вторник, 8 сентября 2015 г.

uFred Meyer Kicks Off Christmas Decoration Season On Labor Dayr


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  • While Alaska is closer to the North Pole than the rest of the country, that doesn’t mean that the Christmas season starts any earlier there than it does in the Lower 48. Unless, of course, you’re retailer Fred Meyer. Or does the Christmas season start on Labor Day everywhere now?

    lights

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    Reader Kris sent along these photos, noting that the display of Christmas decorations is probably out because the store is “almost completely empty of Halloween products.” This could be because they sold out of those products, or because they’ve concluded that Christmas decorations are more important.

    PayPal tells us that the winter holiday shopping season starts at the end of September, but when does Christmas decorating begin? Labor Day, we guess, or whenever enough back-to-school supplies and Halloween candy sells out to free up an endcap.



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uLufthansa Canceling 1,000 Flights On Wednesday Amid Pilot Striker


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  • If you’re heading to Europe tomorrow, or if you’re there already reading this and you’ve got a Wednesday flight with Lufthansa, you’ll want to check in with the airline right about now: the German carrier announced it’s grounding 1,000 flights tomorrow — affecting 140,000 travelers — amid a pilot strike.

    The pilots union, Vereinigung Cockpit, kicked off the strike starting with long-haul flights on Tuesday, which forced Lufthansa to cancel 90 flights, the airline said today. The strike is extending to include medium- and short-haul flights on Wednesday.

    Subsidiaries Germanwings, SWISS, Austrian Airlines and Brussels Airlines aren’t affected, Lufthansa said.

    “Lufthansa deeply regrets the resulting inconvenience to its customers and will do its best to keep possible disruptions to a minimum,” the airline said, urging customers to check its website for updates on the travel situation. Customers who have flights canceled due to the strike can rebook or cancel their reservation without penalties.

    The 5,400 Lufthansa pilots are striking for a variety of issues; among those, they want the airline to continue to pay a transition payment for early retirees, notes the Associated Press, they’re against a restructuring of the airline.

    The union said on Monday that an offer it made to Lufthansa that included “vast concessions on a variety of issues” that could save more than 500 million euros had been rejected, and the airline’s counter-proposal was promising at first, but later deemed “insubstantial.”



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uCostco’s Online Photo Services Back Up After Breach, Customers’ Cards May Have Been Compromisedr


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  • Screen Shot 2015-09-08 at 2.24.33 PM

    Costco officially relaunched its photo center site on Tuesday. [Click to enlarge]


    If you like viewing and ordering prints of your digital photos from the comfort of your own home and then traipsing to the local Costco to pick up your memories, then we’ve got good news: Costco has finally relaunched its online photo services website after taking the site down upon discovering a breach in July. But there’s also a bit of bad news: some customers’ credit card information may have been captured in the year-long hack.

    After delaying the relaunch of its photo site three times since it was revealed that online photo service management company PNI Digital Media was hacked, Costco announced today that customers can once again place orders for prints, postcards, greeting cards and other photo-centric products, and warned some users that their credit card information may have fallen into the wrong hands back in mid-July.

    “Let us begin by apologizing for all of the inconvenience, frustration and concern created by taking the Costco Photo Center offline,” the company said in a notice on its photo center page. “We recognize the value our members place on their memories, and we are very sorry for the lengthy downtime experienced on our site.”

    In a FAQ related to the relaunch of the photo site, Costco says that while photos weren’t compromised, “we believe that the credit card information of a small percentage of Costco members was captured.”

    The company says that although the investigation into the hack is incomplete, it’s believed that users who placed mail orders for home delivery through the site may have had their credit card information, mailing address, as well as username and password compromised.

    Those who placed orders for pick-up at Costco sores may have had their username and password compromised.

    The hack on PNI – which affected other retailers including Sam’s Club, CVS, Rite Aid and Tesco – took place between June 2014 and July 2015, when it was discovered, Costco says.

    Costco said on Tuesday that relaunching the photo center site took so long because PNI completely rebuilt the retailer’s operations to include security measures applied at a variety of levels.

    “Both Costco and our third-party vendor have been focused on quality and security,” the company says.

    As a continued safety precaution, Costco has only made consumers’ stored photos from 2014 and 2015 accessible; photos from 2013 and before will be available in the coming weeks.

    Additionally, the services’ mobile app is not available, but should be by late September, the company says.

    To mark the relaunch of its site, Costco is providing customers with a variety of discounts on photo prints and products.

    A quick look at the photo sites for other affected retailers shows they continue to be down.

    Back in July, PNI Digital Media – which is owned by Staples – announced it was the latest victim of a hack, with several retailers in the U.S., Canada and the U.K. temporarily shutting down their photo sites.

    Staples acknowledged that PNI was investigating a potential credit card data issue, but didn’t specify which retailers were affected.

    Still, Costco, Sam’s Club, CVS, Rite Aid and Tesco quickly took action to shut down their online photo sites after being notified by Canadian-based PNI of the possible breach or after hearing reports from other retailers.

    [via GeekWire]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uCustomer Who Ordered One Billionth Waffle At Atlanta Waffle House Nails It: “That’s A Lot Of Waffles”r


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  • Although there could only be one customer to earn the distinction of the person who ordered Waffle House’s one billionth waffle, all the customers at the Atlanta restaurant who witnessed the milestone on Tuesday did get to share in the celebrations, by way of breakfast on the house for everyone.

    Workers shouted “congratulations” when the one billionth waffle — apple crumb — was delivered to the lucky customer, reports WXIA-TV (warning: link has video that autoplays), along with balloons and a special plaque that will forever set her apart from the rest of us who’ve never ordered the one billionth anything.

    “That’s a lot of waffles made,” the customer told WXIA-TV. And she’s right — it is a lot, even if Waffle House is selling 145 waffles per minute, as the company claims: after all, it’s taken 60 years for that billionth Waffle House waffle to arrive.

    Along with her plaque and a story to tell at every social function for the rest of her life, she got a swag bag filled with Waffle House paraphernalia and, along with the rest of the restaurant, free breakfast.

    “We have such a loyal, loyal following,” Darren Jarrett, Waffle House Senior Vice President of Operations for Atlanta told WXIA. “Our analysts have been watching this billion-waffle mark for a long time. They gave us the word yesterday that it was going to happen around 10 o’clock today.”

    Who are these mysterious waffle-clock watchers? What does the waffle clock look like? How does it know when someone orders a waffle — is it listening? Can it hear our waffle whispers when we sleep? So many questions. So many waffles.

    Waffle House sells its one billionth waffle in Atlanta [WXIA-TV]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uPennsylvania “Gentleman’s” Barbershop Fined For Refusing To Cut Woman’s Hairr


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  • It’s perfectly legal to advertise your establishment as a place where “gentlemen” might like to go, but one Pennsylvania barber shop found itself in hot shaving water when a woman claimed she was turned away for a haircut.

    The business, which is described as a “high end Gentleman’s Barber Shop” on its website, will have to pay a $750 fine after a woman said she was turned away upon arriving for an appointment she’d booked online in March for herself and her boyfriend, reports the Washington Observer-Reporter. She reportedly wanted to get a fade, a short style often sported by men.

    But a female barber who works at the shop said she explained to the woman that the staff sticks exclusively to men’s haircuts.

    “I’m a barber, that is what I specialize in,” she told the newspaper. “That’s why I work here. I don’t cut women’s hair.”

    The state’s Bureau of Professional and Occupational Affairs and the state’s Bureau of Enforcement and Investigation researched the complaint, ultimately fining the shop $750 for gender discrimination.

    The shop’s owner said they recommended salons and offered to pay for the woman’s haircut elsewhere to make up for the inconvenience. He won’t contest the fine but said he doesn’t agree with it, either.

    “It’s infringing on our environment. Guys come here as a kind of a little getaway, to be around other guys,” he said. “My hands are tied. They are forcing me to do this and telling me how to do my business.”

    Though there are businesses that may cater to a specific gender, the Pennsylvania Human Relations Act prohibits public accommodations (including barber shops) from discriminating because of sex, among other things.

    As the manager of a nearby Curves gym — a female-centric business — points out: men can be customers if they want to be around mostly women, but it’s up to them.

    “We don’t discriminate against men here, we don’t stop them from joining,” she explains. “We tell them there’s only women here and most of them don’t join. I’m not sure why they might want to join here, but we wouldn’t stop them.”

    Barber shop fined for not cutting woman’s hair [The Washington Observer-Reporter]



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uSalmonella Outbreak Potentially Linked To Andrew & Williamson Cucumbersr


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  • cukesEating more fresh vegetables is supposed to be good for your health, but that turned out to be bad advice for the hundreds of people who have become sick from eating contaminated cucumbers distributed to numerous grocery stores and restaurants in the U.S. and Canada. So far, 53 victims have been hospitalized, and one person has died.

    More than half of the people who have become ill from this outbreak of Salmonella Poona have been children and teens. While it’s good to hear that the children of the U.S. and Canada are eating their vegetables, bacterial infections tend to make people sicker if they’re very young, very old, or very frail or immunocompromised.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention know that the cucumbers were distributed to the following states: Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas, and Utah. They may have been distributed further than that: if you aren’t sure where a cucumber came from, the authorities note, check with the store where you purchased it, or just don’t eat it.

    The affected cucumbers have also been recalled: you can see the box they were distributed in above, which isn’t very useful information to a home cook.

    There’s already a lawsuit from this outbreak: a woman in Minnesota who may have eaten an affected cucumber in her salad at a Red Lobster restaurant has sued the chain.

    If you have any questions about the recall, contact the distributor at (844) 483-3864. If you or a child you care for experience abdominal pain and fever after eating cucumbers, contact your health care provider, especially if you have other health problems.

    Andrew and Williamson Fresh Produce Recalls Limited Edition Brand® Cucumbers Because of Possible Health Risk [FDA]
    Multistate Outbreak of Salmonella Poona Infections Linked to Imported Cucumbers [CDC]
    .



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uMacy’s Teams Up With Best Buy To Sell Electronics In Some Storesr


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  • Shoppers heading to Macy’s generally plan to update the items hanging in their closets, not the electronics littering their living rooms. But that could soon be changing, as the department store plans to house Best Buy outlets in several locations starting this fall.

    The company announced it has signed an agreement to allow Best Buy to test licensed consumer electronics departments in 10 stores.

    The outlets, which will be about 300 square feet and will be staffed by Best Buy employees, are expected to open in various markets starting in early November.

    Products in the outlets will vary, but will include some smartphones, tablets, speakers, headphones, phone accessories, and chargers from Samsung and other brands, the company says.

    Although the department store does sell some electronics online, it says the idea to team up with Best Buy came after customers expressed interest in purchasing electronics at physical stores.

    “We are delighted that consumer electronics will be returning to selected Macy’s stores through this test, which will allow us to learn how we can best serve our customers’ needs in this very sophisticated category…This collaboration with Best Buy reinforces Macy’s as a shopping destination throughout the year for the products that are most in demand,” Jeff Gennette, Macy’s President, said in a statement.

    Gennette says the company will work with Best Buy through the holiday season and into 2016, at which point the company will determine whether to continue and expand the outlets to some of Macy’s other 875 stores.



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist