среда, 11 марта 2015 г.

jikTV Viewership Down 10%; Industry Blames Streaming Videode

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Even though many of us have hundreds of channels to choose from on cable or satellite, we’re choosing to watch less live TV. But it’s not just because we’ve all decided to go outside and take up steeplechase; it has a little something to do with the availability of subscription streaming services.

The Wall Street Journal reports on a recent talk held by the Cabletelevision Advertising Bureau in which the trade group tried to assign blame for the drop-off in TV viewership over the last two years.


The reportedly CAB explained at this gathering that around 40% of recent ratings drops are a result of competition from services like Netflix and Amazon Prime Instant Video.


Over the last few quarters, year-over-year viewership declines range from 9-12%. A recent research report from Nielsen claims that “the U.S. television industry is entering a period of prolonged structural decline,” due to consumers moving away from traditional commercial TV to streaming services with no, or fewer, commercials.


And with a growing number of non-cable TV options in the offing, many consumers are planning to abandon pay-TV or cut back their packages. A recent survey from a TiVO-owned research firm found that 1.5 million Americans plan to cut the cord entirely in the near future, with another 2.4 million looking to downgrade their current pay-TV package.


While there is no concrete way to calculate streaming video’s direct impact on TV viewership, the fact that average Netflix viewership is up to 100 minutes a day indicates that it must be cutting into the time some people would have spent watching live TV. One report says Netflix consumption was up nearly 31% year-over-year for the last quarter of 2014.


Some in the industry believe that ratings declines might not be as bad as the numbers indicate, as Nielsen is not yet taking into account TV viewership on mobile devices, which are an increasingly popular platform.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikFederal Agency Approves Powdered Alcohol For Sale In U.S. — But Your State Might Still Ban Itde

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palcohol3 After reversing its initial approval of Palcohol last year, the Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau has once again approved the powdered alcohol product, making it likely that it could appear on shelves in some stores this spring.


A spokesman for the bureau told the Associated Press that the issues with Palcohol’s label had been resolved, and the product is now approved. He notes that the bureau’s evaluation focuses on whether or not the labels accurately represent the ingredients in the product, rather than judging its potential for abuse.


The product’s maker confirmed the approval as well.


“Over the last 10 months I’ve been working with the TTB to work out all of the issues to make a powdered alcohol product conform to laws that classified alcohol as liquid,” Palcohol’s creator Mark Phillips told The Spirits Business. “It’s done. The FDA and TTB have reviewed and tested Palcohol every which way and they’ve given me the green light to sell it in the United States.”


However, as the bureau spokesman pointed out, states can also regulate alcohol sales — and many have already done so ahead of Palcohol’s approval: Alaska, Delaware, Louisiana, South Carolina and Vermont have banned it, while Colorado advanced legislation last month to temporarily halt its sale.


Lawmakers in Iowa, Ohio, Rhode Island and Utah are also moving to ban the product.


If it isn’t banned in your state, you could soon be mixing up a cocktail from powder, as the Food and Drug Administration won’t be stepping up against it, saying it doesn’t have the legal basis to block it after checking out the non-alcoholic ingredients in the powder.


Powdered alcohol gets federal agency’s approval [Associated Press]

PALCOHOL APPROVED FOR SALE IN THE US [The Spirits Business]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

вторник, 10 марта 2015 г.

jikAmericans Don’t Think Personal Data Is Secure, Still Trade It For Couponsde

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What information are you willing to give up to get a discount or other benefits from a retailer? The consulting company Accenture wanted to know how comfortable we are with all of this, and what information we might be willing to give up for rewards from merchants. Broadly speaking, it depends on what they’re offering.

In a world where a store’s marketing department knows that you’re pregnant before your family does and data brokers scoop up every piece of information on you that they can, it might feel like consumers no longer have anything to hide. 80% of survey participants agreed that total privacy is now impossible or obsolete, and 87% don’t think that companies that hold their personal data are taking precautions to protect it.


Surprisingly, though, a minority of people who took part in the survey believed that their data is for sale.


In the least surprising piece of news from this survey, while most people (93%) are fine with receiving e-mails from brands, only 25% said that they’re comfortable receiving phone calls. These must be the people who robocalls are for.


U.S. Consumers Want More Personalized Retail Experience and Control Over Personal Information, Accenture Survey Shows [Accenture]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

jikApple Store Rake In Money, Get Mall Rent Breaksde

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An article in the Wall Street Journal today forced me to face a difficult truth about myself: I only go to the mall when one of my Apple products breaks or I want to test makeup. I’m not alone in this, apparently, because Apple Stores are replacing department stores as a driver of traffic to malls, and they’ve worked out unique rent arrangements because of that.

The classic setup of a mall has been that malls have department or big-box stores as anchors, which typically pay lower rent per square foot or own their stores’ buildings that adjoin the mall. (This is a large part of Sears’ financial burden right now, and why they’re trying to sell and lease back some stores and ditch others.) In exchange for these privileges, anchor stores are supposed to draw customers to the mall; they stop in other stores while they walk from Best Buy to Macy’s.


In theory, this is how an Apple Store should function. Yet while they’re drawing people into the mall, are those people actually shopping there? The WSJ interviewed mall business insiders who explained that putting an Apple Store in a mall can raise total sales by as much as 10%, even though the store fits in only a tiny part of the mall’s retail space. That makes sense: when someone walks into a store and can drop hundreds of dollars on a phone or tablet or more than a thousand on a computer, that boosts sales numbers overall, but does nothing for the other stores.


This leads to savvy retailers asking what seems like a strange question when they’re considering a new store: what are the mall’s total sales not counting Apple? That gives them a more accurate picture of spending patterns on things that aren’t shiny gadgets.


Apple Gets Sweet Deals From Mall Operators [Wall Street Journal]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

jikWikimedia, Amnesty International, Others Sue NSA Over Mass Surveillancede

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The foundation behind Wikipedia, along with several other high-profile non-profit organizations, has sued the National Security Agency challenging its “suspicionless seizure and searching of internet traffic” in the U.S., claiming that this mass data collection goes beyond what the law allows the NSA to collect and that it violates protections afforded by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

The complaint [PDF] was filed today in a federal court in Maryland, the Wikimedia Foundation and the other plaintiffs — Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, PEN American Center, Global Fund for Women, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, the Rutherford Institute, the Washington Office on Latin America, and The Nation magazine — and names as defendants the NSA, its Director Admiral Michael Rodgers, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence and said Director James Clapper, the Dept. of Justice, and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder.


The particular form of mass data collection being targeted by the suit is so-called “upstream” surveillance, which involves the NSA accessing the “backbone” of the Internet in the U.S., intercepting data as it travels between destinations online.


“In the course of this surveillance, the NSA is seizing Americans’ communications en masse while they are in transit, and it is searching the contents of substantially all international text-based communications — and many domestic communications as well — for tens of thousands of search terms,” contends the complaint.


In 1978, Congress enacted the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, intended to provide a system for authorizing legal government surveillance to counter the decades of unchecked, unwarranted information-gathering by federal agencies on private citizens who were never accused or suspected of any particular crimes.


And for more than two decades, the FISA generally required the government to seek individualized orders from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, showing that a “significant purpose” of the surveillance was the gathering of foreign intelligence.


Then in 2001, President Bush created (and subsequently reauthorized) the President’s Surveillance Program for warrantless wiretapping when the government had a reasonable basis to believe that at least one party on a phone call was in some way connected to Al Qaeda.


In July 2008, the FISA Amendments Act (“FAA”) was enacted, expanding the scope of FISA, by authorizing the government to gather information on international communications without demonstrating any individualized suspicion, and on a wider variety of communications platforms.


At this point, contend the plaintiffs, the FISC stopped being used to review individual surveillance applications, just the processes of surveillance.


“The FISC’s role in overseeing the government’s surveillance under the statute consists principally of reviewing these general procedures,” reads the complaint. “The FISC never reviews or approves the government’s individual surveillance targets or the facilities it intends to monitor. Rather, when the government wishes to conduct surveillance under the statute, it must certify to the FISC that the court has approved its targeting and minimization procedures or that it will shortly submit such procedures for the FISC’s approval.”


The plaintiffs allege that this lack of direct oversight gives the government “sweeping authority to conduct warrantless surveillance of U.S. persons’ international communications.”


Even though the law prohibits the government from intentionally targeting people in the U.S., the NSA may still gather data regarding our communications with people outside our borders; and those people don’t have to be terror suspects or international fugitives.


“The statute does not require the government to make any finding — let alone demonstrate probable cause to the FISC — that its surveillance targets are foreign agents, engaged in criminal activity, or connected even remotely with terrorism,” reads the complaint. “The government may target any person for surveillance if it has a reasonable belief that she is a foreigner outside the United States who is likely to communicate ‘foreign intelligence information’ — a term that is defined so broadly as to encompass virtually any information relating to the foreign affairs of the United States.”


And even though the ostensible targets of this surveillance are foreign persons, there are nonetheless implications for Americans.


“The targets of FAA surveillance may include journalists, academic researchers, human rights defenders, aid workers, business persons, and others who are not suspected of any wrongdoing,” argue the plaintiffs. “In the course of FAA surveillance, the government may acquire the communications of U.S. citizens and residents with all these persons.”


And the government has used this mass surveillance to gather an awful lot of data about a large number of people. The complaint cites the government’s own report showing that it used the amended FISA to target 89,138 individuals, groups, or organizations for surveillance under a single court order in 2013. In 2011 alone, the government gathered 250 million online communications, without providing any info on how many of these involved U.S. citizens or residents.


The plaintiffs contend that NSA has even gone further than the already lenient law allows, claiming that the 2008 statute only specifically allows for surveillance of a target’s communication, not the reviewing or “essentially everyone’s internet communications in order to search for identifiers associated with its targets.”


“By tapping the backbone of the internet, the NSA is straining the backbone of democracy,” said Lila Tretikov, executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation, in a statement. “Wikipedia is founded on the freedoms of expression, inquiry, and information. By violating our users’ privacy, the NSA is threatening the intellectual freedom that is central to people’s ability to create and understand knowledge.”


The government’s actions, argue the plaintiffs, violate their First Amendment rights to free expression, their Fourth Amendment protection against unreasonable search and seizure. Furthermore, the FISC’s lack of oversight over this surveillance allegedly runs afoul of Article III of the Constitution, which established the judicial branch of the federal government.


“Under U.S. law, the role of the courts is to resolve ‘cases” or “controversies’ — not to issue advisory opinions or interpret theoretical situations,” reads a statement from the Wikimedia Foundation. “In the context of upstream surveillance, FISC proceedings are not ‘cases.’ There are no opposing parties and no actual ‘controversy’ at stake. FISC merely reviews the legality of the government’s proposed procedures — the kind of advisory opinion that Article III was intended to restrict.”


The plaintiffs are asking the court to declare the government’s upstream data collection unlawful and to issue an injunction preventing the NSA and other agencies from continuing to surveil the plaintiffs in this manner. Finally, they seek to compel the government to purge all data already collected.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jik5 Things We Learned Today About What It’s Like To Gather And Eat Roadkillde

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Though the idea of eating something that’s been run over by a car and left on the side of the road might turn even some of the strongest of stomaches, the fact remains that there’s a lot of meat at stake, and there are those out there who are more than willing to pick up what others might not want and turn it into a tasty stew. But while you might be imagining a clumsy shovel and buzzing fly situation, in reality, says one avid roadkill aficionado, it’s a lot different.

NPR’s The Salt has a great profile of one such roadkill gatherer in Michigan, who shared his experience bringing in found meat from deer, pheasant, turkeys, you name it. In fact, he says, roadkill venison makes almost all of the red meat his family eats.


A few other things we learned about the practice of gathering roadkill that are worth sharing:


1. Even if it’s legal in your state, you still need permission: We actually knew a bit about this one, after Montana somewhat recently legalized roadkill collection for consumption. But it’s worth noting — in Michigan, for example, it’s finders-keepers, first-come first-served, year-round, as long as you report it to the police. There has to be a written record of when the roadkill was found and what it’s intended use is.


2. Roadkill is best collected cold: This isn’t a hard and fast rule, as again, Michigan and other states may allow for collection during any season. But at least so far as eating the animal is concerned, this particular collector only takes meat when it’s cold enough outside that fleas and ticks are all dead, and when the temperature can keep the meat from spoiling. Fresh meat is the best meat, he says.


3. No special equipment required: “The best thing is, you don’t need fancy tools,” he says, just “a pocketknife, once you develop the skill.” As for that skill — you’ll need a stomach strong enough to do some butchery work by the side of the road. This gatherer uses what he calls the poacher’s cut to quickly separate the meat he wants from a deer from the viscera, which if it’s damaged, could contaminate any muscles it touches.


4. Cleanup is relatively easy: Once he’s done, he simply drags the remainder of the carcass deep into woods on public land and lets nature take over from there.


5. Even kids like it: Though his kids weren’t quite thrilled with dad when he first picked up a pheasant along the road on their way to a vacation cabin, once he’d dressed the animal and built a fire at the cabin, the kids were on board.


“The kids had never eaten wild game before at that point, and they were skeptical,” he says. “I put the pheasant in foil, with carrots and onions and a little bit of garlic, salt and pepper, and in a couple minutes it was ready. They turned into barking seals. They were trying to snap it out of my fingers.”


The Accidental Hunter: For One Outdoorsman, Roadkill Is His Only Red Meat [The Salt]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikScammers Are Taking More Money With Fake Boss Wire Transfer Schemesde

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fakemegSo much business is conducted over e-mail now that in some offices, it might be routine to receive an e-mail from your boss telling you where to wire a large amount of money. That’s why the Business E-mail Compromise scam, or CEO Scam, is so plausible and devastatingly effective. Since the last time we discussed this scam, scammers stole more than $17 million from one firm in a single transaction.


That company was an Omaha-based commodities trader. An executive received an e-mail that appeared to be from the chief executive and the company’s outside auditor. It instructed this executive to send wire transfers totaling $17.2 million to a bank in China, to facilitate a secret deal that he wasn’t to tell anyone in the company about. “This is very sensitive, so please only communicate with me through this email, in order for us not to infringe SEC regulations,” the fake CEO wrote to him.


The big fraud in Omaha took place in April 2014, but only became public last month. The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center reports that as of this January, companies in the United States had wired an estimated $179,755,367 into the pockets of fraudsters. Victims in other countries have wired $35,217,136.22.


One problem leading to this scam is that people who use e-mail for day-to-day correspondence are not necessarily savvy about how e-mail works and how to detect scams. At first glance, bossmeg@c0nsumerist.com and bossmeg@consumerist.com look alike. Fraudsters register alternate domain names that look plausible enough, hoping to fool someone with enough power


A reader of Krebs on Security almost fell for the same scam, only realizing after she had requested a $315,000 wire transfer to a bank in China that the tone of the e-mail didn’t really sound like her boss. The company was able to stop the transfer, and she wasn’t fired. It simply hadn’t occurred to her to be on guard for this kind of scam. Messages from the fake CEO and CFO were at a lookalike domain that had just been set up that morning.


How can you prevent this in your own business? Requiring in-person or over the phone interactions before sending off large amounts of money. Calling someone to confirm a deal is a good idea. Be suspicious of transactions that you’re told to keep super-secret.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist