VIDEO: This Guy "Sanmay Ved" bought "GOOGLE.COM" from Google for $12.
Tempted to brag about the greatest online shopping
deal you've ever found? It probably won't come close to the bargain Sanmay
Ved scored in October 2015. The researcher managed to buy Google.com on Google Domains when he saw
it
listed for $12.
While he
only owned it for a total of one minute, it was a worthy investment. Google
revealed this week that Ved was paid about $6000 because of the mix-up.
When Ved first snatched up the iconic domain, Google almost immediately canceled the
transaction and awarded him money for his troubles. But the amount and exact
circumstances were previously undisclosed. This week, the company announced on its blog that Ved's payout of $6006.13—a number
the company says spells out "Google" if you "squint a
little" while reading it—was a part of its Vulnerability Rewards Program.
Since its launch in 2010, the program
has awarded more than $6 million to researchers
around the world who found "vulnerabilities" in the site's security.
"Rewarding security researchers for their hard
work benefits everyone," Google wrote in the blog post. "These
financial rewards help make our services, and the web as a whole, safer and
more secure."
Ved's prize wasn't the program's biggest payout in
2015 (that honor goes to a single payment of $37,500 awarded to an Android
security researcher), but it will have a big impact. When Ved decided to donate
the money to charity, Business Insider reports, Google offered him another reward: The company
doubled the payment, turning his original $12 purchase into a good deed worth
$12,012.26.
VIDEO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yb9reMC31EM
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