packaged meat, dairy anything you could think of really. They couldn’t do anything about it. We literally left the store with grocery carts overflowing with all edible good items for completely free that summer. Remember you got the recently expired item (still good) as well as a non expired replacement all for free! It was quite the summer of stocking everyone’s family fridge. All went to college in the fall and guess they discontinued the program not too much longer after that, but holy smokes to have that now when I’m actually paying for my own groceries
2018 I ordered pizza Hut for my office. I noticed the Free Stix coupon code took off like 4 orders of bread sticks… So we maxed it out.
99 orders of bread sticks, FREESTIX took off all 99 orders.. oh boy.. we can’t screw them like that..
So we ordered like 15 and continued to do so as a Saturday night tradition for maybe 3 months before it was fixed.
Dozen orders of bread sticks, completely taken off the total.. order like $12.99 worth of pizza to split.
When Kmart was big they were running a promotion where if you spent $50, you’d immediately get a $10 gift card for free. I figured out that you could keep purchasing the same gift cards with other gift cards and each transaction would get you a free $10 GC reward. The only catch was that you couldn’t directly buy a $50 GC with a $50 GC. Instead, you had to buy a card with a slightly higher value (+$1) each time but they let you pay for the transaction with 2 GCs. So by the end of the night, I walked out with an iPod Classic and a plasma TV.
Pay for it on your credit card, free delivery.
Get sky miles.
Take dollar coins to bank, deposit, pay off bill.
Repeat.
So a few years back the company MeUndies was doing a ‘national underwear day’ sale where new users could order any pair off the site and only had to pay $1 for shipping.
The thing was, they didn’t have any restrictions on verifying new users. You could type in any email address you wanted, slam in a random series of characters for a password, and it would make the account.
Then you could order a pair, log out, type in more random info, and repeat the process.
My apartment mailbox was literally overflowing with these purple confetti design packages. It was wonderful.
I worked in outsourced payroll a number of years back. Somehow, the company figured out they had paying this guy who was let go for 3 years.
The company came after my organization to say it was our error (converting into our system as active). This guy had a reporting manager who must have approved his hire every year (or did a c**p job of just oking it).
The story was they fired this guy and he wasn’t happy with the way they did it. So, he never told the company. The company tried to go after him, but the law wasn’t on their side.
We had our original files for conversion saved and they had sent the guy over to us as an active employee.
Would love for this to happen to me, though I’d probably tell them (unless they pissed me off like they did to this guy)
Company requested we as remote workers fly out to headquarters every other month just to show face. They let the employees book their own tickets and set up their own car rentals. We just expensed our CC purchases and it was gewchie. There wasn’t a hard limit on how long we stay, just aim for the 10-14 days. I worked 4 on 4 off. Ended up starting my trip on my weekend, taking my 4 off, working my 4 then taking 4 off before flying home. Got my $78/hr OT rate 10hrs a day for 8 days plus per diem while chillin in the hotel, or doing things around town because while it was my weekend, I was out on a work trip and OT applied.
Also because we did the purchasing, we kept all the airline frequent flier and rental miles. Ended when I left for a position offering a nicer check, probably woulda been doing it to this day if I didn’t leave.
The railway crews each had a wallet full of fleet cards (like a credit card, but only usable for fuel and related things) so they’d be able to fuel up anywhere in North America. In the cities, that meant they could choose what gas station to go to, and that choice was usually based on where the crew leader had loyalty cards for. Company pays for fuel, crew leader gets the points.
Anyway, one guy happened to have the points card for the bulk fuel/truck stop that I worked at. One summer they had a major project. They’d bring in two pickup trucks and a large commercial truck one the way to the job. The commercial truck also had a large fuel tank on it that they’d fill up and use to fill the heavy excavators, welders, generators and such. So he’d full that up, and then return later that day, fill the truck and the tank up again and go back out. They were spending thousands of dollars for fuel every day. Those points really added up quickly, and he used them to get gift cards. He used the gift cards to buy smoke and lunch every single day and still had some left over.
When I traveled for work (in the days before Uber) I got a ton of blank taxi receipts. And I’d fill them out for rides to and from the airport. It was $35ish each way. But I’d take the subway for $1.50 instead. So $70ish dollars tax free income for every trip.
I had that air hockey table running for HOURS. We had kids lined up around the table. We even did a little tournament - it was so much fun.
When my family was about to leave I told one other kid the trick. Turns out I'm a pretty good judge of character. For 3 years we met back up and ran that Air Hockey table until one of the campground attendants caught on.
The 4th year the table was fixed and cost a dollar to play. The arcade was entirely dead. The thing is - kids would always play other games while they waited for air hockey. The campground decided it was better to have a dead arcade that made nothing rather than one that made a little and had free air hockey. That was when I learned the importance of a loss leader.
It’s most likely safe to say that, every once in a while, every one of us has a chance of encountering some overlook in the system that we usually get an opportunity to abuse for our own good. This is no less true when talking about the author of this post.
As Bored Panda found out by reaching out to the OP, u/Aarunascut, also known as Aaruna Njuguna, is a 34-year-old UK resident working as an e-commerce entrepreneur. As he told us himself, he’s a down-to-earth people person who is intrigued by diversity.
The author is a curious human being. He likes to ask questions and loves to get good replies, so she tries to time these posts to get the most responses possible. “It’s exciting reading some of the replies, and it’s kind of self-fulfilling when others say they like such threads.”
Aaruna was eager to make his own addition to the list and share his own loophole story, telling us that in his home country, some random tech-savvy people would post instructions with codes on the X platform. “I’d get 100GB+ internet bundles for free,” shared the poster.
The OP also told us that his favorite story from the comment section was about a student renting a store as a front for getting a deduction, which made it much easier for her to fund her tuition fees. “It got me thinking,” said Aaruna, praising the person for their smartness in coming up with this hack.
A well known bank offered a lucrative cashback reward points program for grocery store, gas station, and pharmacy purchases on a credit card they offered. The promotion only lasted the first six months of opening the card, but you could open multiple cards and get the same benefits again every time you opened a new one.
You know those prepaid debit cards you can buy at grocery stores? I maxed out the credit card every day buying those babies, then used them to pay off the credit card balance and just collected the cash from the reward points.
Made thousands of dollars a day doing this. It felt illegal, but it wasn't. I effectively robbed the bank legally. And since credit card reward points are considered rebates it was all tax-free.
This eventually became my full time job. It got more difficult to pull off over time as the grocery store employees understandably became increasingly suspicious of me and reluctant to keep selling me their cards at such a high volume. I had to start driving longer distances to new stores that didn't recognize me and work on charming store managers to dissuade them from hassling me. Still beat the hell out of any real job, though.
I rode this gravy train for a little under a year before the bank sent me a letter in the mail gently informing me that they were aware of what I was doing and kindly requested that I stop. I didn't want to find out what would happen if I pressed my luck any longer so I quit while I was ahead. The bank has since closed the loophole.
It was a pretty surreal year. I grew a huge beard, was baked at least half the time, ate way too much fast food, and went to the beach almost every day. Ultimately I was somewhat relieved when it came to an end, but I do have fond memories from that year.
Making mistakes is human, so there will always be things that are not supposed to be where they are, yet get overlooked and stay there regardless. But it’s also interesting to learn why we keep looking for these easy ways around certain things and where is the place that a line should be drawn.
Looking for answers to these questions, we came across an article by Lifehacker, which explained that loopholes are not inherently good or bad and exist in a pretty gray area. When they’re being exploited, the result will likely tip closer to one or another side. However, that depends on a wide number of various factors.
It’s good to know why we look for these cracks in the systems that can be used. And the very first stop on this list is laziness. Humans like comfort, and we’re often pulled to do as little as necessary to achieve what we want. It may be bad for us, and it might also push us to find better ways of doing something, but the statement is true regardless.
People also love free stuff. So when we find an opportunity to get some, possibly without any apparent consequences, it’s hard to pass on it. At the same time, it comes to the issues with the existing systems, whether to fix it or to get around it.
And lastly, we are curious, love feeling smart, and hate being told “no.” Knowing something that others don’t always make us feel good, doubly so if it brings us benefits. However, when we’re told we can’t do something, it only excites our curiosity more, making us push the limits and see how far we can really take things.
I had a LOT of cheap chocolate and soda.
When I was a little kid, my dad would volunteer at the Farm area of our State Fair every year. I'd go with him all the time, and just run around since there was nobody there in the morning hours before the fair opened for the day.
Across from the Farm area was a beer garden, with a big koi pond. Every morning I would go over to the (currently closed) beer gardens, wade into the pond, and collect like $20-30 in coins from the drunk fair goers the day before.
It was an insane amount of coins, and they were damaging to the fish anyway - so it was a total win-win scenario. I did this every day for the entire month of the fair... several years in a row.
Most things can be somehow justified, and it all usually comes down to our own personal ethics. However, there are some questions that people should ask themselves before exploiting some loophole to make it easier to consider the consequences and find where they believe a line should be drawn.
To start with, ask, “Is it breaking the law?” If it is, being caught can result in losing a lot more than gaining and can cause a lot of regret down the road.
Following that up, another viable question would be, “Is it affecting someone else?” Someone else could easily get in trouble for your actions and have no way to protect themselves. While you might not feel the consequence, that person definitely will.
After the first legitimately purchased beer I thought to my IT self: what if the swiping off animation of the coupon is on client side? If that's the case, turning internet off before handing the coupon would prevent it from being voided. Then, turning internet on again and refreshing the web page should present it as new.
I was right. I got 7 free beers and a friend of mine 6.
If the previous two questions end up with an answer “no,” ask yourself this: “Is it worth the trouble?” Just like breaking the law, this can lead you to bigger losses than gains, or at the very least, cost you precious time.
Lastly, it’s a good idea to think about what someone you respect would think of you if you chose to do it. If the answer is negative and you’re still trying to justify it, you’re most likely already looking for a loophole to get to a loophole, which should be a definite stop sign.
Except, to scan a barcode, you don't need to purchase it, you just need to have it. So if 1st day of the month you buy the chocolate bar, nothing is stopping you from scanning it again and again. You can even just take a picture of the barcode of the soda drink bottle next time you stop at the supermarket and actually never buy it.
And you can make a printable PowerPoint of it, to ease the task.
And you can open accounts to family and friends and share the Ppt.
It lasted a bit more than a year and it was very fruitful.
I noticed I was always getting like $1.50 returned to my account here and there and then I realized what it was
In the end, there really is no set officiator that could undeniably tell us what is wrong and what is right. Even when talking about abusing some system, agreement, or rule through its shortcomings abuse, there are ways to use that for both good and bad. It all comes down to our own morals, but as long as we don’t hurt anybody, at the very least, we get some good stories to share online or in person.
What do you think of this list? Have you ever found and exploited any loopholes yourself? Well, don’t wait! Come down and share!
A long time ago when I was attending community college, I worked at an Imax movie theater in a mall. Next door was a two-story arcade that had promotion that if you brought in a ticket stub from the Imax theater or the movie theater, you'd get a $3 free play card. I'd assist in cleaning the theater and find lots of discarded tickets that I'd take to the arcade after my shift. None of the workers cared.
For my sons 4th birthday party we went to Chuck E Cheese, he got to stand in the ticket wind machine, imagine a circular phone booth and wind would rush in there and tickets would fly around. The birthday boy got 60 seconds in there to keep what he could catch.
I told him to hold his shirt out and stand there, he was 4000 tickets richer.
When I was a kid I was in the swimclub. It was a pool open for the general public, and we swam when it was closed. A section of lockers had turnstile combination locks, you'd put 50 cent in and choose your combination but they would frequently jam so the 50c wouldn't come out again. People couldn't be bothered to get someone from personell for 50c, so the money would pile up in the lock. People kept putting 50c in, the lock wouldn't work so they'd move to the next one. We swimmers knew the trick of how to get the money back out so it was always a race to get there first. If you were lucky you could get 10 bucks in coins from all of them. That was a lot for a 10 year old 30 years ago, and you'd get yourself a frozen Marsbar, and if you had a big haul you'd buy your friends some to, that was the unspoken rule.
There were some nights I had to pay for metered parking, just so I could go to bed. One time though, I found a meter that was broken. Parked there the rest of the year, then never renewed my parking permit and parked there for another year. Saved a bunch of money and uncountable hours of driving time, never got a ticket
I worked a job where we would have to book clients very expensive last minute hotel rooms if their flights were cancelled. My coworker would book the hotels using his personal rewards account with the hotel. One particularly bad week, he racked up about $15k worth of Marriot reward points. Yes, in one week.
Never paid over $1/gal the entire time she worked there.
Years ago, my office had a Christmas party at a bar and restaurant in the city. Just dinner and drinks. The service was absolutely atrocious, forgotten orders, wrong orders, when offered a free round to apologise, they forgot to bring the free round. So we clearly complained.
Management gave us a call the next morning to apologise and to come in. Myself and a colleague went in and the management gave us a refund for one meal and one drink, and then gave us a voucher for $100 off the next time we were there.
The issue was, this voucher wasn’t numbered. It had no date on it. It had nothing to show that it was unique.
So, my colleague and I did what every good person who has access to a high colour copier would do. We copied the s**t out of it and drank there for free for nearly a year until we both got banned for life.
Thanks Jade Buddha in Brisbane!
ETA: it seems I need to check to see if my student e-mail still works LOL
Long, long time ago in school. No alcohol allowed in our dorm rooms and the administrators would check. No way to keep my booze stash. Discovered the admins didn’t track gym lockers. Set up one locker for liquor and one for beer. Problem solved and made extra cash selling to thirsty classmates.
Not quite a loophole but whatever. In the early days of the iTunes Music Store (04-05), Pepsi had a promo for free download codes with each bottle cap. I worked at a university, made little money, didn’t have the internet access to regularly steal music, so would just look in the recycling bins every time I walked in the halls for Pepsi caps. Also befriended a secretary who was addicted to Diet Pepsi that would just give me bags of bottle caps. I probably got at least a dozen albums with that promotion.
You could just buy the stickers of eBay and stick them on the redemption cards, worked out 5 pence a coffee.
Then they came out with the app 😭
Okay in the late 90’s the grocery store Albertson’s had a program called fresh or free where if you found an item on the shelf that was expired you got the expired one and a fresh one of the same item for completely free. They didn’t really advertise it but our friend worked there and told us. There were a few stores that were open till 1am so we would go in before midnight and scope everything set to expire that day and then at 12:01am start filling our grocery carts. Baked goods, packaged meat, dairy anything you could think of really. They couldn’t do anything about it. We literally left the store with grocery carts overflowing with all edible good items for completely free that summer. Remember you got the recently expired item (still good) as well as a non expired replacement all for free! It was quite the summer of stocking everyone’s family fridge. All went to college in the fall and guess they discontinued the program not too much longer after that, but holy smokes to have that now when I’m actually paying for my own groceries
2018 I ordered pizza Hut for my office. I noticed the Free Stix coupon code took off like 4 orders of bread sticks... So we maxed it out.
99 orders of bread sticks, FREESTIX took off all 99 orders.. oh boy.. we can't screw them like that..
So we ordered like 15 and continued to do so as a Saturday night tradition for maybe 3 months before it was fixed.
Dozen orders of bread sticks, completely taken off the total.. order like $12.99 worth of pizza to split.
When Kmart was big they were running a promotion where if you spent $50, you'd immediately get a $10 gift card for free. I figured out that you could keep purchasing the same gift cards with other gift cards and each transaction would get you a free $10 GC reward. The only catch was that you couldn't directly buy a $50 GC with a $50 GC. Instead, you had to buy a card with a slightly higher value (+$1) each time but they let you pay for the transaction with 2 GCs. So by the end of the night, I walked out with an iPod Classic and a plasma TV.
Pay for it on your credit card, free delivery.
Get sky miles.
Take dollar coins to bank, deposit, pay off bill.
Repeat.
So a few years back the company MeUndies was doing a 'national underwear day' sale where new users could order any pair off the site and only had to pay $1 for shipping.
The thing was, they didn't have any restrictions on verifying new users. You could type in any email address you wanted, slam in a random series of characters for a password, and it would make the account.
Then you could order a pair, log out, type in more random info, and repeat the process.
My apartment mailbox was literally overflowing with these purple confetti design packages. It was wonderful.
I worked in outsourced payroll a number of years back. Somehow, the company figured out they had paying this guy who was let go for 3 years.
The company came after my organization to say it was our error (converting into our system as active). This guy had a reporting manager who must have approved his hire every year (or did a c**p job of just oking it).
The story was they fired this guy and he wasn’t happy with the way they did it. So, he never told the company. The company tried to go after him, but the law wasn’t on their side.
We had our original files for conversion saved and they had sent the guy over to us as an active employee.
Would love for this to happen to me, though I’d probably tell them (unless they pissed me off like they did to this guy)
Company requested we as remote workers fly out to headquarters every other month just to show face. They let the employees book their own tickets and set up their own car rentals. We just expensed our CC purchases and it was gewchie. There wasn't a hard limit on how long we stay, just aim for the 10-14 days. I worked 4 on 4 off. Ended up starting my trip on my weekend, taking my 4 off, working my 4 then taking 4 off before flying home. Got my $78/hr OT rate 10hrs a day for 8 days plus per diem while chillin in the hotel, or doing things around town because while it was my weekend, I was out on a work trip and OT applied.
Also because we did the purchasing, we kept all the airline frequent flier and rental miles. Ended when I left for a position offering a nicer check, probably woulda been doing it to this day if I didn't leave.
The railway crews each had a wallet full of fleet cards (like a credit card, but only usable for fuel and related things) so they'd be able to fuel up anywhere in North America. In the cities, that meant they could choose what gas station to go to, and that choice was usually based on where the crew leader had loyalty cards for. Company pays for fuel, crew leader gets the points.
Anyway, one guy happened to have the points card for the bulk fuel/truck stop that I worked at. One summer they had a major project. They'd bring in two pickup trucks and a large commercial truck one the way to the job. The commercial truck also had a large fuel tank on it that they'd fill up and use to fill the heavy excavators, welders, generators and such. So he'd full that up, and then return later that day, fill the truck and the tank up again and go back out. They were spending thousands of dollars for fuel every day. Those points really added up quickly, and he used them to get gift cards. He used the gift cards to buy smoke and lunch every single day and still had some left over.
When I traveled for work (in the days before Uber) I got a ton of blank taxi receipts. And I’d fill them out for rides to and from the airport. It was $35ish each way. But I’d take the subway for $1.50 instead. So $70ish dollars tax free income for every trip.
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