понедельник, 26 октября 2015 г.

uLord & Taylor Launching Yet Another Off-Price Chainr


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  • (Mike Mozart)
    Earlier this year, we learned that Macy’s was opening its own off-price stores called Macy’s Backstage, and Kohl’s is opening an off-price store called Off Aisle by Kohl’sto unload returned merchandise. Now Lord & Taylor wants to join the party with their own off-price store, called Find @ Lord & Taylor.

    Now, you can tell that the chain is meant to attract younger customers because the @ symbol is in the name, which stands for the Internets or something. Indeed, the Wall Street Journal explains, the chain is meant to attract shoppers in their twenties and thirties, when shoppers at Lord & Taylor stores are mostly over forty. In addition to the usual off-price store offerings of last season’s clothes and items from designer brands made just for off-price stores, “Finds” will have more items for babies and children and more home goods than a regular Lord & Taylor store.

    Like other department stores’ off-price outlets, the stores are meant to capture business from younger shoppers with thinner wallets who might otherwise shop at stores like TJ Maxx, Marshalls, or Ross. Also, when these customers are older and perhaps wealthier, they might stick with the brand of their favorite off-price chain if they shop in department stores. An off-price store is “an opportunity to introduce a new customer to the brand, who might eventually migrate to the higher-end store,” the CEO of the parent company of Lord & Taylor and Saks explained to the Journal.

    Lord & Taylor Jumps Into Discount Game [Wall Street Journal]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


пятница, 23 октября 2015 г.

uA&P Brand Names And Customer Data Are Up For Auctionr


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  • (army.arch *Adam*)
    If you’ve always wanted to own the brand name of a venerable but defunct supermarket company, now is your opportunity. After A&P filed for bankruptcy for the second time in five years and the last time ever, the company is getting rid of the last of its assets. The leases and locations of individual stores were sold off to rival grocery chains, and now what’s left are brands, customer names, and e-mail addresses.

    Brands for sale include A&P, Pathmark, Waldbaum’s, Super Fresh, Food Basics, Best Cellars, and all of the company’s current and former in-house brands, which could be mined for their nostalgia value.

    Another useful resource to mine would be customer lists: the chains have millions of customer records (presumably from loyalty cards) and hundreds of thousands of e-mail addresses that would be most valuable to another grocery chain in the Northeast. Any promotional mailings from the eventual buyer of this list would most likely be opt-in.

    It’s not out of the question that someone could buy one of these brands cheap now and exploit it later: A&P still has good brand recognition nationwide even after the chain shrank significantly.

    A&P puts brand, data on the block [Supermarket News]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uReader Spots Loose Tarantula On Cleaning Cart At Petco, Freaks Outr


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  • David and his daughter took a trip to Petco this week to buy a fish for her aquarium. After choosing a nice one, they took a lap around the store to look at the other animals. That’s when they ran into the cleanup cart… and the tarantula chillaxing on the corner. At least, that’s what it looked like. (Please note: this post contains pictures of a spider. Proceed with caution if you do not like spiders.)

    The cleanup cart was blocking an aisle but with no employees nearby, so he just moved it out of he way. “I went to push it aside when I noticed the guy in the picture – just hanging out on the cart doing his thing,” he told Consumerist. “I jumped about a foot and almost dropped my kid.”

    spidercart

    For the arachnid fans in the audience, here’s the full-resolution photo from David’s phone.

    spidercloseup

    Now, it is possible that this is not a spider. No, not that it’s a plastic Halloween decoration, but it could be a molted skin from one of the store’s tarantulas. A molted skin looks just like, well, the outside of a tarantula. (You can watch a sped-up molting video here.) David was actually the one who suggested that possibility––I don’t know a lot about spiders––but he was still very startled.

    This arrangement couldn’t be very safe for the alleged tarantula or the store’s customers, so David sought out an employee and explained the problem. The following exchange is according to David’s memory:

    “We’re cleaning the terrariums,” the employee told him. “So yeah, it’s fine.”

    “Aren’t you worried that it will get away?” David asked, concerned for the pet as well as for fellow shoppers.

    “No, the lid will keep it from getting away,” the employee replied, apparently not understanding where the critter actually was.

    David gave up. Maybe the spider-like object was a molted skin after all. He, his daughter, and their new fish left the store, vowing not to come back on cleaning days at Petco anymore.

    He wrote to us about his misadventure, and we contacted Petco. If this was a live spider, a company representative explained, that was not an approved location for it to hang out while its habitat was being cleaned.

    “Having the spider not contained like that during maintenance of the habitat is definitely outside of our policy,” a Petco spokesperson explained to Consumerist. “Our policy is that the animal should be contained in a specific carrier during cleaning, so we are following up with the store.”

    If it was just a molt, it evidently still has the potential to seriously freak out customers, and probably shouldn’t be stored on the edge of a cart. Even as Halloween approaches.



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uPinterest Doesn’t Own Exclusive On “Pinning” Things Onliner


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  • Pinterest sued Pintrips in 2013, alleging that the travel-booking site was infringing on its trademark.
    Ages before there was an Internet, and certainly long before Pinterest ever came onto the scene, folks were pinning things — to bulletin boards, to computer dashboards and docks. But the folks at Pinterest believe they have an exclusive trademark of the online use of phrases like “pin it.” Unfortunately for them, a federal judge disagrees.

    Back in 2013, Pinterest filed a trademark infringement lawsuit [PDF] against travel site Pintrips.com, alleging that the brand “causes confusion among consumer[s] and implies a connection, affiliation or sponsorship that does not exist.”

    “Pinterest pioneered the use of PIN-formative terms in the context of social media and bookmarking,” reads the 2013 complaint. “The public associates these terms with Pinterest, and they have become famous in relation to Pinterest’s goods and services.”

    Pinterest argues that when Pintrips launched in 2011, it “should have adopted its own unique name,” but instead chose to go with something “similar in appearance, sound, and commercial impression” to Pinterest.

    One thing that really seemed to have burned Pinterest’s butter was Pinstrip’s use of a “Pin” button:

    pinbuttons

    When Pintrips attempted to trademark its name in 2012, Pinterest objected. That filing has been on hold pending the outcome of the Pinterest lawsuit.

    As the judge explains in this week’s ruling [PDF], there are various categories of trademark, each with its own general degree of protection.

    Trademarks deemed “arbitrary” or “fanciful” often receive the highest level of protection because consumers may be confused into thinking that two companies named “GuffleBoon” — a name that in no way indicates what type of product or service is being sold — are related.

    Lower down on the trademark protection totem pole are “suggestive” trademarks — names that don’t explicitly state what a company does, but give a good enough idea for your typical consumer to suss it out. So you may not know for sure that “GufflePrint” is an on-demand printing company, but it wouldn’t take too much imagination to make that leap.

    Pinterest argued that its trademark belonged in the arbitrary category, but the judge concluded that it is merely suggestive.

    “[W]hile understanding the meaning of the ‘Pinterest’ mark requires the public to employ the multistage reasoning that differentiates suggestive marks from those that are merely descriptive, the combination of ‘pin’ and ‘interest’ cannot reasonably be said to be arbitrary or fanciful,” explains the court. “The Pinterest mark is a textbook example of a suggestive mark that ‘subtly connote[s] something’ about the company’s services, in that it conveys to users that the website allows them to pin their interests.”

    But at the same time, the judge noted that the Pinterest trademark is strong — both in terms of consumer identity and because there aren’t many other similar-sounding brands out there. That was a point in Pinterest’s favor.

    Pinterest also contended that Pintrips causes confusion because both sites offer “services related to the travel industry generally” and “collaborative products that allow consumers to plan travel using the Internet.”

    But the court disagreed that about the similarities of the way the two sites are used with regard to travel booking. Sure, people use Pinterest to research travel destinations based on other users’ pinned images and notes, but that’s not the same as actually researching the logistics of travel.

    “Pintrips does not provide users the opportunity to research their travel destinations, identify sights to see while traveling, or gather ideas for new travel destinations from other users, given that all Pintrips Tripboards are, by default, private,” writes the judge, who notes that in order for a Pintrips user to partake in anything resembling Pinterest’s “social media” aspect is to individually invite other users to access a particular trip.

    Beyond that, explains the court, “Travel is just one of the dozens and dozens of exceptionally broad subject-matter categories about which Pinterest users choose to pin… While Pinterest users undoubtedly use the service to research their travel destinations (as well as hundreds of other subjects), that fact does not render Pinterest’s social media service similar to Pintrips’ airline itinerary-tracking tool.”

    During the trial, Pinterest said that it is considering someday expanding the site’s capability to facilitate actual travel booking, but the judge says the fact this may happen “at some unknown point in the future is too speculative and indefinite to weigh in favor of” Pinterest’s trademark infringement claim.

    While the court acknowledged there is at least some visual similarity in the words “Pinterest” and “Pintrips,” and that they could be pronounced in a way that makes them sound alike (especially when Pinterest is pronounced “pin-trist”), the judge found it was unlikely that consumers would be confused by the meanings of the two marks.

    One place where Pinterest came up very short was in its attempt to show actual consumer confusion between the brands. As evidence, it only produced a single customer e-mail written to Pintrips from a Pinterest user who had questions about her username and password.

    “One potentially confused consumer, standing alone, is not sufficient evidence of actual confusion,” writes the judge. “Moreover, even this e-mail does not suggest that the consumer’s confusion affected her purchasing decision — i.e., that she visited or used the Pintrips website mistakenly believing it was the Pinterest website.”

    The judge also blasted two surveys submitted by Pinterest as evidence of possible confusion, saying they each had “fatal defects” in their designs that “render their results meaningless to the resolution of this lawsuit.”

    Pintrips, before its launch, was originally dubbed “Flightrax.” The when, how, and why of the name change is also at the core of the judge’s ruling.

    Pinterest believes that the Pintrips name was a deliberate attempt to ride the coattails of the slightly older site, even though it was an invite-only website with a mere 500,000 unique monthly visitors at the time Pintrips was created.

    At trial, those involved in the launch of Pintrips testified that the name came up during a brainstorming session in which one staffer was describing the way you use the site, saying “you pin this over here, you pin this trip to this board over here, and then you pin this trip to this board over here,” leading another person in the room to declare “That’s what it is. Pinning trips. ‘Pintrips.'”

    The Pintrips folks claim they did not know of the Pinterest name until several days later; a claim that Pinterest disputes, noting that the URL for Pintrips wasn’t registered until after one staffer e-mailed the other in June 2011 pointing out the existence of Pinterest.

    In the end, the judge found Pintrips’ timeline and testimony credible and said that “No evidence was introduced at trial that suggested that the Pintrips mark was selected to take advantage of Pinterest’s brand recognition. In fact, no evidence suggests that Pinterest had substantial brand recognition as of June 2011 that Pintrips would want to appropriate.”

    The court also held that while Pinterest may hold a trademark on a very specific use of the term “Pin,” it doesn’t apply to every use of “pinning” something online. If it did, concluded the judge, that would me a step down the slippery slope toward allowing trademark protection for all generic words.

    In this case Pintrips isn’t using “pin” as a commercial mark in the way the Pinterest does. It’s merely describing an action of how one uses the Pintrips service. Furthermore, experts demonstrated that “pinning” and “pin” have been used as generic terms in computer interfaces for decades, much like other generics, including “file” and “folder.”

    Pinterest tried to argue that Pintrips is using the word “pin” so that users associate that action with the Pintrips brand, but the court notes that numerous other computer, software, and social media companies — including Microsoft and Facebook — have used the term “pin,” even though it in no way relates to, or creates an association with, their brands.

    “Facebook, Google, and Windows all permit users to pin virtual objects, and because they all use the same word to identify the pinning operation, that word could not plausibly serve to identify their unique brand,” writes the judge.

    Beyond that, while Pinterest buttons can appear on any site that wants to encourage its users to share its content, the only way a Pintrips button will appear on a third-party website is for a user to have created a Pintrips account and downloaded the Pintrips browser extension.

    Even though Pinterest has spent two years and heaven knows how much money fighting this war, the website is now trying to downplay the importance of the court’s decision.

    “This ruling is based on Pintrips’ ability to convince the court they hadn’t heard of Pinterest in 2011,” a rep for the company tells Ars Technica. “While we’re disappointed in that conclusion, it doesn’t have any implications for our marks today or the future.”



ribbi
  • by Chris Morran
  • via Consumerist


uWatch A Takata Airbag Explode In Slow Motionr


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  • Last year, owners of vehicles equipped with shrapnel-shooting Takata airbags shared their point of view of the massive safety device recall, likening the situation to driving around with an explosive device in their steering wheel and dashboard. Their description was no doubt frightening, but seeing one of the airbags rupture in real time is even more so. 

    Research organization Battelle – which was hired by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to develop tests to analyze Takata’s airbag defect, not to pinpoint the root cause of the issue – filmed a rupture in slow motion in order to better show the effects of the explosion, WIRED reports. 

    The test centers mostly on the small canister found inside an airbag. The canister holds chemicals that eventually cause the airbag to deploy in the event of a crash.

    In the case of Takata’s airbags, the canisters contain an ammonium nitrate compound, that some investigators believe could be tied to the excessively violent ruptures.

    The video shows the canister suspended between wires.  Soon after, the canister explodes, sending pieces of metal flying in every direction.

    While the test obviously wasn’t performed in a vehicle with a person behind the wheel, after seeing the metal spray across the screen one can only imagine the injuries – or worse – that could be sustained.

    Battelle tells WIRED that the filmed video, which was shown during a NHTSA hearing on Thursday, is just one example of a Takata airbag rupture.

    The company is actually working on large lot tests that allow dozens of airbags to be tested in rapid succession.

    “With such a catastrophic potential for failure, the only option is to test a large number of inflators,” Ben Pierce, who runs Battelle’s transportation research group, said.

    To further assist in determining the root cause of the airbag ruptures, the organization’s domed testing facility is equipped with pressure sensors and slow-motion cameras, and each canister is given a CT scan before tests.

    NHTSA officials said on Thursday that they continue to investigate why the airbags are susceptible to such forceful ruptures.

    Watch Takata’s Defective Airbags Explode In Slow Motion  [WIRED]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uUSPS Denies It Has Missing Damaged Package, Still Turns Down Customer’s Insurance Claim After Finding Itr


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  • (.sanden.)
    It’s always a good idea to purchase insurance for your packages, especially if you’re mailing something valuable. But even having that protection didn’t keep one USPS customer from ending up with broken equipment and no insurance payment to cover the cost of replacing or fixing it.

    A woman living in Salt Lake City sold a portable power supply online to a buyer in New York and shipped it with USPS. She wanted to make sure the item got to its destination intact, reports KUTV.com.

    “I went and actually bought a very sturdy box, extra packaging, since this is a heavy item, I took great care in packaging it,” she said.

    As a fail-safe, she also paid $22 to purchase a $1,600 policy against loss or damage. And wouldn’t you know — the package arrived at its destination damaged.

    She contacted the USPS, who told her to ask the buyer to return the package to the local post office for inspection, which he did. He received a stamped letter confirming that he’d left it with a clerk. But when the woman submitted her insurance claim, USPS denied it, saying the package hadn’t been dropped off at the post office.

    So she appealed the denial, sending in the stamped letter as proof, but her efforts were rebuffed twice more. The USPS kept telling her they didn’t have her package.

    “They’ve damaged my item. They’ve lost my item. But they’re not willing to pay,” she said.

    Finally when KUTV’s Get Gephardt reached out to USPS to ask how a package that was lost while in the hands of the USPS could lead to a denied insurance claim, the power supply was miraculously discovered at the post office and shipped back to her.

    But despite the fact that the power supply is bent and some of its pieces are shattered, USPS won’t approve her claim: she was told that she only gets three chances to appeal, and she’d used them all up trying to chase down her package… which USPS kept insisting it didn’t have.

    Get Gephardt reached out again to USPS to ask why it wouldn’t let her appeal since it was their fault the box was misplaced, which resulted in the denials, but did not receive an answer.

    USPS’ bizarre reason for denying insurance claim [KUTV.com]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uConflicts In Patient Privacy Laws Often Leave Student Health Records Vulnerabler


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  • (George)

    When a college student seeks medical treatment at a campus healthcare facility, they probably expect they will be afforded the same discretion as all consumer are under HIPAA (the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act). But thanks to a separate, often conflicting federal law, that isn’t always the case.

    Much like HIPAA’s goal is to provide patient privacy, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) was intended to protect the privacy of student education records. However, a new report from ProPublica highlights how HIPAA and FERPA often leave patient privacy vulnerable when students seek treatment at their on-campus health centers.

    That was the case for a Yale University graduate who shared her story with ProPublica.

    Just weeks before graduation, the student found herself struggling with depression and anxiety and seeking help from the on-campus facility. Eventually, she was hospitalized against her will at the Yale-New Haven Hospital, which is off campus.

    Although she was 21 at the time, the University contacted her parents to let them know of the situation. Soon after, the woman says she flew back home with her parents where they refused to accept her situation or allow her to see a psychiatrist or therapist.

    Under normal circumstances, a 21-year-old’s medical history wouldn’t have been shared with others – even her parents – without her consent. But, as ProPublica goes on to explore, because she happened to be a student, her information was subject not to HIPAA, but to FERPA.

    The issue goes back several decades when the government enacted FERPA in 1974 as a way to give students and parents access to their education records. The law also dictates when and how universities can obtain or share information that identifies individual students.

    For example, if a student is under 18 or is claimed as a dependent for tax purposes, the law allows colleges to share their education information with parents, even without the students’ consent.

    Additionally, the law provides a health-and-safety exemption, that states if a student is seen to be in danger, or to be putting others in danger, health information can be shared with “appropriate parties,” such as parents.

    The story is different off-campus, though, according to ProPublica. In those cases, HIPAA applies, not FERPA, meaning the student has near full discretion on who their records can be shared with.

    But the water is further muddied when a student is transferred to an off-campus facility from an on-campus one, as was the case for the Yale student. While she was eventually seen at the Yale-New Haven Hospital, a private institution – a stay that was covered by HIPAA – the information from the health clinicians that first helped her at Yale was only covered by FERPA.

    And for the most part, it’s up to the college to determine when and how to use FERPA’s health-and-safety exception.

    While Yale says it informs parents they can’t access their child’s health information without a signed written consent form, the student says she doesn’t remember signing such a document. And when she asked about its existence, she was told there wasn’t one for her case.

    “Most of what happened while I was in the hospital happened without my knowing it,” she said. “I got an update every day or two about where my life was going.”

    According to ProPublica, the woman’s story depicts the fine line universities walk when providing needed medical treatment for students: if they share too little they’re liable to be blamed if something happens, but if they share too much they’ll be accused of invading one’s privacy.

    “There’s no doubt in my mind that the schools are trying to strike the right balance,” Paul Lannon, a Boston lawyer who advises colleges on legal issues, tells ProPublica. “They care for the students. They want the students to do well. They want the students to be healthy.”

    Although the issue of student privacy may seem straight forward, it’s been cause for controversy in the past, particularly in the cases of high-profile campus shootings and sexual assault cases.

    In an attempt to better guide schools on their responsibilities, while protecting students’ privacy, the Department of Education issued proposed guidelines over the summer concerning student counseling records, ProPublica reports.

    Under the proposal [PDF], the Dept. directs university lawyers to only view counseling records if the treatment itself is at issue in a legal case, if they have permission, or if a judge’s order gives them access.

    “Institutions of higher education have a strong interest in ensuring that students have uncompromised access to the support they need, without fear that the information they share will be disclosed inappropriately,” the Dept. wrote in a blog post on the issue.

    The Dept. sought consumer input on the issue until Oct. 2; it’s unclear what the next steps will be.

    When Students Become Patients, Privacy Suffers [ProPublica]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist