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Showing posts with label flight price inflation. Show all posts

US Lawmakers Raise Concerns Over AI Airline Ticket Pricing Practices

 

Airline controversies often make headlines, and recent weeks have seen no shortage of them. Southwest Airlines faced passenger backlash after a leaked survey hinted at possible changes to its Rapid Rewards program. Delta Air Lines also reduced its Canadian routes in July amid a travel boycott, prompting mixed reactions from U.S. states dependent on Canadian tourism. 

Now, a new and more contentious issue involving Delta has emerged—one that merges the airline industry’s pricing strategies with artificial intelligence (AI), raising alarm among lawmakers and regulators. The debate centers on the possibility of airlines using AI to determine “personalized” ticket prices based on individual passenger data. 

Such a system could adjust fares in real time during searches and bookings, potentially charging some customers more—particularly those perceived as wealthier or in urgent need of travel—while offering lower rates to others. Factors influencing AI-driven pricing could include a traveler’s zip code, age group, occupation, or even recent online searches suggesting urgency, such as looking up obituaries. 

Critics argue this approach essentially monetizes personal information to maximize airline profits, while raising questions about fairness, transparency, and privacy. U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy voiced concerns on August 5, stating that any attempt to individualize airfare based on personal attributes would prompt immediate investigation. He emphasized that pricing seats according to income or personal identity is unacceptable. 

Delta Air Lines has assured lawmakers that it has never used, tested, or planned to use personal data to set individual ticket prices. The airline acknowledged its long-standing use of dynamic pricing, which adjusts fares based on competition, fuel costs, and demand, but stressed that personal information has never been part of the equation. While Duffy accepted Delta’s statement “at face value,” several Democratic senators, including Richard Blumenthal, Mark Warner, and Ruben Gallego, remain skeptical and are pressing for legislative safeguards. 

This skepticism is partly fueled by past comments from Delta President Glen Hauenstein, who in December suggested that AI could help predict how much passengers are willing to pay for premium services. Although Delta has promised not to implement AI-based personal pricing, the senators want clarity on the nature of the data being collected for fare determination. 

In response to these concerns, Democratic lawmakers Rashida Tlaib and Greg Casar have introduced a bill aimed at prohibiting companies from using AI to set prices or wages based on personal information. This would include preventing airlines from raising fares after detecting sensitive online activity. Delta’s partnership with AI pricing firm Fetcherr—whose clients include several major global airlines—has also drawn attention. While some carriers view AI pricing as a profit-boosting tool, others, like American Airlines CEO Robert Isom, have rejected the practice, citing potential damage to consumer trust. 

For now, AI-driven personal pricing in air travel remains a possibility rather than a reality in the U.S. Whether it will be implemented—or banned outright—depends on the outcome of ongoing political and public scrutiny. Regardless, the debate underscores a growing tension between technological innovation and consumer protection in the airline industry.

Rising Threat: How Bots Are Disrupting Summer Travel and Driving Up Flight Costs

 

As the summer travel season reaches its peak, a growing concern is taking off—one that has nothing to do with airfare hikes due to fuel costs or increased demand. Experts are sounding the alarm on the surge of automated bot traffic that is inflating flight prices, interrupting bookings, and degrading the overall travel experience.

According to the 2025 Thales Bad Bot Report, the travel industry was the most targeted sector globally, accounting for 27% of all bot-related activity last year. These bots are disrupting online travel platforms in multiple ways. One particularly damaging tactic is “seat spinning”—where bots start the booking process without completing payment. By temporarily reserving seats, they skew inventory levels and manipulate dynamic pricing systems, leading to artificial scarcity.

In more malicious instances, bots engage in ticket scalping, buying tickets in bulk and reselling them, often forcing real customers to pay inflated rates or face unavailability.

Another alarming trend is SMS pumping, where bots flood messaging systems to send premium-rate texts, increasing operational costs for companies and potentially delaying critical updates to travelers. “Bad bots aren’t just causing chaos online anymore, they’re hijacking holidays,” said Tim Ayling, cybersecurity expert at Thales.

“Right now, travel websites are being overwhelmed by bots pretending to be real customers, snapping up tickets, scraping prices, and slowing everything down.”

The issue is particularly problematic for mobile users and last-minute travelers who depend on accurate, real-time data. Bots are becoming easier to launch, with many now powered by AI-based tools. Unlike before, these attacks don’t require skilled hackers—basic scripts and free proxies are enough to bypass traditional defenses.

In many cases, VPNs and proxies, often used to protect privacy, are exploited to disguise bot activity, making it appear as if requests are coming from legitimate users across various regions.

A growing area of concern is the abuse of APIs, which power everything from flight search results and loyalty programs to pricing engines. Almost half of all advanced bot attacks now target APIs, interfering with core backend functions, slowing down websites, or even causing full outages.

Attackers are also getting better at mimicking human behavior, making it increasingly difficult for traditional tools to detect harmful activity. Even CAPTCHA, once a standard defense, is proving ineffective and is now more likely to frustrate real users than stop bots.

“Traditional defenses just aren’t cutting it. Travel companies need a smarter, layered approach, blocking credential stuffing attacks and securing vulnerable areas like logins and checkouts through continuous testing and threat monitoring.”

In today’s digital ecosystem, where bots outnumber human visitors online, the real challenge for travel companies isn’t just visibility—it’s precision and proactive defense