четверг, 7 января 2016 г.

uWalgreens “Nice!” Orange Slices Recalled Because Glass Shards Have No Nutritional Valuer


4 4 4 9
  • ucm480648If you shop at Walgreens, you’re probably familiar with its “Nice!” line of house-brand products, which includes bottles of mandarin orange slices. Unfortunately, some of those bottles might contain something that isn’t very nice: pieces of glass.

    The FDA and Milky Way International Trading — the company that provides the oranges to Walgreens — have announced a nationwide recall of 8-ounce bottles of Nice! Mandarin Oranges in Light Syrup after learning of three complaints — including one injury — from customers who found pieces of glass in the bottles.

    The recall specifically involves bottles with the lot codes listed in the chart below. Lot codes can be found printed on the neck or lid of the bottle.
    Screen Shot 2016-01-07 at 3.42.56 PM

    According to the recall notice, Walgreens has already removed affected product from store shelves. If you have any of these oranges, you should call Milky Way International immediately at (562) 921-2800, Monday to Friday between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. PST.



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uParents Of Child With Cerebral Palsy Say IKEA Wouldn’t Allow Him In Play Arear


4 4 4 9
  • (Håkan Dahlström)
    Stores that provide a play area for kids can be a welcome relief for parents tired out by dragging their offspring around during long shopping trips. But one family says their son, who has cerebral palsy, was kept from IKEA’s designated kid space during a recent visit to a Utah store.

    The parents brought their son, 10, and daughter, 8, to Ikea on Sunday, and decided to bring the kids to the play area, they told KSL-TV.

    When their mom tried to sign the kids into the Smaland play area, she said workers told her they couldn’t allow her son inside.

    “(The employee) said, ‘Well, she’ll pass [pointing to the daughter], but I don’t know if he will [pointing to her son],'” she said.

    Her son uses a wheelchair and a reverse walker to help him get around, which shouldn’t have been a problem, his mom said, adding that he isn’t medically fragile and can transfer out of his wheelchair to crawl around and play.

    After talking to a manager, the IKEA worker told the mom that her son wouldn’t be allowed in, because they couldn’t provide “one-on-one care,” she said. Even after she explained that she didn’t need that, just some help getting out of his wheelchair, the employee didn’t budge. When his parents offered to take him out of the chair themselves, they say workers told them it’s against IKEA policy to allow parents in the play area.

    Instead, the family left in tears, and said they won’t return.

    “They’re obviously making us feel unwelcome there, so I don’t want to go where I’m not welcome,” the dad told the station.

    IKEA issued the following statement to KSL-TV regarding the incident:

    IKEA wants to make shopping fun and safe for the many people; and this includes the children’s play areas in each of our stores. Providing a safe and secure environment is of upmost importance so that all individuals and families can thoroughly enjoy the IKEA shopping experience.

    As all IKEA co-workers are carefully screened, it’s our policy that only authorized IKEA co-workers are allowed in the Smland/playroom. This policy protects the well-being and safety of all children in Smaland. However, there are situations in which a parent is granted access to retrieve their child.

    As for Smaland requirements, IKEA has chosen to use toilet training and height as a criterion for admission in an effort to ensure safety and security.*

    *Note children with disabilities are exempt from the toilet training requirement and may enter with a diaper or pull-up.

    Parents of child with cerebral palsy told it’s ‘against policy’ to allow son in IKEA play area [KSL-TV]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uPolice: Couple Gets Engaged In Walmart, Allegedly Goes On Shoplifting Spreer


4 4 4 9
  • (Keith Tyler)

    After getting engaged, it’s normal to want to celebrate. But one Michigan couple took their celebration in a different direction after their public Walmart proposal: they allegedly went on a small shoplifting jaunt that included pilfering assorted sex toys. 

    The couple, who got engaged over the loudspeaker at a local Walmart store, were arrested last week after police say they stole items from both the location of their engagement and a Spencer’s Gifts store inside a nearby mall, MLive reports.

    According to police, authorities responded to a complaint from Spencer’s Gifts that a couple had stolen sex toys and other items shortly after 6 p.m. on Dec. 30.

    While the pair fled the area before police arrived, the woman was found walking between a Bob Evans and Taco Bell nearby. She denied stealing a necklace and earrings that police found on her.

    The man, on the other hand, was found sleeping in the mall’s food court, after apparently falling asleep at the table while tying his shoes, MLive reports.

    Police woke the man, and after searching him found a watch, an edible thong, a sex toy, panties, and sex candy from Spencer’s valued at a total of $80.93, according to court records.

    The man told authorities that he stole the items for his new fiancé.

    From there, MLive reports, deputies went to the Walmart store and employees corroborated the man’s proposal story, showing surveillance footage of the of the event, with the couple hugging and kissing as people applauded.

    The footage also showed the man purchasing an engagement ring, and the woman allegedly putting items in her purse. When police confronted the woman, she continued to deny the theft, but later said her fiancé stole the jewelry.

    MLive reports that the man copped to the Spencer’s Gift theft, saying he was feeling brash after being given a narcotic-like pain reliever during a recent hospital visit.

    A local judge arraigned the man on one count of third-degree retail fraud. The woman posted bond before she could be arraigned.

    Couple gets engaged at Walmart, steals sex toys at mall, police say [MLive]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uSaks Fifth Avenue Parent Company Buying Flash-Sales Company Gilt Groupe For $250 Millionr


4 4 4 9
  • giltgroupeThe owner of Saks Fifth Avenue is branching out into the world of here-and-then-gone Internet discounts, snapping up flash sale site Gilt Groupe for $250 million in cash. Because luxury brands obviously have that much money just sitting in their gilded piggy banks.

    Hudson’s Bay Company — which also owns Lord & Taylor — announced Thursday that it’s acquiring Gilt Groupe, in the hopes that it helps get more shoppers in the doors of its Saks Off 5th locations, reports USA Today.

    Customers who shop on Gilt will be able to return those items at the department store, while Saks Off 5th locations will also feature new open Gilt concept shops in the store.

    Gilt has more than nine million members after eight years in business, and they’re not just any members — many of them belong to that magic customer demographic with disposable income to spend, the millennial.

    “We always want to make sure we’re appealing to the incoming generation, and particularly the kind of customer that Gilt has,” CEO Jerry Storch told USA Today. “The affluent Millennial audience is the most sought-after audience in retail today.”

    Saks Fifth Avenue owner to acquire Gilt Groupe for $250 million [USA Today]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uRadioshack Franchisee On Martha’s Vineyard To Close, Store Dog Will Also Retirer


4 4 4 9
  • (David Berkowitz)
    Radioshack’s bankruptcy last year led to the closure of more than half of its stores, and the sale of others to one of the company’s major secured creditors. Yet the bankruptcy also affected the 700 or so remaining RadioShack dealers and franchisees, including Vineyard Electronics, a franchisee that has kept the island supplied with gadgets since 1981, and is now closing.

    You may not be familiar with the idea of RadioShack dealers and franchisees, but they were a key strategy for the company to sell merchandise in small, remote towns. Local general stores became dealers that could use RadioShack as a supplier to stock the latest electronics, and local franchisees operated their own stores under the RadioShack brand, or at least stocked with RadioShack merchandise.

    That’s what Vineyard Electronics is. The store’s owner, who was originally an employee and bought the business in 1984, says that she was unable to find a new supplier with reasonable prices: for some items, she told Martha’s Vineyard Times, it would be cheaper to buy them on Amazon than from the wholesalers. Yet island residents and vacationers could order directly online and have next-day delivery, even on an island.

    While the bankruptcy of RadioShack really hurt the store, it began losing money when it moved to a new location in 2012: owning their building saved money on rent, but sales plummeted.

    The 73-year-old owner of Vineyard Electronics says that she doesn’t feel ready to retire, and will probably look for a job in someone else’s store after the going-out-of-business sale is over. However, store dog Gracie the black Lab is 11 years old and looking forward to retirement.

    Vineyard Electronics turns out the lights [MV Times]

    FURTHER READING:
    RadioShack’s small town strategy ruled [Dallas Morning News]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


u6 Things You Should Know About The New Federal Dietary Guidelinesr


4 4 4 9
  • (Ben Schumin)

    In a bid to reduce obesity, prevent chronic diseases, and encourage healthy eating patterns, federal regulators issued new five-year Dietary Guidelines on Thursday. From cutting down on sugar, to saying red meat wasn’t so bad for your diet, the updated guidelines are chalk-full of things you should and shouldn’t do in order to live a healthy lifestyle. 

    While this isn’t the first (or the last time) the Department of Agriculture and Department of Health and Human Services will delve into what we put in our mouth, the eighth edition of Dietary Guidelines do reflect the current trend of recognizing the importance of focusing on individual nutrients and foods, as well as the way people eat and drink today.

    The guidelines, which were compiled after receiving input from a panel of scientists, provide basic nutrition advice that forms the basis for many federal, state, and local food policies.

    “The Dietary Guidelines for Americans is one of many important tools that help to support a healthier next generation of Americans,” said Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack in a statement. “The latest edition of the Dietary Guidelines provide individuals with the flexibility to make healthy food choices that are right for them and their families and take advantage of the diversity of products available, thanks to America’s farmers and ranchers.”

    Aside from the normal “eat more vegetables and fruit,” the guidelines offer a few new (and continued) recommendations for a healthy lifestyle. So without further ado, here are the six things you should know about this year’s version of the quinquennial publication:

    1. Less Added Sugar: Perhaps the biggest change included in the 2015-2020 Dietary Guidelines is the limitation of added sugar to no more than 10% of one’s dietary calories.

    It should be noted that the recommendation to decrease consumption of the sweet stuff does not include naturally occurring sugars that are found in fruit and other whole foods.

    According to the guidelines, the recommendation to limit added sugar intake was based on “food pattern modeling and national data on intakes of calories from added sugars that demonstrate the public health need to limit calories from added sugars to meet food group and nutrient needs within calorie limits.”

    Added sugars account on average for almost 270 calories, or more than 13% of calories per day in the U.S. population, the recommendations state.

    Currently, beverages, such as soft drinks, fruit drinks, sweetened coffee and teas, account for almost half – or 47% of all added sugars consumed in the U.S.

    The guidelines recommend that individuals choose beverages with no added sugars, such as water, in place of sugar-sweetened beverages.

    “Additional strategies include limiting or decreasing portion size of grain-based and dairy desserts and sweet snacks and choosing unsweetened or no-sugar-added versions of canned fruit, fruit sauces, and yogurt,” the government advises.

    ChooseMyPlate.gov provides more information about added sugars, which are sugars and syrups that are added to foods or beverages when they are processed or prepared.

    2. Less Saturated Fats: Like added sugar, the government recommends that individuals limit their intake of saturated fat to just 10% of their caloric intake.

    The advice regarding saturated fats is unchanged from the last five-year guidelines, as the government found that just 29% of individuals actually limit their intake of saturated fats to just 10% daily.

    While you might thing that red meat is the largest producer of saturated fats, the guidelines show that mixed dishes account for 35% of all saturated fats coming from items like burgers, sandwiches, tacos, pizza, rice, pasta, and grain dishes.

    The guidelines suggest that people change the ingredients in these mixed dishes to increase the amounts of vegetables, whole grains, lean meat, and low-fat or fat-free cheese, in place of some of the fatty meat and/or regular cheese.

    3. No Need To Limit Red Meat, Kind Of: While individuals should watch their intake of saturated fats, the guidelines don’t explicitly advise them to cut out red meat.

    This is surprising considering there’s evidence — and it’s mentioned in the paper — that diets with less meat were associated with reduced risk of heart disease and stroke.

    NPR reports that health advocates believe the guidelines should have stated more directly that red meat should be limited.

    “The message to eat more seafood, legumes and other protein foods really does mean substitute those for red meat,” Tom Brenna, a nutrition professor at Cornell University and a member of the Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee, tells NPR. “So I think the message is more or less there, it’s just not as clear.”

    4. Go For That Coffee: As the guidelines point out, beverages are often ignored when it comes to thinking of one’s overall health. But that shouldn’t be the case.

    “Beverages make a substantial contribution to total water needs as well as to nutrient and calorie intakes in most typical eating patterns,” the guidelines state. “In fact, they account for almost 20% of total calorie intake.”

    The most caloric beverages include those that are sweetened, like soda, which we know should be limited (i.e. sugar intake).

    As for that cup of java you need to get going in the morning, it’s okay to reach for it, as long as you limit the sweeteners.

    According to the guidelines, moderate coffee consumption can be a part of a healthy diet.

    5. Alcohol Minus The Caffeine: If you’re a fan of whiskey cokes, or other similarly caffeinated alcoholic drinks, then you likely wont’ be a fan of the new guidelines.

    The government recommends those who drink alcohol should skip the caffeine mixer. (To be clear, The Dietary Guidelines do not recommend that individuals begin drinking alcohol, or drink more for any reason.)

    As far as the guidelines are concerned, caffeine paired with booze can lead people to consume “more alcohol and become more intoxicated than they realize, increasing the risk of alcohol-related adverse events.”

    6. Help Your Neighbor: Because the vast majority of people in the U.S. are not meeting dietary recommendations, they suggest we all just help each other out.

    “Professionals have an important role in leading disease-prevention efforts within their organizations and communities to make healthy eating and regular physical activity an organizational and societal norm,” the guidelines state. “Changes at multiple levels of the Social-Ecological Model are needed, and these changes, in combination and over time, can have a meaningful impact on the health of current and future generations.”



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uHotel That Inspired “Fawlty Towers” To Be Torn Downr


4 4 4 9
  • fawltymooseMore than 45 years ago, the uptight manager of an English hotel inadvertently inspired Monty Python’s John Cleese to create a comedy legend. Now comes news that this landmark of sitcom history will soon be demolished.

    The creation myth of Cleese’s Fawlty Towers — the short-run, but incredibly influential sitcom about high-strung inn owner Basil Fawlty and his motley crew of staff and locals — claims that in 1970, Monty Python was filming on location in the seaside town of Torquay and stayed at the Gleneagles Hotel.

    The owner, Donald Sinclair, was later described by Cleese as “the rudest man I’ve ever come across in my life.” Things got so bad, according to anecdotes told by the Pythons in the decades since, that Sinclair actually threw one of their suitcases off a cliff (or out of a window, depending who tells the story) because he thought it contained a bomb.

    Sinclair’s widow repeatedly denied many of the colorful stories about the Pythons’ three-week stay.

    “There are no cliffs anywhere near the hotel,” Beatrice Sinclair told the Telegraph in 2002.

    “My husband didn’t want the Python team to stay at the Gleneagles. They didn’t fit into a family hotel and Donald came to me and said they should go,” she recalled at the time. “He said they would upset the other guests. But it was off-season and they were filming for about three weeks and I argued that it was good money and we couldn’t afford to turn them away.”

    As for the character of Basil’s bossy wife Sybil, Beatrice admitted that “Certainly I was the boss but I was never as bad as that.”

    The Gleneagles has changed hands many times since the Sinclairs owned it. Most recently it was operated as part of the Best Western Group, reports Conde Nast Traveler.

    This week, the Torquay Herald-Express brings the sad news that the hotel has again been sold, but this time it’s to be torn down and turned into a retirement home.

    “Like its former guests, we’re sure new owners of the apartments will appreciate the development’s brilliant location and perhaps have a laugh at its quirky history,” says the planning director for the property’s new owner.

    This now means that all real estate associated with Fawlty Towers will have passed on into memory. The exterior of the inn was not the Gleneagles, but the Wooburn Grange Country Club in Bourne’s End, Buckinghamshire. That building fell victim to a fire nearly 25 years ago and had to be demolished as a result of the damage.



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uHome Depot Explains Why It Offers “Do-It-Herself” Workshopsr


4 4 4 9
  • DIYDIHInterested in learning how to do a few handy things around your home? Home Depot, like some other retailers, offers free workshops to customers. In fact, it offers three types of workshops: The generic “Do-It-Yourself” classes, kid-friendly tutorials, and then “Do-It-Herself,” a category that has some wondering what a customer’s gender has to do with DIY home repair.

    Consumerist reader Renate brought this to our attention after she used the Home Depot app to check out the workshops offered in her area.

    She says the idea of separate classes for just women made her “really disgusted,” especially because Home Depot had become her favorite store since buying a fixer-upper — “bought all by my lonesome, too, imagine that!”

    While the general DIY workshops on the app show classes like “Interior Paint & Drywall Repair,” “Installing Tile Backsplash,” “Installing a Vanity,” and “Build a Storage Bench,” the females-only listing has one lonely offering: “Build a Beverage Crate.”

    Though workshop options might vary by your location, the same sessions are available on Home Depot’s website for us when we checked.

    “With just a few tools and a little know-how, you can build a beautiful wood beverage crate,” the description reads. “We teach you to properly measure, use a jigsaw to make grid cuts, and customize with paints and stains.”

    To critics of the Do-It-Herself concept, phrases like “just a little know-how” and describing the crate as “beautiful” is more than a little condescending, especially since the generic DIY tutorials don’t go on about “gorgeous” backsplashes or “lovely” drywall.

    “What century are we in now?” asks Renate, who contends that Home Depot is perpetuating gender stereotypes by offering the different workshops. “And evidently women are only capable of building beverage crates, nothing truly practical like changing a faucet or repairing drywall for us delicate females!”

    It’s worth noting that these workshops are nothing new. Earlier this year, Death & Taxes referenced a Tweet from a customer who was confounded by the “Herself” workshops. At the time, the DIH class being offered ed all about stocking hangers:

    Given the criticism — and the fact that there are millions of women in America doing serious DIY repair projects every day — we asked Home Depot about the separate designations for women and other DIYers.

    A rep for the retailer told Consumerist that the workshops have been around since 2003 and that they have been popular. After a few initial clinics held in the aisle of Home Depot stores, customers started to request formal clinics, the spokesman explained, “and females expressed interest in having their own clinics.”

    As for the topics, the spokesman said they’re chosen based on surveys conducted after workshops.

    “These workshops have been around for many years and have had thousands of participants,” explains the rep. “Some groups even do them as parties from time to time. In fact, they became so popular that we eventually formalized them as a regular part of our workshop curriculum, as you see them listed online today. And like the other workshops, they cover a wide range of projects throughout the year.”



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uDreams Really Do Come True: You Can Now Make A LEGO Head In Your Own Imager


4 4 4 9
  • legofacePlaying with LEGO when I was a kid was great, because my friends and I could build the houses — nay! castles! — of our dreams and fill them with all the things kids want in a dream home (huge pool, ice cream parlor, cat ranch, etc.). There was only one problem: none of the little barrel-headed figurines I had to act out those childhood fantasies looked remotely like me. That is no longer an obstacle to fun times.

    A UK-based company called Funky 3D faces is offering the chance for anyone with about $44 to spare the chance to turn their mugs into a 3-D head that fits on a LEGO minifig body (h/t People). To be clear, these are not official LEGO products, nor has the company endorsed them.

    You can choose to either have a big head, or a smaller one, which probably says a lot about how you feel about yourself:

    Screen Shot 2016-01-07 at 1.09.40 PM

    Funky 3D Faces is a side project for some folks who work for a parent company called, ELAT3D Ltd who make 3D printed bones for the medical industry and architectural models for architects and surveyors. Though that sounds like a blast, the creators said on their website that they “wanted to use the technology we had to make something fun and affordable to the masses.”

    To immortalize yourself in plastic, customers just need to send two photos of their head to the company. Because the heads are removable — like all LEGO minifig heads — you can switch’em up depending on how you’re feeling that day.



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uMelatonin Helps People Fall Asleep, But Has Potential Problems And Side Effectsr


4 4 4 9
  • (PepOmint)
    If you’re having trouble falling or staying asleep, you may first turn to melatonin, a synthetic version of the hormone that regulates our sleep/wake cycles. It might seem like a mild and natural alternative to sleeping pills, but there are potential problems. The hormone can interact with other medications and have side effects like next-day grogginess, and since it’s regulated as a supplement, its potency may vary. You also may need a much lower dose than what’s in the bottle: as little as .1 mg works for some people. [Consumer Reports]


ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uT-Mobile Execs Say YouTube Is “Absurd” For Complaining About Downgraded Video Qualityr


4 4 4 9
  • tmoneversettleThe war of words between T-Mobile and YouTube continues, with executives from the wireless company claiming it’s “absurd” that the streaming service should care so much about T-Mo downgrading the quality of YouTube videos.

    To recap: In November, T-Mobile introduced its “Binge On” program, which doesn’t charge users’ data monthly data allowances for accessing video streams from participating content providers. The catch is that videos watched via Binge On can be downgraded so that they are not necessarily the full HD feeds being pushed out by the video services.

    The problem for YouTube, which is not currently participating in Binge On, is that T-Mobile is apparently downgrading — or “optimizing” as T-Mo likes to phrase it — all streaming video to Bing On users, regardless of whether the video provider is involved in the program.

    “Reducing data charges can be good for users, but it doesn’t justify throttling all video services, especially without explicit user consent,” YouTube, which has asked the FCC to look into the matter, said back in December.

    At a Citigroup investors conference this week, T-Mobile execs fired back at YouTube, according to the Dow Jones News Service.

    “We are kind of dumbfounded, that a company like YouTube would think that adding this choice would somehow be a bad thing,” explained T-Mobile Chief Operating Officer Mike Sievert, who called the company’s position on the matter “absurd.”

    His argument is that, because of the downgraded video feeds, Binge On users are able to access three times as much YouTube than they would be if the streams weren’t optimized.

    But recent testing by the Electronic Frontier Foundation raises questions about whether customers are indeed getting “optimized” video or if T-Mobile is taking the step of actually throttling YouTube feeds, a potential violation of recently enacted net neutrality rules.

    The EFF test confirmed that Binge On was slowing down all video feeds (not just YouTube) to about one-tenth of what you’d normally get on a 4G LTE connection, even when the phone could handle streaming at a higher speed.

    With regard to T-Mobile’s claims that it is only optimizing these streams for broadcasting over cellular connections, EFF researchers contend that this is problematic because optimization should be coming from the content provider serving up the file, not the wireless carrier.

    Trying to optimize high-definition video midstream, can actually end up resulting in stuttering and uneven video.

    This matter is far from over, and you can expect both companies — and interested parties — to chime in with opinions and arguments until it’s eventually settled, whether by regulators or in some sort of arrangement between T-Mo and YouTube.

    [via DSLreports.com]



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uMcDonald’s Hopes Its New Packaging Design Makes You Feel Better About Going To McDonald’sr


4 4 4 9
  • oldpackagingWhile McDonald’s can’t control how your actual insides feel after frequenting one of its locations, the company says it’s hoping that its newly redesigned packaging will help put your mind at ease about choosing to eat at the restaurant.

    During the last year, McDonald’s President and Chief Executive Officer Steve Easterbrook was on a crusade to turn around the struggling fast food chain, with some of those efforts proving fruitful, while others, less so.

    As part of that continuing effort, McDonald’s is phasing in new bags, cups and boxes that are supposed to enforce the company’s new “contemporary restaurant experience.” They’re simpler than the company’s last redesign from 2013, Fast Company points out, which featured a visual onslaught of QR codes, slogans, illustrations, and symbols. And it’s supposed to make you feel a certain way about eating at the Golden Arches.

    “The packaging is intended to create noticeable change for our customers and I’m hoping it makes them feel better about their choice of going to McDonald’s,” Matt Biespiel, Senior Director of Global Brand Development at McDonald’s told Fast Company. “Unlike other [branding] categories, you receive packaging after you’ve already made the purchase. The thought for me is, this is about reinforcing the purchase decision—having people feel good about walking down the street holding our bag.”

    It says a lot about McDonald’s that the company knows you might be embarrassed to admit to the public that you’ve bought its food and likely intend to eat it. Will you be judged less harshly and feel less ashamed that you’re wolfing down a Big Mac, large fries and two milkshakes in one sitting just because your bag is simpler? That’s up to you.

    Can Packaging Design Make You Feel Better About Eating Fast Food? McDonald’s Hopes So. [Fast Company]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uTaco Bell Teases New Menu Item By Not Providing Any Details On Itr


4 4 4 9
  • (Mike Mozart)

    What’s the best way to get people trying to guess your secret? By telling them you’ve got a secret and leaving the rest to their imagination. That seems to be the tactic for Taco Bell’s latest plan to drum up hype for a new menu item.

    Taco Bell (kind of) announced on Thursday that it will introduce “what could be its biggest food creation yet” to the world via a commercial during the Super Bowl on Feb. 7.

    The heavily redacted press release (see below), which looks more like some Hoover-era FBI file than a fast food chain ad, offers virtually no details on what the new item might be.

    TB’s upcoming Super Bowl ad will mark the fast food company’s return to the big ad game after last airing a promotion during the event in 2013.

    “We aren’t revealing details of our spot until the big game, but we will have ways for our fans to engage with us in the weeks leading up to Super Bowl 50,” Chris Brandt, chief concept and brand officer for Taco Bell, tells Business Insider. “This build up will pay off with one of the most exciting announcements from the Taco Bell brand to date.”

    While Taco Bell is certainly hoping to get people talking, there’s always the slight chance that it’s overselling the announcement.

    In October 2014, the company inexplicably marked the launch of a new pre-ordering app by blacking itself out on the Internet. That ploy fell a bit flat, resulting in more questions than excitement.

    For those of you who like playing the guessing game, or just want to see what an unhelpful news release looks like, here’s the TB announcement:

    TB PR

    [via Business Insider]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uPredictions About Bad Weather Hurting Retailers Didn’t Come True At JCPenneyr


4 4 4 9
ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uAt Least 16 NJ Towns Left With Failing Phone Service While Verizon Dithers On Repairing Copper Wiresr


4 4 4 9
  • (chrismar)

    Verizon has made it very clear that they have no interest in maintaining or upgrading their aging, legacy copper-wire networks. If they were replacing them all with fiber that would be one thing, but according to residents and officials in at least 16 New Jersey towns, that’s not what’s happening. Instead, municipalities are just seeing their entire communications infrastructure left to rot, to the point where you can’t even make a phone call on a rainy day.

    The Philadelphia Inquirer reports that the towns in a rural part of southern New Jersey have had it with their poor quality of service. The aging copper lines that service their community hum, crackle, or flat out go dead during inclement weather (which is not uncommon in the northeast or mid-Atlantic), and they want Verizon to take their complaints seriously and come fix it already.

    It’s not that residents in this section of the state are unwilling to upgrade, they say; it’s that they aren’t being given a choice to. The old copper-wire infrastructure is the only choice they’ve got, since Verizon isn’t bringing fiber-optic services out their way. Meanwhile, there aren’t enough cell towers in the area to make wireless signals strong or reliable. And as for cable competition, Comcast serves, part, but not all, of the area.

    A Hopewell Township resident said that his phone has a “hum” on sunny days, doesn’t work at all in the rain, and that Verizon won’t extend DSL service to him. Cable service stops a mile from his home. “This is 2016, and I can’t get the Internet,” he complained to the Inquirer.

    The towns formally filed their complaint about deteriorating service with the state Board of Public Utilities in late November of last year. A Verizon spokesman told the Inquirer that the company has checked its customer service reports, and found that the service quality meets the required state standards. However, Verizon will be meeting with the mayors of the 16 towns over the next month to hear more about their concerns.

    “In three to five years, there will be no dial tone, and what recourse will residents have?” an official from Hopewell Township said to the Inquirer. “The scariest thing is that this is New Jersey, which is the most densely populated state in the country, and if we can’t get 100 percent wired-out, good luck to other states.”

    Granted, parts of New Jersey are less populated and more spread-out than others, and the section in question is indeed a rural area. But the entire state is only 70 miles wide and 170 miles long, and it’s flanked on both ends by major urban centers. Only three other states (Rhode Island, Delaware, and Connecticut) are smaller. We aren’t exactly talking the great wide spreads of Montana or South Dakota, here.

    It’s no secret that Verizon wants nothing to do with maintaining its aging copper-wire infrastructure anymore, nor is it unusual for Verizon not to care what its legacy-tech-using customers think — especially, for some reason, those in New Jersey.

    Twice last year, the company made headlines for threatening customers with complete termination of service unless they consented to switch from copper wiring to modern fiber. Meanwhile when Verizon does roll out their fiber upgrades, as they have done in the northern part of New Jersey, they have been accused of skipping low-income areas.

    The union that represents the maintenance workers who actually install and repair the older lines has accused Verizon of deliberately letting them go to rot. And when residents in southern New Jersey complained last year about the degradation of their network, a Verizon spokesman actually said that “people are going to look back and laugh” at those customers and their concerns.

    16 S. Jersey towns to Verizon: Fix our copper phone lines [Philadelphia Inquirer / Philly.com]



ribbi
  • by Kate Cox
  • via Consumerist


uBad News For Naruto: Monkey Can’t Hold Copyright On Infamous Selfier


4 4 4 9
  • The monkey seen in this image is actually the one who pressed the button on the camera. Copyright law forbids a non-human animal from holding a copyright, so many believe the image is in the public domain. PETA claimed that monkeys like Naruto should be treated no differently than if a human had snapped the picture. A federal judge disagrees.
    The years-long saga of the “monkey selfie” may have rolled to a quiet end in a federal court in San Francisco yesterday after a judge tentatively ruled that Naruto the macaque photographer does not hold the copyright to images he snapped on a stolen camera more than four years ago.

    A quick refresher for those who don’t know the story behind the above image. In 2011, photographer David Slater was shooting pics of macaque monkeys in Indonesia when one of them — supposedly Naruto, though some now claim it was actually a different monkey — grabbed one of Slater’s cameras and fired off several photos, most of them blurry and useless. But among those images was the above self-portrait.

    After Slater posted the image and the story behind it online, a number of people began using it without permission. Against Slater’s repeated takedown demands, the image eventually ended up in the Wikimedia Commons collection of 22 million images and videos that are free to use.

    Supporters of its inclusion in the collection — including the Wikimedia Foundation — argued that the monkey was the actual author of the photo; Slater just owned the camera. And since U.S. copyright guidelines explicitly forbid non-human animals from holding copyright, they contend that the image is in the public domain.

    In Sept. 2015, animal rights organization PETA filed suit in a federal court, arguing that Naruto should be granted copyright, as the photo in question “resulted from a series of purposeful and voluntary actions by Naruto, unaided by Slater.”

    The lawsuit also accused Slater of violating Naruto’s copyright by making money from the sale of books that include the self-portrait.

    But after hearing arguments in the case this week, U.S. District Court Judge William H. Orrick issued a tentative opinion [PDF] that doesn’t look good for hipster monkey shutterbugs out there.

    Pointing to a previous federal appeals court ruling — Cetacean Community v Bush, a case involving the legal standing of sea mammals (whales, dolphins, etc) to bring suit against the U.S. government — Orrick notes that Congress and the President do have the authority to extend the protection of law to animals as well as humans, but that “there is no indication that they did so in the Copyright Act.”

    Without legislative or executive guidance, this matter is in the hands of the Copyright Office, which has made it clear that only humans can hold copyright in the U.S.

    The judge’s decision does not directly impact Slater’s ongoing attempts to plant his copyright flag on the photo.



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uUber Settles With NY Attorney General Over 2014 Data Breachr


4 4 4 9
  • (afagen)
    Ride-hailing services have vital information about both their drivers and their readers on file. For drivers, they have license and vehicle information, as well as personal information used for payment. For passengers, a location-based app knows where users are, creating a Marauder’s Map of cars and people in a city. NeW York State has settled with ride-hailing company Uber for $20,000 over a 2014 breach, and the company also agreed to encrypt and limit access to passenger location information.

    “God View” was a tool that would allow Uber staff to see every user on the system, giving them the ability to track someone in a vehicle in real time. While that might have useful customer service applications, when the tool’s existence was revealed in a 2014 Buzzfeed story, many users weren’t comfortable with the existence of the tool or potential misuses.

    A reporter for that site was riding to Uber headquarters in a car hailed using the service, and the local general manager was waiting for her at the door. He explained that he had tracked her arrival using God View, knowing the exact time she would be arriving at the door. Users of the service were understandably uncomfortable to learn about this.

    That’s not what the $20,000 settlement is for, though. In an unrelated privacy issue, hackers gained access to information about the service’s drivers, including their names and license numbers.

    “I strongly encourage all technology companies to regularly review and amend their own policies and procedures to better protect their customers’ and employees’ private information,” AG Eric Schneiderman said in a statement.

    Uber drivers are neither customers nor employees; they’re independent contractors, which is the subject of a class action lawsuit against the company in California that will be tried later this year.

    Uber Reaches Accord With New York Over Tracking Rider Data [Bloomberg]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uGoogle Fixes Bug In Online Tool After It Started Translating “Russian Federation” To “Mordor”r


4 4 4 9
  • mordorGoogle says it’s addressed a bug in its online translation tool after it started translating the words “Russian Federation” to “Mordor.” This matters, of course, because Mordor is the name of a fictional region in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle Earth, as described in the Lord of the Rings books by other names like The Land of Shadow. Unlike Russia, you can’t just walk into Mordor.

    Other errors — including translating “Russians” to “occupiers” — were introduced to Google Translate’s Ukrainian to Russian service automatically, Google said, according to the BBC.

    The terms mirror language used by some Ukrainians after Moscow annexed Crimea in 2014. Social media users have been sharing screenshots of the erroneous translations in recent days. Google Translate works by looking for patterns in hundreds of millions of documents, but perfect translation may elude it when the meaning of words is tied to the context in which they’re used, the company explained.

    “Google Translate is an automatic translator — it works without the intervention of human translators, using technology instead,” said Google in its statement. “This means that not all translations are perfect, and there will sometimes be mistakes or mistranslations. We always work to correct these as quickly as possible when they are brought to our attention.”



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uTime Warner Cable Warns 320,000 Customers Their Email & Passwords May Have Been Breachedr


4 4 4 9
  • (PROLyman Green)

    Hundreds of thousands of Time Warner Cable customers received alerts this week telling them to change their email passwords after law enforcement officials notified TWC that hackers may have gotten their hands on this sensitive information.

    Reuters reports that TWC was notified by officials with the FBI that some customers’ email addresses, including passwords, “may have been compromised.”

    While the company hasn’t determined how the information was obtained, TWC says the email and password details were likely gathered either through malware downloaded during phishing attacks or indirectly through data breaches of other companies that store TWC’s customer information.

    “Approximately 320,000 customers across our markets could be impacted by this situation,” Eric Mangan, director of public relations, tells Venture Beat. “To protect the security of these customers, we are sending emails and direct mail correspondence to encourage them to update their email password as a precaution.”

    Mangan says the company will post a notice on its website that includes tips for how customers can navigate the Web more carefully and how to avoid phishing schemes.

    TWC will contact customers who may have been affected by the possible breach individually and help them reset their passwords.

    The possible hack of TWC emails comes about two months after Comcast said it reset the passwords for about 200,000 email customers because of a similar leak.

    The list of emails and corresponding passwords made up roughly 590,000 accounts. However, Comcast determined that nearly 60% of that information was for inactive accounts, leaving just 200,000 compromised customers.

    A rep for Comcast said the company’s security teams are certain that none of its systems or apps had been compromised.

    A copy of the alert sent out by TWC to affected customers

    Time Warner Cable says up to 320,000 customers’ data may have been stolen [Reuters]
    Time Warner Cable advises 320,000 customers of possible hack [Venture Beat]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uMacy’s Will Close 40 Stores This Spring: Here’s The Listr


4 4 4 9
  • (Mike Mozart)

    Three months after Macy’s said it would likely shutter dozens of stores in the first months of 2016, the retailer has solidified its plan.

    The retailer announced on Wednesday that it will eliminate about 4,800 jobs and close 40 stores in an effort to cut costs after a dismal holiday season.

    “In light of our disappointing 2015 sales and earnings performance, we are making adjustments to become more efficient and productive in our operations,” Terry J. Lundgren, chairman and chief executive officer of Macy, said in a statement.

    Macy’s says the cuts are estimated to save approximately $400 million and enable the company to “still investing in growth strategies, particularly in omnichannel capabilities.”

    Thirty-six of the 40 affected stores, representing about 5% of Macy’s-branded U.S. stores, will shutter in the spring of 2016. Four stores — in Owings Mill, MD; Bedford, NH; West Orange, NJ; and downtown Pittsburgh — are already in the process of being shuttered. Most stores will begin offering clearance sales next week, continuing for up to 12 weeks.

    “In today’s rapidly evolving retail environment, it is essential that we maintain a portfolio of the right stores in the right places,” Lundgren said. “So we will continue to add stores selectively while also being disciplined about closing stores that are unproductive or no longer robust shopping destinations because of changes in the local retail shopping landscape.”

    The estimated 4,800 employee – including 165 executives – may be offered positions in nearby stores, if possible, the company said.

    Macy’s is no stranger to closing stores. In early 2015, the company announced it had closed 14 stores and opened two in a restructuring effort.

    In addition to the four in-progress closings mentioned above, here are the 36 stores slated to close this spring:

    • Irvine Spectrum, Irvine, CA
    • Country Club Plaza, Sacramento, CA
    • Westfield Century City, Los Angeles, CA
    • Enfield Square main store, Enfield, CT
    • Enfield Square furniture/home/men’s store, Enfield, CT
    • North DeKalb Mall, Decatur, GA
    • Kailua, HI
    • Palouse Mall, Moscow, ID
    • Northwoods Mall, Peoria, IL
    • Cortana Mall, Baton Rouge, LA
    • Valley Mall, Hagerstown, MD
    • Berkshire Mall, Lanesborough, MA
    • Eastfield Mall, Springfield, MA
    • The Shoppes at Stadium, Columbia, MO
    • Middlesex Mall, South Plainfield, NJ
    • McKinley Mall main store, Buffalo, NY
    • McKinley Mall home store, Buffalo, NY
    • Arnot Mall, Horsehead, NY
    • Hudson Valley Mall, Kingston, NY
    • Eastern Hills Mall, Williamsville, NY
    • Cary Towne Center, Cary, NC
    • Chapel Hill Mall, Akron, OH
    • Midway Mall, Elyria, OH
    • Quail Springs Mall, Oklahoma City, OK
    • Pony Village Mall, North Bend, OR
    • Roseburg Valley Mall, Roseburg, OR
    • Suburban Square, Ardmore, PA
    • Century III Mall, West Mifflin, PA
    • Ridgmar Mall, Ft. Worth, TX
    • Chesapeake Square, Chesapeake, VA
    • Virginia Center Commons, Glen Allen, VA
    • Peninsula Town Center, Hampton, VA
    • Military Circle Mall, Norfolk, VA
    • Regency Square main store, Richmond, VA
    • Regency Square furniture/home/men’s store, Richmond, VA
    • Downtown Spokane, Spokane, WA



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


среда, 6 января 2016 г.

uGot A Fitbit Or Other Gadget For Christmas? It’s Time To Opt Out Of Mandatory Arbitration!r


4 4 4 9
  • Adam Fagen
    Customers have filed a class action suit against Fitbit, claiming that the company’s Charge HR and Surge fitness bands don’t accurately measure users’ heart rate during vigorous exercise. We’ll keep an eye on the lawsuit and let you know if it goes anywhere, but it probably won’t, and that’s what got our attention. The users filed a class action against Fitbit despite signing (well, clicking) away their right to do so when they registered their devices.

    Without registering and syncing your fitness tracker to a computer or smartphone, you might as well buy a pedometer at the dollar store and use that instead. To sync your device, you have to register an account on Fitbit.com, which requires you to agree to terms of service. One of those terms that you agree to is that you and Fitbit will resolve any disputes either informally or through arbitration, and that you waive your right to sue the company, including in a class action.

    If you choose to use arbitration, that’s fine, but it should be your right to choose the venue that you prefer if you ever have a dispute with Fitbit. Keep in mind that in arbitration, the company chooses the arbitrator, and other consumers who might encounter the same problem won’t know about your case or what the outcome was.

    As we publish this on January 6, you still have time to opt out if you registered your Fitbit on or after December 7, 2015. That leaves the many fitness trackers given as Christmas gifts well within the window to opt out, which you can do by e-mailing legal@fitbit.com. Simply write, “I, [your first and last name], decline Fitbit’s arbitration agreement.”

    Opt-out of Agreement to Arbitrate: You can decline this agreement to arbitrate by contacting legal@fitbit.com within 30 days of first accepting these Terms of Service and stating that you (include your first and last name) decline this arbitration agreement. Arbitration Procedures: The American Arbitration Association (AAA) will administer the arbitration under its Commercial Arbitration Rules and the Supplementary Procedures for Consumer Related Disputes. The arbitration will be held in the United States county where you live or work, San Francisco, California, or any other location we agree to.

    This isn’t unique to Fitbit, as our regular readers know. Competitor Jawbone’s Up fitness tracker, for example, has the same policy. While you’re at it, check any other product you’ve purchased or subscription that you’ve signed up for recently. Lots of the agreements that we all scroll past on our way to register for a website or register a product or sign up for TV service have arbitration requirements, though there aren’t always opt-out clauses.

    While the class action system is flawed, right now we don’t have a better way for consumers to fight back when many people have been wronged in small ways. That brings us back to the Fitbit heart rate monitors: in the Charge HR and Surge case, the plaintiffs say that the dispute resolution section shouldn’t apply to them, since they weren’t informed of this policy before purchasing their devices.

    In a statement to the Verge, a Fitbit representative said that the company “strongly disagrees with the statements made in the complaint and plans to vigorously defend the lawsuit.” At least one of the lead plaintiffs has received a letter from Fitbit informing her that since she did not opt out, the case must go to arbitration. (PDF download)

    termsofservice

    If Fitbit succeeds in moving the case to arbitration, the dispute may be resolved, but that will be no help to other users who have the same problem. A U.S. Supreme Court decision less than a month ago affirmed companies’ right to keep consumer complaints out of court.

    Fight back: check for these clauses whenever you see a new user agreement, and opt out if possible.

    Fitbit hit with class-action suit over inaccurate heart rate monitoring [The Verge]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uTaxpayer Advocate Concerned About IRS Plans To Move More Support Onliner


4 4 4 9
  • (Joachim Rayos)
    It was just last week that we wrote about how this year will probably be better than last year for U.S. taxpayers with questions or problems. Yet looking forward to the next decade or so, changes in how the IRS provides support will mean leaving some Americans behind.

    One potentially worrisome area is fees: when the IRS had less money for operations, they raised the fees for some services, and has proposed adding more. For example, people who owe a large amount of tax and need to set up an installment plan. The fee just for setting up such a plan was $105 in 2013, and $140 in 2014.

    “Fees that seem reasonable to the IRS may seem outrageous to taxpayers when added to the costs of recordkeeping, filing and paying taxes and paying professionals for help in navigating complicated rules and procedures that the government created,” the Taxpayer Advocate’s report points out.

    You’re reading a website, so you may be more comfortable with the idea of seeking help for your taxes online. However, there are still large numbers of Americans who are uncomfortable with going online, or who lack home Internet access or computers. Cutting resources to traditional help methods like toll-free phone numbers would be a problem for that population, and Olson’s office is concerned that moving help resources online could hurt elderly and poor taxpayers, who are already at a disadvantage.

    IRS Web Move May Leave Older, Poorer Filers Behind



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uChipotle’s Sales Took A Deeper Dive Than Previously Expected Amid Food Safety Issuesr


4 4 4 9
ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist