up vote 526 down vote favorite
206
share [g+] share [fb]

News reports such as this one indicate that the above number may have arisen as a programming bug.

A man in the United States popped out to his local petrol station to buy a pack of cigarettes - only to find his card charged $23,148,855,308,184,500.

That is $23 quadrillion (£14 quadrillion) - many times the US national debt.*

In hex it's $523DC2E199EBB4 which doesn't appear terribly interesting at first sight.

Anyone have any thoughts about what programming error would have caused this?

link|improve this question
28  
bored gas station attendent? – txwikinger Jul 15 '09 at 19:54
211  
Well Obama did say that he had a new stimulus plan in the works to ease the deficit... – SomeMiscGuy Jul 15 '09 at 19:56
25  
Exactly what kind of credit card does this guy have that that transaction went through and triggered a mere $15 in overdraft fees... Gas station also probably unhappy about the 2% credit card processing fee on that. – Nick Bastin Jul 15 '09 at 19:59
41  
Easter egg from a programmer that is soon to be fired ;) – Matthew Whited Jul 15 '09 at 19:59
28  
Maybe this is some kind of new anti-smoking campaign. ("See how much smoking really costs you!" :-) – Slapout Jul 16 '09 at 18:02
show 21 more comments
feedback

protected by Will Jan 12 at 15:46

This question is protected to prevent "thanks!", "me too!", or spam answers by new users. To answer it, you must have earned at least 10 reputation on this site.

19 Answers

up vote 1412 down vote accepted

Add the cents to the number and you get 2314885530818450000, which in hexadecimal is 2020 2020 2020 1250.

Do you see the pattern? The first six bytes have been overwritten by spaces (hex 20, dec 32).

link|improve this answer
56  
Once again proving that whitespace is not innocuous. – Eric Jul 15 '09 at 19:58
530  
if this is true, you just won a prize for "best debug of the year" :) – Stefano Borini Jul 15 '09 at 19:58
82  
VISA might need him more than NASA. – Brandon Jul 15 '09 at 20:02
60  
Looks like he bought a carton, not a pack - hex 1250 = dec 4688, or £46.88 – John Rasch Jul 15 '09 at 20:02
154  
nerds: find out brand and amount of cigarettes a man smokes by debugging his wrong credit card report ;) – Stefano Borini Jul 15 '09 at 20:07
show 45 more comments
feedback

Hold on a second; there’s something fishy going on.

While the space-padded explanation certainly seems good, it may be (at least partly) specious.

VISA said that there were “fewer than 13,000” customers affected by the snafu with the Visa Buxx pre-paid cards. I’ve found news on several so far. Josh Muszynski in New Hampshire, Jason Bryan in Tennessee, Ron Seale in Texas, Karen Taylor’s teenage son in Bethel, and a teenage girl, Elizabeth Lewis in Owatonna .

The thing is that all of them have the exact same charge: $23,148,855,308,184,500.00. If the problem was the space-padding, then how is it that all of them had the exact same $0x1250 ($46.88) charge? Two of them had purchased cigarettes at gas stations, another two had paid at restaurants, Lewis bought eggs and milk, the last one at a drug store. Do all these varied items happen to cost the same? $46.88 for a restaurant bill seems okay, but for a pack of cigarettes? for milk and eggs‽

The space-padding error makes sense, except it does not account for the 0x1250 constant. Why is it that all of them ended up with 0x2020 2020 2020 1250 instead of 0x2020 2020 2020 2020 or different numbers in the last WORD?

Hmmm, if only 13,000 customers were affected, it may be that somehow that exact, specific charge triggered the error. In that case, it is more than just a field error. If it was just the text field being interpreted as a 64-bit integer, then why didn’t other amounts cause it, thus affecting everyone, not just <13,000. Still, how is it that 13,000 people could have just happened to charge the exact same amount in the same week?

They say it’s a “temporary programming error”, and it may well be, but could it be a hacking thing? In that case, it probably would be a magic-number. In fact, it may be a combination of both: some hacker putting a 0x1250 automatic charge, that got combined with the space-padding error, causing one or both errors to be detected.

The Register thinks that the answer is indeed the padded-field error, but does not expand on why they are all the same, although one of the comments mentions the number possibly being rounded to the nearest $100 (unlikely since banks and banking software explicitly go to lengths to ensure precision).

(There is also a report of a similar, earlier error.)


Jason Bryant’s bill:

Jason Bryant’s bill

Elizabeth Lewis’s bill:

Elizabeth Lewis’s bill

Ron Seale’s bill:

Ron Seale’s bill

Josh Muszynski’s bill:

Josh Muszynski’s bill

link|improve this answer
18  
+1: nice answer – Stefano Borini Jul 16 '09 at 22:16
8  
Possibly the number hex 1250 = dec 4688 is the minimum to cause some sort of extra methods of fraud checking. If it is exactly equal to this a bug in the code is introduced? – PeteT Aug 9 '09 at 4:12
6  
+1 can you imagine what would happen if the 13,000 customers did a chargeback at the same time? :P – pageman Aug 9 '09 at 7:43
11  
@petebob796 actually each byte is treated separately, so 1250 (12 50) is 18 and 80. 18 is a control char and 80 is capital P (at least in ASCII). Hmmm... Ctrl+P? – WildJoe Aug 9 '09 at 7:49
4  
12.50 is small and round, but it's a completely different number from 0x12.50. And if there's anyone out there paying $12.50 for one pack of cigarettes, I'm glad I quit. – Roger Pate Nov 22 '09 at 17:22
show 4 more comments
feedback

Well, let's look at the number 23,148,855,308,184,500. The first two digits are 23 - a number known to be tied to many numerological conspiracies, and even the subject of several documentaries. Add all the digits, 2+3+1+4+8+8+5+5+3+0+8+1+8+4+5+0+0 = 11, which we'll get back to in a moment. The hexadecimal form of the number, 523DC2E199EBB4, shows a pair of 9s. So we have three numbers that stand out - 23, 9, and 11. Thus, this case is really the final proof that the Illuminati was behind 9/11.

link|improve this answer
10  
2 + 3 + 1 + 4 + 8 + 8 + 5 + 5 + 3 + 0 + 8 + 1 + 8 + 4 + 5 + 0 + 0 = 65. 6 + 5 = 11. It's all in the numerology. ;-) – Head Geek Aug 13 '09 at 4:39
8  
absolutely hilarious! – Andrew Aug 20 '09 at 1:32
3  
But 11 is not a valid number in numerology, it has to be reduced to: 11=1+1=2. – Synetech inc. Aug 24 '09 at 11:47
9  
So the illuminati were behind 9/11 and this transaction signifies the second coming. – Kevin Peno Nov 8 '09 at 6:12
@Synetechinc. - clearly your numerology-fu could improve. have you heard of "ruling 22" and "ruling 11" ? 22 is meant to be "the magician" (the guy with power), but the 11 is meant to be "the power behind the throne"... what more could you expect of the Illuminati :) – Taryn East Nov 24 '11 at 21:06
feedback

What happens when you make a purchase by card is that the software immediately goes online to ensure you have sufficient funds for the purchase, but only places a hold on the funds for the transaction. At the end of the working day the software then gathers all the transactions placed in the last 24hrs and submits them to the acquiring bank for processing.

The submission to the bank is known as settlement, and its done by sending a plain text file in a very rigid format. (This was all developed decades ago and the number of systems now using it makes it hard to modernise)

Each transaction appears in the file as a line of text, and part of that is the transaction value. This field should be 11 numeric characters (zero padded on the left hand side) and will always hold the value in lowest common denominator (in this case cents). 11 numeric characters caters well for values in any currency.

Looks like the payment processor in this case had made some changes to their submission software and erroneously replaced the zero padding with space padding. Quite how this got by a) service provider, b) acquiring bank and c) Visa without being picked up escapes me. The net value of that settlement file (13,000 high value transactions) would have been astronomical, and maybe that also was a contributing factor somewhere.

link|improve this answer
15  
"11 numeric characters caters well for values in any currency." -- what about Zimbabwean dollars? – quant_dev Aug 9 '09 at 11:43
6  
Who's paying by VISA in Zimbabwe? (^_^) – RegDwight Aug 11 '09 at 1:23
4  
People with dollars. – Marcus Downing Aug 13 '09 at 20:05
Then they're not Zimbabwean dollars anyway, right? – Macke Dec 5 '09 at 16:53
That's a good comment. But if it was a software glitch, then there's no proving that a) service provider, b) acquiring bank and c) Visa all saw it at all. It could have arisen at any point. – Isaac Lubow Aug 29 '10 at 4:05
feedback

Batman: Pretty fishy what happened to me on that ladder.

Gordon: You mean, where there's a fish, there could be a Penguin.

Robin: But wait! It happened at sea! See? "C" for Catwoman!

Batman: Yet... an exploding shark was pulling my leg!

Gordon: The Joker!

O'Hara: [It] all adds up to a sinister riddle. Riddle-er. Riddler?

Gordon: Oh! A thought strikes me! So dreadful I scarcely dare give it utterance.

Batman: The four of them. Their forces combined...

Robin: Holy nightmare!

link|improve this answer
3  
+1 for old school Batman reference – Andy_Vulhop Jul 16 '09 at 16:51
1  
The exploding shark pulling leg seems to trigger something in my addled brain. Isn't this the movie based on the classic Batman series, with the same actors in it? – peSHIr Jul 16 '09 at 18:33
24  
Yes, this is the film, where the four baddies team up and dehydrates the members of the UN, turning them into piles of different-coloured sand which soon gets all mixed up. Luckily Batman has a machine that can sort out the sand into its component colours, and manages to rehydrate the ambassadors - who carry on arguing in their own languages as if nothing has happened. Impressive that I remember all that, or just sad? – Daniel Roseman Jul 19 '09 at 19:47
4  
Holy bad dialog, Batman! That show is campier than I remember! – Beska Jul 20 '09 at 17:22
4  
@Daniel Roseman - Almost correct, though the ambassadors are rehydrated and continuing to argue, their languages are mixed up (i.e. their minds got swapped around) – Grant Peters Aug 9 '09 at 4:02
show 1 more comment
feedback

Nope you're all wrong, these are just london prices :-)

link|improve this answer
feedback

If you remove the trailing zero, this validates as a VISA card number. My guess is they swiped the card then manually entered the number, thinking the swipe had failed.

link|improve this answer
9  
lol - Have we just published his Visa Card number?.. What was his name again? – ian_scho Jul 16 '09 at 15:32
4  
p.s. THIS is the most likely answer, the 200+ upvotes for the first answer are by geeks :) There are around 50+ Billion Visa Transactions a year. – ian_scho Jul 16 '09 at 15:37
12  
No, it was a bug, not a usage error. About 13000 customers were affected by this bug. – Guffa Jul 16 '09 at 15:52
87  
-1 - Visa card numbers start with 4, not 2 – John Rasch Jul 16 '09 at 15:54
8  
What's the likelihood that the first six bytes would be spaces by sheer chance? – Robert Harvey Jul 16 '09 at 15:56
show 5 more comments
feedback

See for yourself:

Go to http://www.easycalculation.com/hex-converter.php

Enter 2020202020201250 as the HEX value.

The decimal value calculated is: 2314885530818450000

Interpreted as cents, this is $23,148,855,308,184,500.00

link|improve this answer
11  
The Windows calculator in scientific mode can do this, no need to go to a web calculator. – Loren Pechtel Jul 16 '09 at 3:24
6  
Sorry, most people have the Web to hand. – hendry Jul 16 '09 at 14:32
8  
@Loren Pechtel: many people don't use Windows... (of course they could probably use their native desktop calculator) – Zifre Jul 16 '09 at 16:28
35  
@Zifre the kind of people who aren't using Windows are either a) the kind of people who do hexadecimal math in their heads, or b) the kind of people who don't know what a hexadecimal number is in the first place (I'm looking at you, graphic design MacHeads.) – raimesh Aug 13 '09 at 11:37
or: "2020202020201250".hex ;-) – Sunny Sep 30 '11 at 18:48
show 1 more comment
feedback

More Information:

More information from Consumerist and Slashdot

link|improve this answer
feedback

The ultimate mystery is still where 12 50 is coming from. They are the ASCII codes for Ctrl+R, P. Which happens to be the secret keystrokes you have to type to enter the validation code for QuickBooks.

Link: Where to enter Validation code

Quite a coincidence. I wonder what happens when you type these keys in the wrong place...

link|improve this answer
feedback

If you use the binary equivelant (1110101110110100) decode of the number 23148855308184500, you get K鑛, which is the Mandarin character for mining and ore. Kmine could mean "knowledge mine," or something like kmine Holdings Ltd. Perhaps there's a correlation between K(mine or ore) and Bank of America or Visa?

link|improve this answer
53  
I think everything is much more deeper that this. If you multiply this number by the height of Pyramid of Khufu and then multiply every third number by 2012 you will get exactly 1/666 length to the Alpha Centauri. – serg Jul 17 '09 at 15:15
1  
@serg555: This is scary... – Andreas Rejbrand Jul 29 '10 at 12:01
ja.wiktionary.org/wiki/%E9%91%9B – Mob Nov 22 '11 at 16:05
feedback

If you shift left 64-bit representation 8 bits left (multiply by 256) You will get a well formed credit card number and 3 empty positions for thise 3 secure extra numbers (all zeroes for some reason). There is only 1 out of 10 chance that random number gives a well formed CC number.

5926 1069 5889 5232 000

link|improve this answer
feedback

There are any number of things that could cause a very rare error like this - race conditions and alpha radiation, just to name two. If the error changed a pointer rather than the value being used, it would change the value to just about any random number. Bitwise, large random numbers are more likely than small random numbers.

Edit: It certainly appears to be a software bug, since 13000 other people were affected.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/07/15/quadrillion.dollar.glitch/index.html

link|improve this answer
1  
aren't you talking about gamma radiation? When gamma ray it the atmosphere, they disintegrate into a gerb of neutrons which can in turn know off electrons from circuitry – Eric Jul 15 '09 at 20:12
know -> knock . – Eric Jul 15 '09 at 20:12
1  
No, I was speaking of alpha radiation generated by the RAM packaging itself - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/… . I don't know how gamma rays affect circuitry that isn't space hardened. – Mark Ransom Jul 15 '09 at 20:28
1  
What I find intriguing is the fact that "fewer than 13000 transactions" were "inaccurately posted to a small number" of accounts. In the scale of Visa, yes, that 13k transactions is a small number, but ... Imagine being the one person that got two "erroneous postings". – Adrien Jul 15 '09 at 21:11
feedback

Probably just a corrupt bit or something during the network communication or a write that error checking failed to catch.

Or they were really nice cigarettes.

link|improve this answer
13  
Which is probably what the software guys will say when they close the ticket. – gbarry Jul 15 '09 at 20:00
9  
The corrupt bit or the quality of cigarettes? – samoz Jul 15 '09 at 20:11
feedback

Sounds like Salami Slicing, LOL

link|improve this answer
feedback

Most financial cc gateways use SOAP as a transfer protocol. Extra spaces in there along with a changed gateway interface on the receiving end could definitely account for this.

link|improve this answer
feedback

4815162342 now that's a magic number.

link|improve this answer
1  
Man I'm so "lost"... – Will Bickford Jul 15 '09 at 20:20
feedback

If the number was in IEEE 754, then the significand could have been 2.3148855308184500 and the exponent got mangled from 1 to 54 by some bug, causing the massive price explosion.

link|improve this answer
28  
I work for a financial institution, and I can say that only a fool uses floating point for dollar amounts. (Rounding issues can cause major bugs.) Of course, something horrible did happen... – Adam Crume Jul 15 '09 at 20:05
1  
@Adam Crume, what do you use? some Arbitrary-precision arithmetic? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arbitrary-precision_arithmetic Plain integers, other? – Liran Orevi Jul 16 '09 at 21:27
7  
All financial institutions work in integer cents, or sometimes integer tenth-cents. – Xanthir Jul 17 '09 at 13:52
6  
This is a popular misconception. You don't use floating point in accounting of actual cashflows, but you do use FP all over the place in financial modelling and derivatives pricing (which is what financial institutions also do). Just nitpicking. – quant_dev Aug 9 '09 at 11:45
feedback

Even more magic-number-mania:

1,597,463,007

link|improve this answer
No sqrt for you! – Will Bickford Jul 15 '09 at 20:19
+1, I dunno, I kinda like it – Shawn Aug 16 '10 at 7:17
feedback

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.