Friday, 17 June 2016

SodaStream Extending Promo Offer That Gives Keurig Kold Customers A Free Sparkling Water Machines

If you own a soon-to-be obsolete Keurig Kold machine and haven’t snapped a photo of yourself with it to get a free sparkling water machine from SodaStream, there’s still time: SodaStream has extended its promo a few more weeks.

SodaStream’s “Snap a Selfie” promotional offer was supposed to end today, June 17, but will now go on through June 30.

“The response has been so positive, we want to make sure every disappointed Kold user gets a chance to upgrade to SodaStream,” said Emma Froelich-Shea, VP of marketing for SodaStream USA. “We heard from folks who weren’t able to send in their selfies yet. Well, at SodaStream, we never leave people out in the Kold.”

Of course this is just one more opportunity for SodaStream to rub salt in Keurig’s fizzing wound, noting that Keurig’s failed effort focused on soda instead of sparkling water.

“That’s something Kold never offered and SodaStream has long understood,” SodaStream’s Froelich-Shea says. “Drinking more water is the healthy upgrade we’re all trying to make.”


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

How Well Do You Remember The Last Few Days? Take The Consumerist Quiz

Think you’re a smart one, eh? Well, you obviously have impeccable taste in websites, but how well did you absorb all the news of the last few days? It’s time to test that memory of yours one more time with the Consumerist Quiz!

As always, in the storied three-week history of the Quiz, all questions relate to stories published on Consumerist this week (June 13 – June 17).

Be warned that unless you’ve been paying close attention, scoring a 100% will not be easy. Last week’s quiz had a median score of around 60%, and improvement over the previous week but still a D- (no grading on a curve here, bub).

But it’s not like readers are badged with a scarlet “F” if they don’t ace the test (we can’t afford all that red felt), so just take it for turds and giggles. If you do well, then brag about it to all your friends. Heck, if you completely blow, feel free to lie about your score; we won’t tell…


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Star Trek Fan Film Lawsuit Will Live On

While the makers of the crowdfunded Star Trek fan fiction film Axanar had once hoped to reach a settlement with Paramount and CBS over a lawsuit accusing the filmmakers of copyright infringement, the much discussed lawsuit will live to see another day, as the two companies told a California federal judge this week that their action remains pending. 

The Hollywood Reporter reports that Paramount and CBS filed a response to the filmmakers of Axanar, which previously entered a counterclaim that cited statements from Star Trek directors urging the companies to drop the suit.

The drawn-out ordeal began at the end of 2015, when the two studios filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against the Axanar filmmakers.

The filmmakers filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that, among other claims, numerous individual elements of their planned production — including costumes, names of planets and places, Starfleet emblems, and the Klingon language — are not protected by copyright.

A judge denied the request, taking issue with the argument, explaining that while some individual aspects of the Star Trek universe may not enjoy copyright protection, those same pieces do get that protection when considered together.

Axanar Productions filed a counterclaim to the lawsuit on May 23, seeking declaratory relief that its works are non-infringing. In the filing, the company mentioned comments from J.J. Abrams, executive producer of the forthcoming Star Trek Beyond film.

In mid-May, Abrams signaled that the lawsuit would soon be resolved, noting that “within a few weeks it will be announced this is going away and fans will be able to work on their projects.”

The filing also included statements from CBS and Paramount confirming settlement discussions and indicating work on a set of fan-film guidelines, the Hollywood Reporter.

This week, the two production companies were expected to file an extension for the suit, so that the parties could continue negotiations.

However, the Hollywood Reporter reports that CBS and Paramount filed an answer to Axanar Production’s counterclaim, admitting to the public statements, but noting that the suit was moving forward.

Paramount Says ‘Star Trek’ Fan Film Lawsuit Lives On [The Hollywood Reporter]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Of Course The Rolls-Royce Driverless Electric Car Has A Silk Sofa & A Light-Up Red Carpet

Listen, anyone expecting a Rolls-Royce vehicle that isn’t insanely luxurious and likely very, very expensive is living in a dream world. So we’re not shocked whatsoever to learn that BMW’s plan for a driverless, electric Rolls Royce includes such niceties as a silk love seat, light-up red carpet, and a virtual assistant owners will probably end up falling in love with a la Her.

The 103EX is a fully autonomous electric vehicle, unveiled by Rolls-Royce as part of its 100-year anniversary celebration, and is “but one example of a number of possible personal visions,” the company said in a lengthy, somewhat overly-wrought description of the concept car.

Though there’s no price tag on it yet, we’d have to imagine the 103EX will cost a pretty penny. Along with that couch made with “expanses of bespoke, rare materials” like silk, the entire roof canopy “opens up to an inner sanctum, before effortlessly enveloping you,” the company says.

“The skylight is your panoramic observatory, inspiring awe and wonder,” the description reads. “The only sound is the hushed beat of your own heart.”

Sorry, I just fell asleep there for a second.

It’s also not really a car, Rolls-Royce explains, but will be designed “more like an individual sculpture made from one seamless surface.”

“Rolls-Royce will design and manufacture this personal vision of each customer and make every Rolls-Royce a unique bespoke masterpiece,” the company said.

There’s also that light-up red carpet, so you can show everyone else that you’re arriving, if they hadn’t noticed already.

rollsroyce2

Also included in the 103EX is a personal digital assistant named Eleanor, the “voice” of the Spirit of Ecstasy, the symbol adorning the hood of every Rolls. She sounds like she’s right up Joaquin Phoenix’s alley:

“It’s no secret that the future belongs to self-aware, autonomous vehicles,” the company’s description reads. “But for the first time, Rolls-Royce will give artificial intelligence a name, a soul and a purpose. Her name is Eleanor.”

She’s not just going to tell you to turn left or right, no! Eleanor is so much more complicated than that.

“Her vital spark lives within the very fabric of your vehicle: driving you, guiding you, discovering the world with you. Eleanor intuitively complements your personality, becoming a true companion.”

Check out the company’s 360-degree video for more Eleanor:


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Naomi Campbell Shills For Adidas, Fails At Social Media

While we don’t accept advertising, we have no problems with celebrities who sell out. Yet we got some extra insight into how sponsored Instagram posts by celebrities happen as model and actress Naomi Campbell, or someone working for her, just slapped the whole e-mail from a brand representative in the caption field on Instagram.

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Here’s what the rep emailed her:

Naomi,

So nice to see you in good spirits!!!
Could you put something like:

Thanks to my friend @gary.aspden and all at adidas – loving these adidas 350 SPZL from the adidas Spezial range. 😘 😘💜✊ @adidasoriginals

She has since edited the post to remove the nice message from the Adidas rep.

Instagram Photo

Yes, yes, that’s the same thing that reality star and pseudo-Kardashian Scott Disick did on his Instagram feed less than a month ago while shilling for some kind of fitness shake.

While Campbell doesn’t have anywhere near the social media reach as Disick (she only has 2.9 million Instagram followers, while he has 16.7 million) celebrities can still rake in tens of thousands of dollars for a single sponsored post. Paradoxically, this post might draw more attention than if she hadn’t made the error in the first place.

Naomi Campbell accidentally shared a little extra in this sponsored Instagram [Mashable] (via Racked)


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Lay’s Wants Me To Try Their New BBQ Chips, Sends Me Expired Coupon

In recent years, Frito-Lay has experimented with the flavors of its iconic Lay’s potato chips, giving consumers the chance to weigh in on what outlandish flavors — cappuccino, wasabi ginger, bacon mac and cheese — should be added to the company’s lineup for a limited time. More recently, the company has revamped its popular BBQ Lay’s — somehow adding a “burst of flavor.” And, in an attempt to entice customers to try the to try the re-flavored snack, the company offered customers a coupon for a free bag of chips. Except, by the time the mailed coupons arrived, they were expired. 

Consumerist reader B. brought the issue to our attention this week, pointing to a Facebook post by Lay’s promoting the new “more flavorful” BBQ chips and offering a free bag.

Screen Shot 2016-06-17 at 1.45.10 PM

In the April 18 post, which includes a video, Lay’s says its new BBQ chips are “bursting with more flavor,” urging customers to “get a free bag while they last” with a link directing customers to enter their information and receive a coupon for a free sample bag.

While the link no longer allows customer to enter their information, stating that “sorry, all samples have been claimed,” Facebook users who commented on the post say they were told the coupon would be mailed to them.

Starting this week, customers began commenting that they had finally received that coupon, only to find it had expired days before arriving.

“I was looking forward to the surprise of receiving the coupon and using it for the sample,” one user says in a comment dated June 13. “I arrived home from work today and saw the envelope. I was shocked that it expired yesterday. Not much of a promotion…Disappointed.”

“I just received my coupon today and it expired June 12th, 2016,” another post from June 14 states. “The postal system is awful! I guess mine went half way around the world before making it to Arkansas.”

“My mother received her coupon for the bag of free BBQ chips today, June 16, 2016,” another potential customer writes. “We are very disappointed that the coupon has expired on June 12, 2016. I haven’t received my coupon yet but I am sure mine is expired also. Why would you send out expired coupons?”

We reached out to Frito Lay for comment on the expired coupons on Wednesday, but have not heard back. We’ll update this post when we do.

However, it appears that the company has started to reply to customers who received the expired coupons, apologizing for the issue and saying a new coupon would be sent in a few weeks.

Screen Shot 2016-06-17 at 9.21.31 AMScreen Shot 2016-06-17 at 9.21.45 AM

The company offered several similar replies to customers commenting on the post. It’s unclear when the newly issued coupons will expire.

The company also responded to the complaints posted on Twitter.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Here’s What You Should Know About Philadelphia’s New Tax On Soda

Philadelphia is just the second municipality in the United States (after Berkleley, CA) to pass a tax on sugary beverages, though dozens of places have tried it. Well, okay, but what does that mean for soda drinkers in Philadelphia, and could your city or county be next?

Here are some of the questions that you might have about the tax if you live elsewhere, and discussion of the tax hasn’t dominated the news for you.

When does the tax start? The city would begin collecting the tax on January 1, 2017. Trade group the American Beverage Association has promised (or threatened, depending on your point of view) to “take legal action” against the law before that.

How much is the tax? It’s $.015 per ounce. That means the tax imposed on a 20-ounce bottle would be $.30, while the tax on a one-gallon jug of sweetened iced tea would be $1.92.

The taxes will be imposed at the distributor level, not at retail, so customers may not end up paying the full amount… or could pay even more if retailers round prices up to the nearest $.05, $.10, or $.25.

The original proposal was a $.03 tax, and politicians reached a compromise that made drinks with non-nutritive sweeteners, including substances like stevia, subject to the tax. Then the tax was cut in half.

To simplify things, the common 1-liter and 2-liter sizes of soft drink bottles will have their taxes rounded down to $.50 and $1 respectively.

What drinks are affected? Originally, the tax would have only included beverages with sweeteners that add sugar and calories, including high fructose corn syrup, evaporated cane juice, and maple syrup. Drinks that are at least half milk or fruit juice are not taxed. Philly.com has a handy visual guide to different drinks and how much the tax will affect their prices.

Who has to pay? The tax only applies in the city limits, creating an advantage for soft drink fans with cars who can go pick up cases and 2-liter bottles elsewhere.

What will be done with the money? Soda taxes are usually sold as a public health measure, which made the campaign for the tax in Philly unique: it was sold as a way to raise money for pre-kindergarten programs, city parks, libraries, and tax credits for businesses that sell beverages without added sweeteners.

It later came out that not all of the money will go to education and parks, and about 20% would go to fund other city programs and benefits for city employees.

Where else have soda taxes succeeded? Only in Philadelphia and in Berkeley. A bill that would have made a tax statewide in California was voted down in committee last year, and other municipalities have tried it.

The entire country of Mexico has had a tax that raises prices roughly 10% since the beginning of 2014, but the latest reports are that soda sales are up. That’s good if the goal of the tax is to raise money, but bad if it’s to reduce consumption of added sugars.

Who wanted the tax to succeed? This is the third time that a soda tax has been proposed, and the first under new mayor Jim Kenney. Most of the funding for a nonprofit that promoted the bill came from notorious soft-drink foe and former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg.

The Center for Science in the Public Interest, a health-focused nonprofit, said in a statement that the passage of the tax “is a huge win for the city’s children and parents, who will now benefit from expanded pre-K and parks.”

Apart from raising extra money (an estimated $91 million) for schools and parks, proponents say that discouraging city residents from drinking soda will have long-term positive effects on their health.

Who wanted the tax to fail? The American Beverage Association spent about $5 million in ads against the tax, and opponents argue that the tax will hurt people who work in stores at at distributors, as well as disproportionately affecting poorer residents who can’t go pick up their favorite soda in bulk at a suburban Costco. A local Pepsi bottler even offered to put up the money to pay for a year of universal pre-K in the city if the city council would delay the vote.

Experts on this side say that cutting back on sweetened beverages has a minor effect on health, and that obesity rates have kept rising even though Americans are actually drinking less soda than we used to.

Is my city next? Maybe. The first challenge will be keeping the law in place until 2017 in spite of legal challenges from the industry.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

IBM Teaming Up With GoGo To Help Airplane Pilots Avoid Turbulence In Real Time

If the word “turbulence” has you grabbing your chair in fear at the mere thought of a bumpy, rollicking airplane ride, there could be relief in sight. IBM has teamed up with in-flight WiFi company GoGo to provide pilots and dispatchers with real-time turbulence reports and alerts.

The service will use The Weather Channel’s turbulence detection algorithm live in GoGo’s servers, which before were only used to provide WiFi on commercial flights. IBM purchased The Weather Channel last year.

“It’s no longer just about passenger connectivity, we have to consider all the other ways we can leverage the available technology to enhance the overall flight experience and improve,” said Andrew Kemmetmueller, vice president of connected aircraft services at Gogo in a press release.

“Traditionally, flight operations personnel, pilots and aviation meteorologists received coded verbal reports with limited information on flight conditions, also known as PIREPS,” IBM explains. But certain factors, including no internet service in the cockpits, kept pilots from getting real-time updates.

Detecting turbulence before it hits isn’t just about keeping passengers calm, it can also help prevent injuries in the cabin. And it can also keep me from ordering too many alcoholic beverages to keep the panicky feelings inside quiet.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Lobster Rolls Returning For The Summer To Some East Coast McDonald’s Locations

It seems McDonald’s move to bring lobster rolls back to the menu last year was successful, as the chain says it’ll again offer the seafood menu item at select New England locations this summer.

Starting June 20, certain stores in Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and the Albany, N.Y., area, will offer the $8.99 rolls through mid-August, the company announced.

They’re made with North Atlantic lobster meat, tossed in mayo, and layered with lettuce on a toasted roll. At 290 calories, they’re also lower in calories than say, a Big Mac, which clocks in at 530 calories.

McDonald’s brought lobster rolls back to the menu last summer, marking the first time they were offered in a decade.

“The return of the Lobster Roll is exciting for McDonald’s because it was such a hit with our customers last summer,” said Suzanne Pingeton, McDonald’s Marketing Director for the Boston Region in a press release.

Related: Here’s Why You’re Probably Paying Way Too Much For A Lobster Roll


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

25 Total Mitsubishi, Nissan Models Affected By Fuel-Economy Issue; None So Far In U.S.

Two months after U.S. regulators opened an investigation into Mitsubishi over falsified fuel mileage data, the carmaker says its internal probe found that 20 of its models are affected, but none in the U.S. 

Mitsubishi announced Friday that it manipulated fuel-economy on more models than previously thought, bringing the total to 25 models, including five that were made and sold under the Nissan brand, The Wall Street Journal reports.

In all, the company says that 20 of its vehicle models sold between 2006 and 2016 included manipulated tire pressure data that made mileage appear 5% to 10% better than it actually was.

Mitsubishi says that the manipulations were caused in one of two ways: the company used desktop calculations instead of fuel-economy tests to cut costs, or when tests were conducted, resistance ratings were manipulated to produce better rates.

To make it up to customers, Mitsubishi will set aside nearly $500 million for compensation. In all, the carmaker says it will offer compensation that could include payments for additional gas costs because the fuel economy was worse than advertised.

For example, it will pay $960 to each affected minicar owner and $290 to owners of five other models.

Back in April, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration directed Mitsubishi to hand over any information on its vehicles sold in the United States, Reuters reports.

“We’ve requested information from Mitsubishi about this issue,” a spokesman for NHTSA said at the time, declining to specify which models the agency sought data for.

Since then, Mitsubishi admitted that the falsified data could go back as far as 25 years. Following that admission, NHTSA ordered additional tests on the vehicles in the U.S. It’s unclear what the agency has determined.

Mitsubishi Motors Takes Nearly $480 Million Charge as Fuel-Economy Scandal Spreads [The Wall Street Journal]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

‘Stomach tap’ to let obese people empty their gut after eating

A device that allows people who are obese to empty a portion of their stomach contents into the toilet after a meal has been approved for use in the US

via New Scientist - Health Read More Here..

Tourist Fined $1K For Straying Off Yellowstone Boardwalk To Collect Thermal Water

Just a week after a tourist died in a geyser at Yellowstone National Park after leaving the park’s designated boardwalk, officials say they fined another visitor for straying out of bounds in an attempt to collect water from the volatile, dangerous hot springs.

National Park Service officials say a witness reported seeing a man walk through the terrace formations near Libert Cap, and collect thermal water, breaking the fragile crust on Tuesday in the Mammoth Hot Springs area. The witness also took photos.

The man, a tourist from China, admitted to rangers that he’d left the path and taken the water. He said he hadn’t read the safety information provided to him at the park’s entrance.

He’s now on the hook to the tune of a $1,000 fine, which is a lot better than what could have happened.

“Hot springs have injured or killed more people in Yellowstone than any other natural feature,” the park website says. “Keep your children close and make sure they understand the danger posed by boiling water.”

Park officials are no doubt ramping up safety efforts after a 23-year-old man slipped and fell into a hot spring on June 7. No human remains were recovered.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Credit Card Forgers Going On One Last Crime Spree While Magnetic Stripe Readers Are Still Prevalent

America has long served as a haven for credit card crooks because it’s only recently that we’ve switched to credit and debit cards that use smart chips (EMV). However, criminals are taking advantage of retailers’ delay in installing card readers that use the technology, and holding sort of a fire sale on stolen credit card numbers.

Thieves can use stolen card data in a variety of ways, but Bloomberg Technology reports that one common method has been to take the numbers from stolen cards, create duplicate cards with those numbers, and use them at retailers.

This is the type of fraud that has been popular for decades in the United States thanks to our magnetic stripe card readers. While magnetic stripe cards remain an option, experts say that criminals are using up their stash of numbers and blank magnetic stripe cards.

Due to delays in merchants getting their EMV payment equipment installed and certified, some retailers are dealing with a burdensome number of fraud chargebacks.

Fraud has become such an issue that Visa announced yesterday that it would change policies to either block chargebacks for counterfeit cards, and will require banks to be liable for all fraud-related chargebacks on cards after that.

Mastercard, meanwhile, is speeding up its certification of merchants’ card-readers, hoping to get more transactions to go through using chips and fewer using magnetic strips.

Last Call for Old School Credit Card Fraud in the U.S. [Bloomberg Technology]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Private Healthcare Providers Are Making Big Bucks Contracting With Prisons

When you think of big business, you probably think of an industry like banking, but it turns out that one of the bigger businesses out there happens to be prisons — both private and federal. While we already know that financial institutions benefit from others, collecting tens of millions of dollars every year from inmates’ families in fees for basic financial services, the healthcare industry has also found a veritable goldmine by contracting services to prisons and jails across the country. 

A new report from The Guardian shines a light on the billion dollar business that is private healthcare at prisons across the country every year.

According to federal data, states spend about $8 billion a year on healthcare for prisoners, and more often than not these services are contracted to for-profit companies.

While the contracts and money flowing from prisons to private businesses are complicated, here are a few takeaways that we got from the Guardian’s report.

It’s a growing trend — More than half of all state and local prisons and jails have outsourced their healthcare to private companies.

In all, Dr. Marc Stern, an expert on correctional health at the University of Washington and former head doctor of Washington state prisons, estimates that this outsourced healthcare industry is now worth more than $3 billion a year.

In fact, federal prisons spending on outsourced healthcare increased by 24% between 2010 and 2014, according to the Justice Department.

That trend toward outsourcing services has translated into big bucks for service providers.

“Business for us is terrific,” Todd Murphy, a director of business development for Correctional Medical Group Companies, tells the Guardian.

It costs more — A survey of 69 prisons found that all paid more for medical services than the Medicare rates. In fact, some prisons spent as much as 385% more.

Murphy declined to provide The Guardian with details on how much the company charges for its services, but noted that “it’s typically not cheaper, but it’s always better.”

But not everyone sees it that way. While some companies would contend that higher fees result in better service, others say that isn’t happening.

“What makes it dangerous is we don’t put enough money into it, period,” Stern said. “When a private company comes in, we don’t give them enough money and they don’t provide good enough care. But that also happens in state-run prisons.”

It comes down to liability — Murphy tells the Guardian that many counties contract with them not to reduce costs, but to reduce liability and the comfort of knowing that if an inmate dies, the family would likely sue the company, not the county.

“We provide a full partnership to our county partners,” he said. “But the biggest thing we do is indemnify the county against risk and reliability, do everything we can to keep them out of trouble.”

Lawsuits against these private healthcare providers for wrongful death of a prison aren’t entirely unusual, The Guardian reports.

Over the past five years, one provider — Corizon — has been sued more than 1,300 times for, among other things, wrongful death, and sexual misconduct among employees.

Last year, the company and Alameda Country, where Corizon was contracted, paid a family $8.3 million after a prison died two days after being jailed on a warrant for failing to appear in court.

The family contended that had the inmate — who was suffering from a severe form of alcohol been withdrawal — been admitted by a registered nurse, not an unsupervised licensed vocational nurse provided by Corizon, the man’s symptoms would have been spotted and he may have lived.

Welcome to Jail Inc: how private companies make money off US prisons [The Guardian]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Russia’s Track And Field Team Barred From Rio Olympics Amid Doping Controversy

Bad news for fans of Russia’s track and field who were hoping to watch the team in the Rio Olympics this August, whether in person or on TV: amid a far-reaching doping conspiracy, the global governing body of the games has banned the country’s team from the summer games.

The I.A.A.F. announced its decision, one that could be without precedent in the history of the Olympics, the New York Times notes, on Friday, ruling that Russia hadn’t worked hard enough to restore global confidence in the integrity of its athletes.

The ruling will go next to the International Olympic Committee, the ultimate authority over the Games, which is due to discuss the issue on Tuesday. It’s likely that Olympic officials will defer to the I.A.A.F., the NYT notes.

Russia’s track and field athletes have been on a seven-month suspension from international competition after a report by the World Anti-Doping Agency accused the country of running a doping program through the government. Russia has denied those allegations, but sports authorities there didn’t argue with the suspension when they had the chance.

Officials have been trying since then to persuade the global sports bosses that things have changed and that Russia can be trusted in the Olympics, saying it’ll go above and beyond what’s usual required for eligibility, and will only send athletes who haven’t been disciplined for drug use.

But in the days before Friday’s vote, the World Anti-Doping Agency questioned Russia’s reforms, saying that the testing authorities from the United Kingdom had been threatened while collecting urine samples by members of Russia’s Federal Security Service. It also said many athletes, many of them track and fielders, had outrun authorities trying to test them.

Russia’s Track and Field Team Barred From Rio Olympics [New York Times]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Microsoft Getting Into The Legal Marijuana Business With Software That Tracks Pot Plants

We’ve come a long way from the days of warning teens about the dangers of reefer madness, America. These days, major corporations are hopping into bed with marijuana in the hopes of making money in states where marijuana is legal. Microsoft is the first big company to get into the weed business, with a new partnership to offer software that tracks pot plants from “seed to sale.”

Microsoft announced Thursday that it’s teaming with a Los Angeles start-up called Kind, that built the software, the New York Times’ Dealbook reports. It won’t be getting anywhere near the green stuff, however, but will be working with Kind’s “government solutions” division, offering the software only to state and local governments that are working on building compliance systems.

The software helps keep tabs on sales and commerce of the plants, and to ensure governments don’t stray from the legal path.

Marijuana is still illegal in the eyes of the federal government, but as state after state legalizes it, companies are starting to pay attention. It’s legal for recreational use in four states and Washington D.C., and this fall, five more states will vote on whether or not to join that list in some capacity.

“We do think there will be significant growth,” said Kimberly Nelson, the executive director of state and local government solutions at Microsoft. “As the industry is regulated, there will be more transactions, and we believe there will be more sophisticated requirements and tools down the road.”

Elsewhere on the NYT, Quentin Hardy writes on the Bits blog that the move makes sense, considering how rapidly the marijuana industry has been growing, and will continue to evolve as other states legalize it. It also follows a very interesting curve in “America’s relationship with vice,” Hardy writes.

“Major recessions, which lower tax revenue, tend to create the legalization (and heavy taxation) of commonplace illicit practices,” Hardy points out. “The Great Depression brought back drinking. State lotteries became widely popular in the long downturns of the 1970s. The recession of 2008 seems to have lit a million legal joints. Who knows what we’ll get with the economic shock that doubtless lies a few decades hence.”

The First Big Company to Say It’s Serving the Legal Marijuana Trade? Microsoft. [NYT Dealbook]
Microsoft Makes a Marijuana Play [NYT Bits]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Google Pays $550K To People Who Found Security Issues With Android

One year after Google launched its Android Security Rewards program that aimed to compensate researchers who discovered vulnerabilities in the company’s products — software, tablets, and phones – the tech giant announced the program was a success, divvying out more than $550,000.

Google announced the results on its blog Friday, noting that the rewards went to 82 individuals who found more than 250 vulnerabilities with the company’s offerings.

One researcher provided the company with 26 vulnerability reports for a total of $75,750, while 15 other researchers received $10,000 or more for their reports.

While the program is focused on Nexus devices and has a primary goal of improving Android security, more than a quarter of the issues were reported in code that is developed and used outside of the Android Open Source Project, Quan To, program manager for Android Security, wrote in the blog post.

“Fixing these kernel and device driver bugs helps improve security of the broader mobile industry and even some non-mobile platforms,” he says.

Following the status report on Friday, Google announced it would revamp the program to provider larger rewards for reports submitted after June 1.

The company will increase its payouts by 33%. For example, the reward for a Critical vulnerability report with a proof of concept increased from $3,000 to $4,000, while rewards for remote or proximal kernel exploits will increase from $20,000 to $30,000.

“Thank you to everyone who helped us make Android safer,” To wrote.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Truth in Advertising Act Before Congress Turns Photoshopped Models Into A Public Health Issue

Do digitally enhanced models in ads for fashion brands and other products hurt consumers? A bill that was introduced in Cogress in 2014 would require the FTC to look into the prevalence of advertisements that show digitally altered humans, and the potential harm that they could cause to consumers, especially to the mental health of children and teens. Now the bill’s sponsors are engaging in a new push to get it passed.

While the idea of ad police checking every model’s rib cage and thigh gap is kind of strange, it’s true that excessive use of Photoshop can be harmful to young people. The American Medical Association spoke out against retouched ads in 2011, using their expertise as physicians to point out that human bodies with waists narrower than our heads are generally not a thing that happens in real life, and that unrealistic images in advertising can contribute to eating disorders, depression, and anxiety.

In Britain, where advertising standards are tougher and more heavily regulated by the government than here, ads can actually be banned for creating unrealistic expectations, like a Dior cosmetics spot featuring Natalie Portman with her eyelashes lengthened in post-production.

The proposed bill wouldn’t regulate ads right away, but would require the FTC to report back to Congress about “the consumer harm arising from the use, in advertisements and other media for the promotion of commercial products and services, of images that have been altered to materially change the appearance and physical characteristics of the faces and bodies of the individuals depicted.”

H.R.4445 – Truth in Advertising Act of 2016 [Congress.gov]
ModCloth Lobbies Congress for Truth in Advertising Act [Racked]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Yes, People Do Still Really Use The Yellow Pages

Can you remember the last time you used the Yellow Pages? No, not as a doorstop or a booster seat, but as an actual resource? I know, we have the internet, but there are some folks out there still consulting a big yellow book full of phone numbers, and businesses who still take out display ads in the hopes of attracting customers.

The Yellow Pages is still hanging in there around the country, The Wall Street Journal reports in a look at the book’s status in New York City: according to the Local Search Association, print business phone directories are a $3 billion industry, with a full 40% of Americans consult one at least once a year.

Though rural areas see more use in the Yellow Pages, in NYC, 13% of people check the book at least once a week.

“It’s profitable, absolutely,” LSA President Neg Norton told the WSJ.

But it’s not going to be a growing business at this point, as the publisher of the Yellowbook directories in NYC cut its Brooklyn and Manhattan editions. Dex Media, publisher of Verizon directories, serves all five boroughs but no longer has Spanish-language or neighborhood editions.

These are not the heavy door-thwackers of the past, either — the books have gone on a diet, as most retail advertisers have gone the way of the internet in the digital age. So who is still advertising? Service providers like electricians, accident lawyers, and pest-control specialists, the WSJ notes.

One reason print-directory publishers have stayed in business is by bundling print ads with online listings and digital marketing services.

And when it comes to targeting older customers or consumers who want to spend on a service, the print directory is the way to go, some say. For example, one of NYC’s biggest yellow-ages advertisers is a company called EPIC Security. It buys the back cover of the Verizon directory for every borough and also has multiple color ads inside.

President and CEO Mark Lerner tells the WSJ that though he gets teased for advertising in the print directory, he doesn’t mind because it means people saw his ad.

“I’m one of the last guys left who still likes the Yellow Pages,” he says.

How long will the Yellow Pages be delivered, at least in New York? Awhile, predicts LSA president Norton.

“The folks who are 55 and older will be around for a long time.”

Yellow Pages Hang On in Digital Age [The Wall Street Journal]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

San Diego McDonald’s Reportedly Testing Sriracha Sauce

Just when you thought American’s love affair with that hot-sauce-of-the-moment Sriracha was beginning to wane, the largest fast food chain in the country has begun experimenting with the spicy red sauce: select McDonald’s restaurants in San Diego are reportedly offering a Sriracha-Big Mac Sauce hybrid. 

Discover San Diego reports that some locations within the city are serving as testing ground for the special sauce as part of a signature crafted menu intended to provide customers with more options.

The new option is reportedly made with white cheddar, kale, spinach, crispy onions, tomato and a secret blend of Sriracha and traditional Big Mac sauce.

The San Diego Golden Arches are also offering a slew of other sauce options including pico guacamole and maple bacon dijon.

It really shouldn’t come as a huge surprise that McDonald’s would jump on the increasingly crowded Sriracha bandwagon. Customers have long suggested the fast food joint provide them with Sriracha for their meals, but mostly as a garnish.

Of course, McDonald’s isn’t the only company taking advantage of the spicy sauces’ popularity. Last year, Heinz spiced things up with a new Sriracha-flavored ketchup, and Pizza Hut offered a Honey Sriracha Dynamite pizza featuring a Honey Sriracha sauce with a Honey Sriracha crust edge and honey Sriracha sauce drizzle.

Before that, McDonald’s rival Taco Bell reportedly tested Sriracha-flavored menu items, while Pringles also waded into to the Sriracha market with a limited-time offering at Walmart.

SD McDonald’s now offers Sriracha items [Discover San Diego]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Subsidised egg freezing isn’t the answer to Japan’s birth rate

The solution to Japan's problem of a shrinking population isn’t publically funding egg freezing to allow delayed parenthood, says bioethicist Angel Petropanagos

via New Scientist - Health Read More Here..

7M NFL Fans In The Dark Thanks To League, Dish Contract Fight

Dish Network has been busy this week, blacking out Tribune Co. channels earlier this week and now, because of another contract dispute, football fans who subscribe to Dish won’t be able to watch NFL Network or NFL RedZone.

Seven million Dish customers were cut off from NFL Network as of Thursday night at 7 p.m. ET, after the two sides failed to come to terms on a distribution contract. If Dish and the NFL can’t make up, customers won’t be able to access NFL RedZone — a Sunday gameday-only channel that — come fall and football season.

“Our contract with NFL Network has expired,” Dish said in a statement. “We remain open to a fair offer that allows us to carry this content at an appropriate value to our customers.”

The NFL says it has never been dumped like this before.

“This represents the first time in NFL Network’s 13 year history that one of its service providers has not continued to offer the network to its subscribers,” the league said in a statement.

The NFL also set up a website, IWantNFLNetwork.com, that sends users to other television providers that carry the league’s channels.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Lumber Liquidators Won’t Resume Sale Of Laminate Wood Flooring From China

More than a year after Lumber Liquidators stopped the sale of laminate wood flooring from China that was found to allegedly contain excessive formaldehyde levels, the flooring retailer and federal safety regulators have come to an agreement that the company won’t restart sales of the products and will provide customers who already installed the flooring with testing kits. 

The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced on Friday that Lumber Liquidators agreed not to resume sales of its inventory of the Chinese-made laminate flooring.

The agreement comes as the CPSC and National Center for Environmental Health/Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (NCEH/ATSDR) completed its evaluation of the safety of the flooring product.

CPSC and ATSDR determined that eye, nose, and throat irritation could occur with the higher formaldehyde emitting flooring samples in certain home environments.

Under the agreement, Lumber Liquidators won’t sell its current inventory of 22 million broad feet of flooring, and any future sale, disposal, or transfer of the inventory can only take place with CPSC’s approval.

In addition to not resuming the sale of the inventory, the CPSC announced that Lumber Liquidators would continue conducting a comprehensive testing program as part of a recall program that affects consumers who purchased Chinese-made laminate flooring from Lumber Liquidators during a three-year period.

The CPSC estimates that more than 614,000 consumers across the country purchased the laminate flooring between 2011 to May 2015, and installed it in their homes.

Consumers with the laminate in their homes are cautioned not to pull it up, as that could expose residents to increased formaldehyde levels. Instead, the CPSC urges consumers to contact Lumber Liquidators to participate in the ongoing testing program and request a free badge kit and screening test.

So far, Lumber Liquidators has tested the air quality in more than 17,000 households and has retained third-party certified laboratories to conduct formaldehyde emissions tests for about 1,300 of those consumers’ floors.

As part of the agreement, the CPSC says that Lumber Liquidators will contact consumers who are found to have high levels of formaldehyde in their homes for more extensive testing.

If efforts to reduce the levels are unsuccessful, the retailer will pay for a certified industrial hygienist to examine the home and propose an additional remedy for the homeowner. The additional remedy would be free to the consumer and could involve replacement of the flooring or repairs to the home, the CPSC says.

In May 2015, Lumber Liquidators said it would suspend the sale of laminate floors sourced from Chinese manufacturers after a federal investigation was opened into claims that some of its laminate wood flooring contend excessive levels of formaldehyde.

Formaldehyde is commonly used in the manufacture of laminate flooring, but usually in such small levels that it dissipates quickly. If employed in excess, the chemical can remain in the flooring even after it’s been installed.

Prolonged, continued exposure to formaldehyde has been linked to numerous health problems ranging from nausea to increased cancer risk. Children are more susceptible than adults to the toxic effects of formaldehyde.

Lumber Liquidators’ alleged formaldehyde problem first came to light in the U.S. in a 2013 Seeking Alpa report by hedge fund analyst Xuhua Zhou. The company was thrust into the spotlight by a 60 Minutes story on the issue. Lawsuits and federal investigations soon followed.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Command and cure: We don’t need to edit genomes to control them

By switching genes on and off instead of changing them, there may be an easy, quick and cheap way to cure genetic problems for life

via New Scientist - Health Read More Here..

‘Daisy-chain’ gene drive vanishes after only a few generations

Gene drives could eliminate diseases like malaria but there are fears the tech could run out of control. A new self-limiting one might solve that problem

via New Scientist - Health Read More Here..

Thursday, 16 June 2016

Prosperous Young Adults Don’t Need To Shop At Dollar Stores, Do Anyway

Dollar stores and dollar-ish stores are growing in popularity, with shoppers choosing them over grocery and discount stores for household staples like food, and for fun stuff like party decorations. Young adults grew up with dollar stores, and also had our spending habits shaped by last decade’s recession. That’s why millennials are sticking with dollar stores…even when their income reaches hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Reuters interviewed a woman shopping at an upstate New York Dollar General, who said that she really appreciates buying party supplies there. What’s the point in spending a lot of money on paper plates and decorations that will just end up in the trash? At first she felt uncomfortable, but came to realize that. Everyone belongs at the dollar store, whether they’re buying essential groceries or just inexplicable Canadian candy. Even upper-middle-class parents in their thirties.

Dollar General also owns the similar chain Family Dollar, and Dollar Tree, a traditional dollar store where items cost either $1 or $.50. Last month, Reuters explains, the company specifically mentioned that affluent adults under 35 or so have been shopping there, and market research shows that about 25% of the money spent in their stores came from them.

Guess who’s shopping at dollar stores? Well-to-do millennials [Reuters]

FURTHER READING:
15 Things You Really Should Buy At The Dollar Store
10 Things You Should Never Buy At The Dollar Store


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Quiz: Craft Beer Or Roller Derby Girl?

If there are two fun, creative groups of folks in this country who just can’t turn away from a good pun, it’s small-time beer brewers and roller derby girls. But can you tell which is which?

There are literally thousands of independent and small-batch brewers slapping their punny brands on bottles, cans, and growlers all over this country, and there are probably just as many women in the U.S. who jam, block, and pivot around the track under an array of awesome assumed names (Shout out to my former roomie Margaret Thrasher!).

Can you sort out the two? Be warned the quiz is not easy, with some of us scoring as poorly as 10%. To make it a little easier, we’ll give you this one tip: There are three questions on this list where “Both” is the definite answer.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

We now have the tech to fingerprint babies – but should we?

Babies can now have their fingerprints taken, which could help with vaccinations and finding missing children. But the technology makes some people uneasy

via New Scientist - Health Read More Here..

FedEx To Finally Settle Decade-Old Employee Misclassification Lawsuits

Back in 2005, FedEx drivers filed the first of many misclassification lawsuits by drivers for that company. Now, as a whole new generation of employers is being accused of misclassifying their workers, the delivery company has proposed a settlement with its former independent contractor drivers. The lawsuits were combined in a single case in Indiana, and involved 12,000 drivers from 20 states.

The drivers made similar claims to misclassification suits that you may have read about recently: they claimed that while the company hired and paid them as independent contractors, they were acting as employees. They were, for example, required to drive FedEx-branded trucks, wear uniforms, and use FedEx scanners.

Payroll is a lot simpler when hiring independent contractors, since workers must pay their own self-employment tax and don’t receive benefits like health insurance, or retirement, and they also aren’t owed expense reimbursement unless that’s spelled out in their contract.

The company switched from hiring drivers as independent contractors to signing contracts with outside firms that employ drivers in 2011. Drivers who worked before then time claim that they’re owed expenses that should have been covered as employees, like overtime pay and reimbursement of driving expenses.

Depending on how long they worked for the company, some drivers could receive up to tens of thousands of dollars from the settlement.

FedEx to settle driver lawsuits in 20 states for $240 million [Reuters]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Lawsuit Against For-Profit Sanford Brown Institute Moves Forward, Despite Arbitration Clause

The highest court in New Jersey has ruled that a lawsuit filed by former students against for-profit educator Sanford Brown Institute can move forward, even though the school’s enrollment agreement has an arbitration clause that takes away students’ right to file such lawsuits. 

The New Jersey Supreme Court issued a ruling [PDF] this week sending a lawsuit filed by former students in May 2013 accusing the for-profit school of consumer fraud — claiming it used a series of deceptive strategies, and false claims to entice the students to enroll in its ultrasound technician program — back to trial court.

According to the lawsuit, Sanford Brown and administrators used “high-pressure and deceptive business tactics” that resulted in the students funding their education with high-interest loans, resulting in significant financial losses.

Sanford Brown didn’t reply to the case, and instead filed a motion to compel arbitration.

The school claimed that because the students signed an enrollment document that included a mandatory pre-dispute arbitration clause, they were contractually obliged to have their issue resolved outside of the courtroom.

However, the school’s motion did not make it clear they wanted the arbitrator, rather than the court, to decide whether the parties agreed to arbitration.

As a result, the trial court declined to submit the lawsuit to arbitration because the provision did not inform plaintiffs that they were waiving statutory remedies and because the provision conflicted with the remedies available under the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act.

Sanford Brown appealed that decision and the Appellate Division concluded that the trial court failed to enforce the arbitration agreement’s clause delegating to the arbitrator the issue of whether or not the students agreed to arbitration.

The panel also found that the parties “clearly and unmistakably” agreed that an arbitration would determine issues of arbitrability. However, because Sanford failed to dictate that it wanted an arbitration, ruling that other positions of the clause were unconscionable.

The case then went to the New Jersey Supreme Court which this week reversed the decision, finding [PDF] that the Sanford Brown agreement provision failed to “satisfy the elements necessary for the formation of a contract,” including providing in plain language that a person is waiving their right to a trial.

“Because the term ‘arbitration’ is not self-defining, an arbitration agreement must inform a consumer in some manner that she is waiving her right to seek relief in the judicial system,” the opinion states.

This means the case will go back to trial court, unless the college decides to appeal the New Jersey Supreme Court’s decision to the U.S. Supreme Court.

MarketWatch points out that while the Court’s decision only applies in New Jersey, the reasoning behind the ruling could be applied in other states, essentially making many arbitration clauses difficult to enforce as they are written.

Experts say that many arbitration clauses fail to satisfy the New Jersey Supreme Court’s standards that an agreement must inform a consumer in some manner that they are waiving their right to seek relief through the courts.

“The reasoning of this case would probably strike down a lot of arbitration clauses out there,” Paul Bland, the executive director of Public Justice, tells MarketWatch. “This case, if it’s picked up by other courts, could have a very significant effect on how the law develops.”

[via MarketWatch]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Punch Up Your Real Estate Listing By Posing In A Panda Costume In Every Photo

If you’ve ever spent hours online looking for a home — especially in a region where most of the properties have similar layouts and designs — your eyes might glaze over as you skim through countless nearly identical photos. Then, wait — was that a woman in a panda suit?

A real estate agent (not sure if she’s a “Realtor”) in Texas decided the best way to grab attention for her client’s home was to appear in every photo of the home, while dressed in a panda bear costume obviously.

Well, technically not every photo, but we spotted the panda in 22 of the 26 images currently attached to the listing:

The agent tells the Houston Chronicle that after only showing the house twice in three weeks, it was time to get fast and furry-ous.

She says that the stunt has apparently worked, as people are now coming to look at the house more frequently and other agents are asking her where they could get a similar costume.

However, the agent tells the Chronicle that she doesn’t intend for the Panda to be her marketing crutch, though it might make an appearance a couple times a year.

She says, “If we overuse it, it might not work.”


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Here’s Some Fuzzy Pricing Math That Isn’t At Target

We began calling certain types of fuzzy pricing schemes “Target math” some years ago, since they turned up most often at Target stores. When this happens, unit pricing goes awry, and it costs more per unit to buy a larger quantity of the same thing. For example, when a two-pack of lotion costs almost a dollar more than two individual bottles.

For example, reader PF. found this example at a Shop ‘n’ Save store. You definitely save… if you buy the 1.25-liter bottles. They don’t even appear to be on sale, which explains some instances of fuzzy math.

1.25liter

2_liter

That’s $.79 per liter for the 1.25 L bottle, and $1.14 for the 2-liter bottle.

Reader Beth noticed these panty liners at her local Price Chopper. The sale on the right caught her eye, which brought the price down to $3.50 for a pack of 60. Then she noticed the mini packages on the left, which have 20 for only $1.

pricechopper

Even though the 60-pack version was on sale, it was still cheaper to buy three packages of the smaller version than a single package of the larger one.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

San Francisco Officials Retract Proposal To Rent Out Picnic Plots At Popular Park

Usually when you’re preparing for a picnic, you make sure you’ve got everything you may need — food, drinks, a blanket, sunscreen… and a permit for the grass you’ll need to sit on. That last thing ticked off many San Francisco residents, prompting parks officials to pull a proposed plan that would’ve had park visitors reserving plots of grass ahead of time.

The parks department unveiled the plan last month for Dolores Park, The Associated Press reports, and the backlash was swift: thousands of people signed an online petition to put the kibosh on the plan within hours, protests were scheduled, and city leaders said the grass wasn’t for sale or rent.

Dolores Park is in the Mission District, which is a historically working-class neighborhood that is becoming wealthier. Making people pay to enjoy the park didn’t sit well for residents who have been dealing with skyrocketing real estate prices and fancy shops popping up in the area.

Under the proposal, rental prices would start at $33 for families and nonprofits, with a $200 security deposit for cleanup. For-profit businesses and corporations would pay more, starting at $260.

City leaders decried the plan, along with residents who felt that while perhaps renting out an area with tables and grills is fine, paying for grass is not.

“We all have the right to enjoy the city’s precious open space and picnic without having every square foot and blade of grass privatized and micromanaged,” said Supervisor Aaron Peskin.

The parks department quickly backpedaled, at the same time defending the prices as reasonable, and pointing out that other parks do it around the city and elsewhere in the country, including Golden Gate Park. A parks spokesman stood by the plan, saying that the park took reservations before its recent two-year renovation, and that each of three picnic areas would’ve been able to accommodate up to 50 people.

Instead, it’ll be first-come, first-served, a lesson anyone who tries to show up at the park late on a goregous summer day with the idea of spreading out has learned the hard way.

San Francisco plan to rent out grassy park space draws furor [The Associated Press]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Following Comcast Complaints, Ad Watchdog Says Verizon Should Revise Its “#1 In Internet Speed” Claims

Which broadband company has the blah blah blah fastest blah blah? Virtually all of them claim to be the best and speediest, using various surveys and statistics to justify their numbers, and subtly couching their boasts in language that best suits their goal. However, a private ad industry watchdog says that Comcast has a justifiable gripe about the way Verizon has advertised FiOS internet speeds.

In ads for FiOS, Verizon has boasted that, “In customer satisfaction studies FiOS is rated #1 in Internet speed [for] 8 years running.”

Of apparent concern to Comcast was the likelihood of this statement — along with another about FiOS being “rated number one in HD picture quality… based on customer satisfaction studies” — would be mistaken as being based on measured data rather than customer opinion.

So Comcast first took its gripes to the National Advertising Division of the Advertising Self-Regulatory Council in 2014, and then again in 2015, with the NAD saying in both instances that Verizon should revise its ads to clarify that such claims are measures of customer satisfaction as opposed to objective data.

While the NAD decisions are in no way binding, Verizon nonetheless has maintained the ads are not misleading and appealed the 2015 recommendations to the National Advertising Review Board, which considered the matter further and ultimately sided once against Verizon.

The internet speed boast comes from PC Magazine’s Readers’ Choice Survey, and Verizon’s #1 speed ranking in that survey is not based on any independent measurements of FiOS connection speeds, nor is it based on a comparison of FiOS speeds to those of other providers. Instead, it’s a reflection of FiOS customers’ satisfaction about their internet speeds.

While that’s something to be proud of, the NARB says it may be misleading the way the result is presented in the ad campaign.

“In this context, reasonable consumers may very well take away a message that Verizon’s #1 rating is based on a comparison of objective Internet speed performance and/or a head-to-head comparison of different Internet service providers,” concluded the NARB, which recommended that Verizon tweak the ads in question to “more clearly communicate that the higher rating with respect to Internet speed is a customer satisfaction rating based on consumers’ rating of their own Internet service providers.”

The NARB panel reached a similar conclusion with regard to the HD picture boasts.

For its part, Verizon says it “appreciates the panel’s guidance in this matter” and will take its opinion into consideration for future ads.

[via Ars Technica]


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Infiniti Recalls 60K Sedans Over Self-Driving Steering Malfunction

The race to put autonomous vehicle technology in vehicles hit a roadblock for Nissan this week as the carmaker announced the recall of 60,000 vehicles under the Infiniti brand because the adaptive steering system may not work as intended. 

Reuters reports that Infiniti will recall approximately 60,000 Q50 vehicles sold in the U.S. and China after determining that the steering system key to the vehicle’s autonomous driving capabilities can malfunction under certain circumstances.

According to Infiniti, the Q50’s direct adaptive steering system — which allows the vehicle to drive itself under certain situations — can malfunction in “rare circumstances, just after starting the vehicle.”

The issue is related to a software glitch that “can lead to a lack of steering responsiveness and change in turning radius,” a spokesperson for the company says.

Infiniti says it will begin notifying customers of the recall this month and next.

The recall comes a week after Infiniti CEO Roland Krueger said the company planned to include the autonomous steering technology in new models, Reuters reports.

“With this (steering) function, we can offer what we call partial autonomous drive already, so the car above approximately 60 kilometers per hour on the highway can be driven hands free,” he said.

Nissan’s Infiniti recalls 60,000 Q50 sedans over steering issue [Reuters]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

“Spam King” Gets 30 Months In Jail For Sending More Than 27M Unsolicited Facebook Messages

Though it may seem like spam messages are the stuff of giant networks of evilly cackling robots who are hell bent on beleaguering innocent people with offers for cheap erectile dysfunction medications, sometimes it’s just a human hacker. One of those humans now has more than two years of jail time to look forward to after sending more than 27 million spam messages through Facebook.

The so-called “Spam King,” who pleaded guilty to fraud and criminal attempt in August 2015, admitting that he’d committed mass spamming efforts in 2008 and 2009, has been sentenced to 30 months in prison and ordered to pay $310,628.55 in restitution, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California announced.

The man admitted that he sent unsolicited ads disguised as friend posts over a three-month span, harvesting Facebook user account information by sending “phishing” messages to users and tricking them into providing their passwords, prosecutors said.

He’d then take that info, log into their accounts and spam their friends’ Facebook pages. Unsuspecting folks who clicked the link would then be redirected to websites that paid the Spam King for the Internet traffic. He also admitted to violating a 2009 court order to stay off of Facebook by logging in to his Facebook account while aboard a flight from Las Vegas to New York.

This wasn’t his first spam rodeo, either: he started his spammy ways back in the ’90s, sending junk fax messages. He’s also faced civil lawsuits from both MySpace (2007) and Facebook (2009), leaving him with almost $1 billion in fines that he was unable to pay.

However, this sentence marks the first time he’s been convicted of a crime, prompting prosecutors to originally push for up to 36 months of jail time.

“The defendant’s history demonstrates that he has yet to suffer a consequence — other than a default judgment that cannot be collected — for his spamming activities,” prosecutors wrote, via Ars Technica. “A sentence of 36 months’ imprisonment will impress upon the defendant the seriousness of his actions and deter him from engaging in similar conduct again.”


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

VW Focusing On New Electric Car Offerings To Make Up For Emissions Scandal

After admitting to equipping more than 11 million vehicles worldwide — around 500,000 in the U.S. — with illegal “defeat devices” designed to cheat emissions standards, Volkswagen is trying to undo that damage by focusing more on greener, electric vehicles. 

Volkswagen CEO Matthias Mueller said on Thursday that the company will introduce more than 30 electric-powered vehicles by 2025, selling two to three million of the cars each year, The Associated Press reports.

The new plan is a part of a review of the company’s strategy to increase its profitability by investing in new ventures, such as ride-hailing services. VW previously announced a $300 million investment in on-demand ride company Gett, which operates in Europe.

In order to move forward with the electric vehicle initiatives, VW says it will set aside about $11.2 billion by 2025, Bloomberg reports.

Mueller said on Thursday that the company’s focus on electric vehicles came about in part so it could meet increasingly stringent limits on emissions of pollutants.

In the past, VW tried to meet those requirements with its diesel-engine vehicles, but that strategy appears to have stalled following the carmaker’s admission of using software to trick emissions tests last year.

“The future program we’re unveiling today ushers in the biggest change process in the history of Volkswagen,” Mueller said. “We are building a new, a better and an even stronger Volkswagen.”

The company plans to establish a mobility-solutions business to develop and acquire technology that would fall within the ride-hailing, robo-taxi, and car-sharing arena, Bloomberg reports.

Mueller said the goal is for the company to generate billions in revenues from these efforts by 2025.

Volkswagen to launch more electric cars after diesel scandal [The Associated Press]

Volkswagen Pushes for Redemption With Electric Cars, Robo-Taxis [Bloomberg]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

‘Stomach tap’ to let obese people empty their gut after eating

A device that allows people who are obese to empty a portion of their stomach contents into the toilet after a meal has been approved for use in the US

via New Scientist - Health Read More Here..

Court: Vimeo Not Liable Just Because Employees Watched Possibly Pirated Content

Streaming video platforms like Vimeo and YouTube host many more user-uploaded clips than could possibly ever be viewed and vetted for potential piracy by actual human beings, and federal law generally shields websites from liability of piracy they aren’t aware of. Yet, do these companies lose that protection if some employees have looked at content that was posted in violation of copyright?

Vimeo is currently being sued by Capitol Records (and a bunch of others under the Capitol/Universal umbrella), alleging — among other things — that because employees at the streaming video platform knew of multiple clips containing pirated music, Vimeo should not, in these instances, enjoy the “safe harbor” protections afforded by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

During the lawsuit, the record companies presented evidence of Vimeo employees allegedly encouraging users to test the limits of piracy when it comes to music.

One community director is quoted as telling a user that Vimeo allows the unauthorized use of copyrighted music but “if the copyright holder sent us a legal takedown notice, we would have to comply.”

Potentially more damning are statements from another community team member, who allegedly advised users that Vimeo has a “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy for music, while telling another “We can’t officially tell you that using copyright music is okay. But…”

The lawsuit, which accused Vimeo of 199 separate instances of copyright violation, was originally filed in 2009, but was effectively put on hold for several years while another high-profile streaming video dispute — between Viacom and YouTube — was sorted out.

In that case, which dated back to 2007, a federal court first ruled in 2010 that YouTube was indeed protected by the DMCA safe harbors. However, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals gave Viacom new life in 2012 when it ruled that there was good reason to consider whether or not YouTube employees knew of the allegedly infringing videos and didn’t take them down, and whether that knowledge should revoke the safe harbor protections.

The question to be asked, noted the appeals court at the time, was whether YouTube staffers had actual knowledge of infringement or “red flag” knowledge.

“[T]he actual knowledge provision turns on whether the provider actually or ‘subjectively’ knew of specific infringement, while the red flag provision turns on whether the provider was subjectively aware of facts that would have made the specific infringement ‘objectively obvious to a reasonable person.'”

That case was eventually settled, but the guidance of the Second Circuit — the same appeals court that would eventually hear the Vimeo case — established a standard for considering when a company employee should know better.

In the Vimeo case, the District Court ruled in Sept. 2013 that the record companies could not prove Vimeo staffers had any knowledge of piracy for 153 of the 199 videos involved in the case, either for lack of evidence or some because the amount of copyrighted material used was too small to have raised a red flag. However, the judge allowed the record companies to continue with their complaints regarding the few dozen videos that remained.

Vimeo appealed this ruling, arguing that the record companies had not established that Vimeo staffers crossed the “red flag” standard established in Viacom. This morning, the Second Circuit agreed, ruling that the plaintiffs had not demonstrated that anyone at Vimeo should have proactively taken down the allegedly offending clips.

“The hypothetical ‘reasonable person’ to whom infringement must be obvious is an ordinary person — not endowed with specialized knowledge or expertise concerning music or the laws of copyright,” explains the court in its opinion [PDF].

The court points out that § 512(m) of the DMCA “makes clear that the service provider’s personnel are under no duty to ‘affirmatively seek'” red flags of piracy.

“The mere fact that an employee of the service provider has viewed a video posted by a user (absent specific information regarding how much of the video the employee saw or the reason for which it was viewed), and that the video contains all or nearly all of a copyrighted song that is ‘recognizable,’ would be insufficient for many reasons to make infringement obvious to an ordinary reasonable person, who is not an expert in music or the law of copyright,” explains the court.

The court also said that while it’s generally up to a service provider to raise and prove they deserve safe harbor protections, in cases like this, that burden shifts to the plaintiff to more concretely demonstrate that knowledge of infringement exists and that it should disqualify the defendant from safe harbor protections.

“The service provider cannot reasonably be expected to prove broad negatives, providing affidavits of every person who was in its employ during the time the video was on its site, attesting that they did not know of the infringement and did not know of the innumerable facts that might make infringement obvious,” writes the court, which contends that the record companies’ understanding of the law would “largely destroy the benefit of the safe harbor Congress intended to create.”

Merely demonstrating that (A) a clip exists containing pirated content, and (B) that an employee has seen some of that clip is not sufficient for two reasons, says the court.

“First, the employee’s viewing might have been brief,” reads the ruling. “The fact that an employee viewed enough of a video to post a brief comment, add it to a channel or hit the ‘like’ button, would not show that she had ascertained that its audio track contains all or virtually all of a piece of music.”

Second, that employee might have viewed the clip for a specific job-related purpose — “classification by subject matter, sampling to detect inappropriate obscenity or bigotry, and innumerable other objectives having nothing to do with recognition of infringing music in the soundtrack.”

Beyond those two reasons, the court explains that just because a piece of music is recognizable, doesn’t mean it is recognized by the person viewing the video.

“Some ordinary people know little or nothing of music,” writes the court. “Lovers of one style or category of music may have no familiarity with other categories.”

And finally, the court notes that there is no way for someone viewing a video to know for certain that the music is being used without authorization. Just because a song is in the soundtrack doesn’t mean it’s been pirated.

“Even an employee who was a copyright expert cannot be expected to know when use of a copyrighted song has been licensed,” explains the court. “Additionally, the service provider is under no legal obligation to have its employees investigate to determine the answers to these questions.”

Thus, the appeals court has remanded this question to the lower court, noting that “Vimeo is entitled to summary judgment on those videos as to the red flag knowledge issue, unless plaintiffs can point to evidence sufficient to carry their burden of proving that Vimeo personnel either knew the video was infringing or knew facts making that conclusion obvious to an ordinary person who had no specialized knowledge of music or the laws of copyright.”

Protections For Pre-1972 Recordings

Sound recordings were not given federal copyright protection until Feb. 15, 1972, and even then the copyright only applied to recordings made from that date on, meaning only state copyright laws protects older recordings — and barring changes in the law, they will continue this way until at least 2067.

In the lawsuit against Vimeo, the record companies argued that the video platform could not enjoy the safe harbor shield for any clips that used pre-1972 recordings. And the District Court judge sided with the record companies, noting that a 2011 report from the U.S. Copyright Office supports the idea of using of DMCA safe harbors to cover pre-1972 recording but concludes that the existing law just doesn’t allow it.

However, the appeals court says the Copyright Office is misreading the statute as saying that protection against liability only applies to federal copyright. In fact, explains the court, the statute in question does not provide any specific definition for “infringer of copyright,” other than as “Anyone who violates any of the exclusive rights of the copyright owner.”

“This provision… is in no way incompatible with interpreting the safe harbor as applying to infringement of state copyright laws,” explains the court. “To state that conduct x violates a law is not the same thing as saying that conduct x is the only conduct that violates the law.”

Under the appeals court’s reading of the law, someone is “liable for infringement of copyright” regardless of whether it’s a state or federal copyright law being violated.

Interpreting the safe harbor protections as only applying to federal copyright law would be, according to the court a “strained interpretation — one that could be justified only by concluding that Congress must have meant something different from what it said.”

Thus, the appeals court has vacated the lower court’s summary judgment of Vimeo’s liability on the pre-1972 recordings, establishing a potentially far-reaching precedent for internet content companies.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Sears Holdings Cares More About Wall Street Than About Customers, And That’s Why It’s Doomed

Eddie Lampert, the manifesto-writing hedge fund manager who runs Sears Holdings, the company that owns Sears and Kmart, doesn’t understand retail. That’s isn’t always a bad thing in a manager: sometimes leaders with fresh perspective bring in fresh ideas. For Sears and Kmart, it’s meant over a decade of no investment in the company and the slowest liquidation and dismantling in retail history.

The public radio program Marketplace teamed up with Business Insider to look at how incredibly doomed Sears is right now. Their verdict after talking to former front-line employees and executives alike: a lot of things have converged to doom Sears, and a lot of them are Eddie Lampert’s fault, even as he tries to blame the wider economy and e-commerce for the company’s woes.

(Scott Miller)

Stock buybacks. This can be a good way for a company to take back more control …or to artificially prop up its stock price and spend money that it should be investing in its stores, its products, and its employees. Stock buybacks were one of the thing that doomed RadioShack, and Lampert wrongly believed that they were a better investment than store remodeling.

Not investing in stores has had one advantage: the company didn’t spend any money sprucing up their stores before renting them out to other retailers or subletting space to other companies, like Primark, Dick’s, and Whole Foods.

Profit over sales. Lampert “had a perspective that the retail industry as a whole was too sales-oriented and not enough profit-oriented,” one former executive explained to the Marketplace/Business Insider team. That’s true, and it is possible to have strong sales but over-spend and not make a profit.

Customers notice despair. “The majority of stores now border on disgraceful and show a complete lack of retail standards and proper store management,” a retail consultant told the team. Sears has even lost the loyalty of women over 55, possibly the last demographic still interested in shopping there.

FURTHER READING:
Our “Tears for Sears” tag
The 5 Meanest Quotes From Report On Sad State Of Sears
Stock Analyst: Sears Is No Longer ‘Viable As A Retailer’
If Kmart And Sears Stores Close Without A National Press Release, Does Anyone Notice?
Sears Leadership Still Convinced That Rewards Program Will Save The Company
10 Things We Learned This Week About Why Sears Is So Terrible


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Alcohol Companies Angling For Health-Conscious Consumers With Boozy Seltzer Drinks

If you’re the kind of person who cringes when someone orders a vodka soda, you’ll probably want to skip reading this one. But for those consumers who want an alcoholic drink that’s light on calories, there’s a lineup of companies out there waiting to entice you with various boozy seltzer beverages now on the market.

Health-conscious consumers are the ones driving most of the latest crazes, fads, and trends these days, so it was only a matter of time before more alcohol companies jumped on the bandwagon that brands like Skinnygirl, a low-calorie bottled cocktail brand.

The newest healthy trend in getting your buzz on is alcoholic seltzer water, MarketWatch notes, pointing to a slew of new products, including Wachusett Brewing Company’s Nauti Seltzer, Boston Beer Company’s Truly Spiked & Sparkling, Boathouse Beverage’s SpikedSeltzer, and Mark Anthony Brands’ White Claw Hard Seltzer.

Some companies say they’re responding to consumer demand for low-calorie drinks with natural ingredients, and with sales of non-alcoholic bottled still and sparkling waters growing in the U.S. while soda sales have slowed, it makes sense.

Despite burgeoning demand, however, alcoholic seltzer might not be a hit with everyone just yet: according to an analysis of 2,000 adults surveyed by Mintel last year, only 7% of consumers said they think ready-to-drink alcoholic beverages are high quality. About 28% said they’d be “embarrassed” to consume a ready-to-drink beverage in front of other people, while likely imagining what used to happen when someone popped a Zima at a party.

That being said, boozy seltzer should still prove popular among people who want less processed products, Mintel’s report says. Almost half the respondents said they were into drinking flavored waters as a replacement for high-sugar drinks.

“Hard seltzer is a sexier positioning for low-calorie/diet [ready-to-drink alcohols] than merely name-checking a lack of calories, which implies lower taste,” said Jonny Forsyth, Mintel’s global drinks analyst, in his report.

What would you do when faced with a spiked seltzer? Vote in our poll below:

The latest craze in ‘healthy’ booze: alcoholic seltzer [MarketWatch]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

WADA report shows tricks Russian athletes use to skip drug tests

Never mind high-tech chemistry, sometimes the simplest methods can stop you getting caught for sports doping – like running away from the tester

via New Scientist - Health Read More Here..

Lawsuit Claims GM Exaggerated Fuel Mileage On Some SUVs For Seven Years

General Motors announced last month that it would provide compensation to owners of their models of SUVs after admitting it had incorrectly calculated the fuel economy on the vehicles. But that apparently isn’t enough for some GM owners who have filed a potential class action against the carmaker. 

The lawsuit [PDF], filed in a federal court in San Diego, accuses GM of deceptively marketing, and advertising some Chevrolet Traverse, GMC Acadia, or Buick Enclave vehicles by overstating the gas mileage since at least 2009.

A California woman, who owns a 2016 Buick Enclave, alleges that she was enticed to purchase the vehicle through GM’s advertisements that included supposedly exaggerated gas mileage.

While GM admitted in May that it had overstated the gas mileage of the model year 2016 Chevrolet Traverse, GMC Acadia, or Buick Enclave, the new lawsuit claims that the same issues were found in additional model years, including those from 2009 to 2016.

“All of the Chevrolet Traverse, GMC Acadia, and Buick Enclave vehicles for model years 2009 to 2016 were represented to have the same inflated gas mileage,” the suit states. “Yet all have substantially the same engines, weights, sizes and shapes and, thus, should achieve substantially identical gas mileage.”

The suit alleges that GM has touted the inflated mileage in advertisements, its website, and in other materials for years, allowing the company to charge a premium for the vehicles.

In one case, GM represented that the 2009 to 2011 Enclave had “better highway fuel economy than any other eight-passenger crossover.”

The company also heavily promoted the fuel economy of the Chevrolet Traverse, marketing it as a vehicle that achieves both power and fuel efficiency.

As a result of the alleged unlawful conduct, “the class members have suffered harm in that they bought or leased vehicles they would not otherwise have bought or leased, or paid more for such vehicles than they otherwise would have.”

For example, the woman claims that prior to purchasing her Buick Enclave she was exposed to marketing materials, including GMs’ website, that touted the vehicle’s mileage.

“Plaintiff also discussed the vehicle’s gas mileage with the dealer,” the suit states. “Plaintiff acted in substantial part on material representations of GM regarding the fuel economy performance of the 2016 Buick Enclave, particularly when compared to other similar vehicles, when deciding whether to purchase the Enclave.”

The woman believes she was charged and paid a price premium for her vehicle based on the claim that it would achieve 17 miles per gallon in city driving, 24 mpg on highways, and a combined fuel economy of 19 mpg.

“Had GM disclosed the accurate fuel economy of the 2016 Buick Enclave, Plaintiff in all reasonable probability would not have purchased the Enclave or would have paid less for it,” the suit states.

In all, the suit claims that owners of affected vehicles will spend approximately $300 more per year than expected because of the mileage exaggeration, or more than $2,400 during the minimum useful life of such vehicles.

The lawsuit seeks to provide owners of affected vehicles with any proceeds obtained by GM as a result of the sale of the vehicles.

Previously, GM alerted dealers that it would try to make it up to thousands of customers by providing them a prepaid gift card valued between $450 and $1,500 or an extended warranty.

Under the program, which began on May 25, customers who purchased a 2016 Chevrolet Traverse, GMC Acadia, or Buick Enclave can choose between a debit card or a 48-month/60,000-mile service protection plan that improves their existing factory warranty.

Those who leased one of the affected vehicles will be offered a debit card.

The value of the debit cards will be determined based on whether or not the vehicle was leased or owned, and what type of vehicle it is.

“We designed this reimbursement program to provide full and fair compensation in a simple, flexible and timely manner,” a GM spokesman said, apologizing to customers for the misstated labels.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist