воскресенье, 26 апреля 2015 г.

uCorinthian Colleges Completes Collapse, Closes Remaining Campuses Effective Immediatelyr


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  • everestAlthough it was nearly a year in the making, the largest collapse in U.S. higher education finally occurred Sunday, as embattled for-profit education chain Corinthian Colleges Inc. – the operator of Everest University, Heald College and WyoTech – announced it would close the remainder of its campuses effective Monday.

    CCI, which has been at the center of a very public downfall since last July, published a notification on its website Sunday declaring it would cease all operations and discontinue instruction at its remaining 28 campuses.

    By shutting its doors on Monday, the California-based for-profit chain will end the current college careers of some 16,000 students. The company says it is currently working with other schools to provide continuing educational opportunities for those students.

    CCI’s final school closures include 13 remaining Everest and WyoTech campuses in California, Everest College Phoenix and Everest Online Tempe in Arizona, the Everest Institute in New York. As well as 10 locations of Heald College in California, one in Hawaii and one in Oregon.

    The company’s prolonged collapse began last July when it entered into an agreement with the Department of Education to sell or close a majority of its campuses. Prior to the agreement CCI enrolled 72,000 students and received $1.4 billion in federal student aid.

    Since that time, Corinthian completed the sale of some 56 campuses to Education Credit Management Corporation in early February. In order to close that deal, ECMC agreed to provide $480 million in forgiveness for current and former students who took out CCI’s high-cost private student loans.

    Officials with CCI say that the company has been part of advanced negotiations to sell its Heald College branch and to arrange teach-out programs that would allow its Everest College and WyoTech students in California to continue their education.

    However, the company says those efforts proved to be unsuccessful because of a number of state and federal investigations into the college chain. Ultimately it was determined the only option was closing the remaining campuses.

    ”We believe that we have attempted to do everything within our power to provide a quality education and an opportunity for a better future for our students,“ Jack Massimino, Chief Executive Officer of Corinthian, said in a statement. ”Unfortunately the current regulatory environment would not allow us to complete a transaction with several interested parties that would have allowed for a seamless transition for our students. I would like to thank our employees for their selfless dedication and commitment to fulfilling the educational and career goals of all of our students.“

    Consumer advocates were quick to welcome CCI’s decision to cease all operations.

    Lauren Asher, president of The Institute for College Access & Success, said in a statement that CCI’s recent actions in continuing to enroll student despite a number of investigations indefensible.

    “The message needs to be clear that no school is too big to fail, and that students who are harmed can count on much-needed relief,” she says.

    Bloomberg reports that the Dept. of Education will begin reaching out to Corinthian students.

    “What these students have experienced is unacceptable,” Dept. of Education Under-Secretary Ted Mitchell said in a statement. “As Corinthian closes its doors for good, the department will continue to keep students at the heart of every decision we make.”

    Mitchell tells Bloomberg that discussions with students could include the possibility of loan discharges.

    While it’s unclear when or how much relief students might receive as a result of CCI’s definitive collapse, consumer advocates and legislators were quick to speak out, urging the department to protect students who attended the college’s campuses.

    Illinois Senator Dick Durbin, whose work on the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pension committee has included a deeper look at the troubles with for-profit education, said in a statement [PDF] that students shouldn’t be left on the hook for the debt they incurred while attending the school.

    “Finally, we see the end of this rotten company, but there are still thousands of students who may never see the end of the damage Corinthian has caused if the Department of Education doesn’t move quickly to provide some relief,” he said. “Today, I am calling on the Department of Education to reach out directly to students impacted by the Corinthian closings and provide them with information on how they can receive a discharge of their federal student loans.”

    Asher, with the Institute of College Access & Success, echoed Durbin’s sentiments, saying in a statement that now-former CCI students should be able to start anew without the burden of costly loans.

    “There is overwhelming evidence of widespread fraud at Corinthian,” Asher said. “Nothing can give students back the time they spent trying to improve their lives at Corinthian, but they must be able to start fresh by having their loans discharged. We urge the Education Department to discharge the federal loans of current and former Corinthian students who were defrauded, including those affected by Corinthian’s action today.”

    Corinthian’s decision to stop operations at its remaining campuses comes after a sting of recent issues for the company.

    Just last week, California Department of Consumer Affairs announced it issued an Emergency Decision demanding that CCI stop new enrollments at several California campuses.

    The Bureau issued the order after determining that the CCI schools did not meet the minimum state standards for financial resources. Among the findings was the confirmation that Everest and WyoTech failed to provide the Bureau with current financial statements as part of their annual reports.

    Additionally, inspections of the two schools found they were unable to produce the required financial statements after repeated requests by the Bureau.

    Before that the Dept. of Education imposed a $30 million fine against CCI over the use of misstated and inaccurate job placement rates to recruit students at its Heald College campuses. As part of that order, the company was required to stop enrollment at Heald campuses nationwide.

    Other issues the company has faced include being delisted from Nasdaq and notice from the California Student Aid Commission that it would halt grants to CCI students. Both of those moves came after the company failed to submit required financial statements to both the Securities and Exchange Commission and the student aid commission.
    CCI’s obstacles haven’t just been relegated to the U.S.: the company’s Canadian operations closed with little warning to students and filed for bankruptcy in February.

    Corinthian Shuts All Campuses, Ending College for 16,000 [Bloomberg]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


пятница, 24 апреля 2015 г.

uRadioShack Bankruptcy Trustee Wants Customer Mailing Lists Removed From Auctionr


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  • Bankrupt RadioShack doesn’t have a lot of assets left that anyone might want, but one very marketable asset is its mailing lists. Specifically, 65 million names and addresses and 13 million e-mail addresses. In March, RadioShack said that it wouldn’t be selling that information…yet. Now that it’s time to sell off the former company’s intellectual property, all of that contact inforamtion is potentially for sale again.

    The Attorney General of Texas and most of his colleagues in other states questioned whether the company even has the right to sell this information according to its own privacy policies. Texas took the lead on this since RadioShack was based in Dallas at the time it declared bankruptcy. The court has appointed a privacy ombudsman who will evaluate these issues, but the bankruptcy trustee argued this week that the sale of customer data (Personally Identifiable Information, or PII, as it’s called in bankruptcy court) may be going forward in a way that doesn’t let the ombudsman have access to the information she needs to report on the planned sale.

    The list of the intellectual property for sale and bidding procedures that RadioShack’s attorneys filed doesn’t clearly explain how customer data would be used once it is sold, and doesn’t detail how the sale will work. “The Motion does not provide any detail or information as to what customer data or PII is proposed to be marketed or sold or how many customers may be affected. The Motion and the Bidding Procedures do not require bidders to separately allocate a portion of their bid for the customer data or PII.” Who will be allowed to bid on this information? What are they allowed to do with it? Nobody knows, possibly even including the ombudsman.

    The trustee asked the court not to include customers’ personally identifying information in this part of the bankruptcy auction. There will be a hearing on this exact subject on Tuesday, and we’ll learn more then.

    Meanwhile, here’s a confidential message for liquidator Hilco Streambank: Consumerist’s offer of ten bucks for the domain name TheShack.com still stands.

    OBJECTION OF THE UNITED STATES TRUSTEE TO THE DEBTORS’ COMBINED MOTION FOR ENTRY OF ORDERS: (I) ESTABLISHING BIDDING AND SALE PROCEDURES; (II) APPROVING THE SALE OF CERTAIN IP AND RELATED ASSETS; AND (III) GRANTING RELATED RELIEF [PDF]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uGoogle Apologizes For Android Figure Urinating On Apple Logo In Google Mapsr


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  • Ooops?

    Ooops?

    Unlike The Dude,* it would appear that every time an Android figure is pictured micturating upon an Apple logo, someone does have to be held responsible. In this case, it’s Google, which is apologizing after an image of an Android bot peeing on an Apple logo popped up in Google Maps.

    The offending bit of urination showed up somewhere near Pakistan, at 33°30’52.5″N 73°03’33.2″E, near Rawalpindi, Pakistan, Cult of Android was the first to report. It’s since been removed.

    Google didn’t just slap this Calvin and Hobbesesque image in there on purpose, despite its intense rivalry with Apple, notes the Washington Post: The company uses a feature called Map Maker that users can update and help keep Google up with the times as things change. Those tweaks are supposed to be reviewed by other users and a moderation team, a system that apparently failed in this case.

    “We’re sorry for this inappropriate user-created content; we’re working to remove it quickly,” a spokesperson told the Washington Post. “We also learn from these issues, and we’re constantly improving how we detect, prevent and handle bad edits,” while noting that most of the users who edit Google Maps provide “great contributions.”

    *Our contribution, on the topic of micturation:

    Google’s sorry that this crudely offensive image of the Apple logo turned up in Maps [Washington Post]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uPolice Seek Woman Who Stuffed $1,140 In Electronics Inside Her Skirtr


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  • criminalcrinolineA dress with a flowing full skirt is a great fashion choice for a hot day, so the woman who walked into a RadioShack in Florida dressed that way back in February didn’t really stand out. No one really noticed the full skirt of her floral dress…not even when she and her shopping companion began cramming electronics under the skirt, into some kind of criminal crinoline with pockets.

    This was after RadioShack declared bankruptcy but before they closed more than half of their stores, but that’s still no excuse. You can watch the video over at the Sun-Sentinel web site: it auto-plays, so we won’t embed it here.

    What is the woman stuffing inside her dress? Police say that she took fairly common RadioShack items off the shelves, which included remote-controlled toys, an electronic music kit, and automated appliances. They didn’t name the specific items, but it must have cleaned off a shelf: RadioShack employees only noticed that a theft had occurred when they saw the empty space on the shelf.

    If you happen to know who this couple are, let Broward Crime Stoppers know: you can call in anonymous tips at 954-493-8477. If you happen to know how to make an under-the-skirt storage device like this, you should probably patent it.

    Up-the-skirt shoplifter swipes electronics at Weston store [Sun-Sentinel]



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uThat Was Fast: Charter Reportedly Already Reaching Out To TWC About Possible Mergerr


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  • timecharterlogoToday’s headlines are all about Comcast failing to buy Time Warner Cable, but there weren’t just two players in the game. Another company is losing out: Charter would have been the lucky recipient of all the mega-merger’s spun-off customers, giving them greater consolidation over markets mainly in the midwest. But with the failure of the mega-merger, TWC is now minus one new owner, and Charter is minus all those new paying customers. So if a new deal i already in the works, well, color us unsurprised.

    Bloomberg Business — which also was the first to hear on Thursday that Comcast was about to bail on the TWC deal — reports this afternoon that Charter has already reached out to spurned suitor Time Warner Cable about another possible union.

    Charter already made one go at buying TWC, but got shot down in January in favor of the more lucrative offer from Comcast. As the Comcast/TWC approval process dragged on with federal regulators, Charter made it clear they’d be happy to try again should the opportunity present itself. And now it has.

    Charter’s 2013/2014 offer to TWC was about $31 billion; Comcast’s failed bid was $45 billion.

    According to Bloomberg, executives from the two companies have not yet sat down to negotiate any specific details, but Charter has already approached banks about potential financing and “advisers” for the company were reaching out to people at Time Warner Cable earlier today.

    Charter’s planned acquisition of Florida-centric Bright House Networks is also on the line after the collapse of the Comcast/TWC merger, and could be part of any further merger deals.

    As for the regulatory angle, a merged Charter/TWC would have one big advantage over anything involving Comcast, and that’s size. Or rather, the lack thereof. Put together, TWC and Charter still have fewer subscribers than Comcast alone, and would only add to TWC’s status as the second-largest cable company in America.

    Charter Advisers Said to Contact Time Warner Cable for Talks [Bloomberg]



ribbi
  • by Kate Cox
  • via Consumerist


uEyewear Maker Luxottica Says The New Version Of Google Glass Is On Its Wayr


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  • Out with the old, in with the new.

    Out with the old, in with the new.

    For those who didn’t get a chance/didn’t want to jump on the Google Glass bandwagon the first time it rolled around, with its oft-maligned design that allows people to record everything they’re seeing (including people who might not want to be filmed), you’ll soon have the opportunity to get/make fun of/criticize a new version soon.

    Luxottica, the Italian eyewear company behind brands like Ray-Ban and Oakley that teamed up with Google in an effort to make Glass something people will actually want to wear, says we should expect the newest offering soon, with CEO Massimo Vian telling shareholders at the company’s general meeting in Milan, Italy that preparations for the new Glass design are underway, reports the Wall Street Journal.

    Though Vian didn’t share any details about exactly when it’ll launch or what capabilities it will have — for example, will wearers still be able to snap photos or record video of unsuspecting parties without tipping them off? — but reportedly said it will be out soon.

    “In Google, there are some second thoughts on how to interpret version 3 [of the eyewear],” Vian told shareholders. “What you saw was version 1. We’re now working on version 2, which is in preparation.”

    Google stopped selling Glass earlier this year and shuttered its Explorer program amid low sales, which made some tongues wag over what some saw as the demise of the project. Despite that, Google’s executive chairman Eric Schmidt insisted it wasn’t done yet, telling the WSJ it had been moved into the same division as Google Nest, “to make it ready for users.”

    Google declined to comment on specifics of the new version, saying only in a statement: “The team is heads down building the future of the product and we’re not commenting on rumor or speculation.”

    Italian Eyewear Maker Luxottica Working on New Version of Google Glass, CEO Says [Wall Street Journal]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uHow A 90-Minute Presentation Turned Into A 2-Year Timeshare Nightmarer


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  • Not even once. (Misfit Photographer)

    Not even once. (Misfit Photographer)

    Most Consumerist readers consider themselves savvy and resistant to marketing messages and sales pitches. Even then, be cautious when accepting free stuff or cash in exchange for sitting through a time-share presentation. One couple received such an offer while shopping in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. They say that they were offered $450 to attend a 90-minute presentation, and after 8 hours of sales pitches signed up for a timeshare that they didn’t want.

    How does that happen? CBS Sacramento investigated what’s been going on at this resort, and found plenty of people who claim that they were plied with alcohol on an empty stomach during the course of the sales pitch. Some claim to have been drugged. A former employee explained that this was a common practice: they would bring in a nice glass of wine or a cold can of beer after prospects had been sitting there for hours with nothing to drink. “After four hours of not drinking, not eating, half a beer you start to feel buzzed,” he explained to CBS Sacramento.

    The couple say that the salespeople opened up new credit cards for them, charging the down payment and closing costs for their condo to the new accounts. They sought assistance from Mexico’s consumer protection agency, and were able to hand them a cancellation letter within the five-day period that timeshare buyers have to change their minds. They returned home to collection calls. That was back in 2013, and the cancellation was never fully canceled. They did get their refund, but only after a reporter and camera crew flew down to Mexico and intervened on their behalf two years later.

    One thing to keep in mind if you do decide to buy a time-share is that there’s a cooling-off period. The salespeople won’t push this idea on you, of course, but that’s the case in Mexico and when you buy any kind of timeshare here in the United States, too. If you go home to sleep on it and change your mind, you are able to back out of the transaction.

    Call Kurtis Investigates: Mexican Timeshare Nightmare



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist