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Salon
Salon
Politics
Kelly McClure

Track Elon Musk's Jet with a Twitter bot

SpaceX owner and Tesla CEO Elon Musk at the Axel Springer Award 2020 in Berlin Britta Pedersen-Pool/Getty Images

Elon Musk, the 50-year-old billionaire who has made a name for himself by wheeling and dealing in technology offered a Florida teenager $5,000 to shut down a Twitter account in 2020. Why? Because the account uses public ADS-B data to track the comings and goings of Musk's private jet for the now viral account, Elon Musk's Jet, and Musk didn't like it.

The owner of the account, Jack Sweeney, turned down Musk's offer, and continues to track Musk's air-traffic to this day. In fact, he's expanded to create accounts to track the private jets of Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, and most recently, Russian oligarchs associated with Putin. 

When Musk reached out to Sweeney in an attempt to get him to shut down Elon Musk's Jet the account had 150,000 followers. At the time of this post it's grown to just under 400,000. 

Related: "Disturbing milestone": Just 12 U.S. billionaires now own more than $1 trillion in combined wealth

Musk reached out to Sweeney via Twitter DM saying "Can you take this down? It is a security risk." According to Protocol Sweeney, who was a college freshman at the time, replied seven hours later with "Yes I can but it'll cost you a Model 3 only joking unless?" From there Musk offered $5,000, which Sweeney countered saying "Any chance to up that to $50k? It would be great support in college and would possibly allow me to get a car maybe even a Model 3." The conversation fizzled shortly after when things didn't seem to be going anywhere.


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"I'm not going to take it down for just $5,000," Sweeney said in an interview with CBS, noting that he made a counter-offer of $50,000 or a Tesla. "He [Musk] said it doesn't feel right — then all the news got out and he blocked me." 

Sweeney's latest accounts Russian Oligarch Jets and Russian VIP & Putin Jets were both started in February of this year and have amassed over 500,000 followers combined.

"Even before this war started, people were saying to me, 'Oh, you should track Putin,'" Sweeney said in a recent interview with The Wall Street Journal

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