понедельник, 23 марта 2015 г.

jikAlaska Airlines Employee Buys Ticket For Stranded Delta Passengerde

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Generally when people decide to pay it forward, it involves purchasing the coffee for the vehicle behind them in the drive-thru or covering the cost of diapers for the woman ahead of them at the register. For an employee of Alaska Airlines in Seattle it meant taking out her own credit card to buy a new plane ticket for another airline’s stranded passenger.


News1130 reports that moment of goodwill came after a Vancouver woman received the runaround from Delta Air Lines at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport while trying to return home from a business trip in California.


The woman says that Delta canceled her ticket home because of issues stemming from her initial flight, including delays, a diverted flight and an unscheduled overnight stay. But instead of being stuck at the airport overnight, an employee of a rival airline stepped in.


The ordeal began last week when the airplane that was supposed to take the woman and her fellow passengers to Seattle was delayed arriving at the Vancouver airport due to weather.


“When it arrived it was delayed even longer because of mechanical maintenance issues, they couldn’t get it started,” she tells News1130. “When we finally got up into the air, they couldn’t land in Seattle because of weather.”


The flight was then diverted to Portland. But once the plane landed, the woman says the passengers were told to stay seated, that the flight was headed back to Seattle. She says the airline assured passengers there would be agents waiting to help them with connections.


Instead, everyone was given a voucher for a hotel stay, with flights beginning in the morning.


Although the woman made it to her meeting in California on time, arriving at the Seattle airport for her return home proved to be an even more unpleasant experience because of confusion with her original ticket.


“They said ‘Don’t worry. We’ll assign you a seat once you get to the gate, just go because they’re already boarding,'” she says. “So, I am rushing through security, I am begging people in the security lineup to let me go ahead of them because the flight is going to take off without me.”


When she arrived at the gate, the agent informed her that the ticket was canceled and the doors had closed.


The confusion continued when she went back to the ticket counter. After about an hour, the Delta agent told her that the original flight’s return ticket was canceled because of the issues flying to Seattle and that the next available flight wouldn’t leave until the following day.


“When they had the mechanical maintenance and we ended up in Seattle and had to spend the night in a hotel there, they used the rest of the value of my entire ticket on that rescheduled flight that morning so there was no more money for me to fly home,” she says. “They didn’t tell me that.”


That’s when an Alaska Airlines employee stepped in, offering the woman a voucher for an earlier flight on that airline.


“She’s filling it out and I thought she just had these free passes,” the woman says. “At one point her coworkers were standing behind her saying ‘Judy! Judy! You don’t have to do that.’ And she says ‘You know what, I’m paying it forward, it’s OK.’ At this point I realize something is up and she pulls out her credit card and starts putting in her credit card information.”


The woman says other Alaska Airlines employees told her the agent was paying for her ticket to ensure she would get home.


“She paid for my ticket, she paid for me to get home,” the woman tells News1130. “She didn’t know me at all. I was boarding and I thanked her again and she hugged me. It was amazing. She didn’t need to do that at all, she took care of me.”


Alaska Airlines employee pays for Vancouver woman’s airfare after runaround by Delta Air Lines [News1130]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

jikTSA Busts Passenger Allegedly Trying To Fly With Bear Paws In His Luggagede

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We’ve heard many a tale of travelers accused of trying to move things they shouldn’t through the air in their luggage, attempts that are often thwarted by the Transportation Security Administration’s airport checkpoints. But while we’re used to hearing about concealed weapons or live wildlife, officials say one traveler allegedly upped the “what not to pack” ante by toting bear paws and other parts in his bags.

A man in Oregon tried to board a plane in Eugene a few weeks ago with a selection of bear paws and bottle with some sort of bear gall, whiskey concoction, authorities say, according to The Register Guard.


Police have cited him with unlawful possession of game parts after the traveler was stopped on his way to Taiwan. He told authorities he was taking the plastic grocery bags holding bear paws overseas to be made into a necklace for his housekeeper (?!?). The drink is medicinal, he claimed, and helped him sleep.


A subsequent search of a barn on his property found bear hides and bear heads, and the man reportedly told police he was a hunter who stored meat in freezers as well as other bear parts. He claimed other people had given him bear paws as well. However, he couldn’t provide the hunting tag required by law to hunt bear under state law at the time of the incident.


He could also be charged with unlawful take of wildlife and unlawful possession of game mammal parts without being properly tagged or without written transfer records.


Probe centers on bear paws, heads and hides [The Register Guard]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikHilton HHonors Site Flaw Exposed All Accounts To Potential Hijackingde

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Following a report of a spike in hijacked accounts, Hilton recently asked its HHonors Awards members to change their passwords — offering them 1,000 bonus points if they did so before April 1. But cybersecurity experts say that hackers didn’t actually need passwords to take control of other folks’ HHonors accounts.

KrebsOnSecurity.com reports that researchers at security consulting and testing firm Bancsec discovered that the only thing needed to take over an HHonors account was a user’s 9-digit account number. If the hacker logged in using one account, they could hijack a different account by tinkering with the HTML and then reloading.


Bancsec says the HHonors site had what’s known as a cross-site request forgery (CSRF) vulnerability, which basically allows an authenticated user to perform an unwanted action on a trusted site.


Once the hijacker accessed the other person’s account, view travel itineraries, redeem or transfer HHonors points. Another flaw in the Hilton site allowed hijackers to change account passwords without having to first enter the current password.


They also had access to the user’s personal info like e-mail addresses, mailing addresses, and partial credit card numbers.


Some holders of HHonors accounts had seen their hard-earned rewards drained by hijackers who would take control of these accounts and redirect any alerts to new e-mail addresses. The points could be used to book travel or sold to third parties.


It was believed that hackers were brute-forcing their way into accounts by running scripts that repeatedly entered combinations of account numbers and 4-digit PINs until getting in, but this latest discovery seems to indicate that there was a way in that didn’t require as much work.


Krebs notified Hilton about the flaw found by Bancsec and it appears as if the hotel chain has plugged this particular hole.


“Hilton Worldwide recently confirmed a vulnerability on a section of our Hilton HHonors website, and we took immediate action to remediate the vulnerability,” reads a statement from the company. “As always, we encourage Hilton HHonors members to review their accounts and update their online passwords regularly as a precaution. Hilton Worldwide takes information security very seriously and we are committed to safeguarding our guests’ personal information.”




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikApple Co-Founder Steve Wozniak: “Eventually Computers Will Get Rid Of The Slow Humans”de

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It isn’t just Elon Musk and your neighbor with the fully functioning bomb shelter who think the robot revolution is not only inevitable, but that computers will win and ultimately, could possibly enslave humanity as a result: Apple co-founder Steve “The Woz” Wozniak is fully confident that artificial intelligence is going to triumph over mankind someday.

“Computers are going to take over from humans, no question,” Wozniak told the Australian Financial Review in an interview about the Apple Watch and self-driving cars.


Though he at first was skeptical of predictions that technology could soon mean machines would surpass humans in the near future, he says he’s become convinced that those predictions are coming true.


“Like people including Stephen Hawking and Elon Musk have predicted, I agree that the future is scary and very bad for people,” he says. “If we build these devices to take care of everything for us, eventually they’ll think faster than us and they’ll get rid of the slow humans to run companies more efficiently.”


He notes that we could end up as gods or akin to family pets, and while he isn’t sure which way it’s going to go, “well I’m going to treat my own pet dog really nice.”


There is some hope out there for us, however, as he says there could be a cap to the burgeoning intelligence of artificial life with the end of Moore’s Law, a pattern that sees computer processing speeds doubling every two years.


By 2020, transistors will have shrunk to a single atom, Moore’s Law suggests, at which point it would be impossible for them to get smaller without scientists developing quantum computers to control their manufacture at a subatomic level.


So far, that’s not likely, Wozniak points out, as researchers haven’t been able to get quantum computing to a usable level for humans. But still, we should be prepared to face our robot overlords, just in case the technology does progress beyond that point.


“I hope it does come, and we should pursue it because it is about scientific exploring,” Wozniak said. “But in the end we just may have created the species that is above us.”


Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak on the Apple Watch, electric cars and the surpassing of humanity [Australian Financial Review]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikTexas Roadhouse Serves Up Sangria To 2-Year-Old Girlde

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When you order a cranberry juice for your 2-year-old daughter and the server brings her a glass containing a dark red beverage, you probably wouldn’t think to sample the drink to make sure she hadn’t been given a glass full of boozy sangria.

But that’s exactly what happened to a family in Asheville, NC, recently during a visit to their local Texas Roadhouse restaurant.


The family says their daughter began drinking the “cranberry” juice but complained that it tasted odd. The parents took a taste and confirmed their kid wasn’t just being a picky eater.


“Two year old drinking sangria,” said the dad to WLOS-TV [via Eater.com]. “It was supposed to be cranberry juice.”


The girl’s mom says her daughter was “staggering and she was kissing everything” after imbibing the sangria.


The youngster was taken to the hospital and checked out by a physician.


“I had to rub her belly the whole night and she slept with us because I was scared she might not wake up,” said the mom. “That she’d choke on her throw up and not wake up. It was the most horrible feeling ever.”


The restaurant apologized to the family, claiming it was an honest mistake, and refunded them the cost of their whole meal.





by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikChicken Fries Will Become A Permanent Burger King Menu Itemde

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ChickenFries_ClearanceBarTop medium resIn a recent publicity stunt for cult favorite menu item chicken fries, Burger King dispatched an actual chicken to restaurants to decide whether that location would serve chicken fries that day. This weirdly cannibalistic ritual is now over, because Burger King has decreed that all locations will have chicken fries indefinitely. The downside is that Gloria should probably watch her back now.


The fries are back on the menu indefinitely starting today. Other than the promotion with Gloria the chicken, the fries were returned for a two-month period that filled chicken fry fans with rapture. They’re celebrating its return with a chicken fry-themed emoji keyboard and…well, who needs anything more than an emoji keyboard?


Chicken fries are something that McDonald’s doesn’t have, and are part of the chains’ ongoing chicken wars. They’re done competing on price, and now seek to give customers what they want. While Burger King brings back the fries, McDonald’s has promised to stop the use of chicken with antibiotic-laced feed.


The fries are available as part of a combo with potato fries and a drink, which makes us wonder whether someone could invent soda fries and have an entire meal that comes in fry form.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

jikL.A. Candy Store Attempting World Record For Largest Peanut Butter Cupde

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There are some jobs out there that make the rest of us wonder why we didn’t study something else in school, and being involved in creating huge works of delicious, record-breaking candy is one of them. A Los Angeles candy store is trying to nab the world record for largest peanut butter cup, in what I can only imagine is a delicious endeavor.

While one can only dream about filling a kiddie pool with peanut butter and chocolate in order to produce candy of ginormous proportions, works at the Candy Factory in L.A. were living that reality in their attempt to bring home the Guinness World Record for largest peanut butter cup.


According to NBC News, the candy crafters used more than 440 pounds of ingredients, which would beat the current world-record holding cup from Vermont, which weighed in at 250 pounds.


The record still needs to be verified by Guinness, but once it is, anyone can get a piece, as the peanut butter cup will be sold off in small pieces with the proceeds benefiting charity.


New Guinness World Record: a 444-pound peanut butter cup [NBC News]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist