‘Alphabet hackers’ gaming UK government site

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‘Alphabet hackers’ gaming UK government site

Private PCR testing firms are using exclamation points and numbers to bypass filters on the official site listing Covid testing providers

Covid testing providers are “alphabet hacking” the UK government’s list of approved firms by using punctuation and numerals to beat the site’s filters and promote their products as the preferred choice, an investigation has found.

Around one in eight (or 13%) of the private PCR testing firms currently on the official site have names starting with either a punctuation mark or a number, according to GridPoint Consulting. A recent report by the consultancy company also found that the firms were charging travelers up to four times the listed price of the tests.

Describing the tactic as “alphabet hacking,” GridPoint Consulting noted that the site’s top five listed suppliers – and ostensibly the first choice for customers – at the time were “!!! 0-100 Travel 19, !! + + 0 0 44 Tests, ! Covid Testing Direct.com, ! Nomad and !247 Travel Tests.”

When prospective travelers browse through the government website looking for PCR home test kits, the prices are advertised as low as £15 ($20). However, when clicking through to the provider’s site, the rates increase to more than three or four times that amount.

There are also hidden charges, including a £10 ($13)shipping fee for some providers, while others – particularly those in less accessible areas – advertised only the “click and collect” rate for their products but charged higher amounts for home delivery. 

While these tactics are not illegal, they had been previously criticized by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA). Although the watchdog and ministers had promised to crack down on such practices, GridPoint Consulting head Robert Boyle suggested that “nothing has changed.” 

The average price for a PCR test in the UK is about £80 ($107) per person, according to The Telegraph. All arrivals are now required to pay for PCR tests.

A spokesperson for the UK Health Security Agency told the paper there are “strict minimum standards” that private test providers had to comply with and that all complaints were taken “very seriously.”

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