понедельник, 28 сентября 2015 г.

uMan Hacks Amazon Dash Button To Order Pizza Whenever He Wantsr


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  • Engineer Brody Berson reprogrammed an Amazon Dash button to order pizza from Dominos.

    When in the mood for the piping hot, cheesy deliciousness that is pizza, there seems to be endless options to satisfy your needs: calling the store, ordering online or even sending a pizza emoji via text or Twitter. One man has created yet another way to have that circle of love delivered straight from your door, simply by hacking an Amazon Dash button.

    Engineer Brody Berson details in a blog post on Medium how he was able to hack a Dash to order him a pizza from Domino’s anytime he pushed the little white button.

    Berson was able to create his own instant-pizza-ordering-button by reprogramming the small device using an API capable of sending payment information to his pizza delivery company of choice –– in this case, Domino’s.

    He programmed a specific order into his Dash button – one that had been disconnected from his Amazon account.

    In all, he says it took just 10 minutes to complete the reprogramming, and then another 30 for the delivery driver to drop off his pie.

    “I bet you can wire up a PizzaDash button like I did in about ten minutes with your own custom order,” he says in the blog post. “That’s pretty awesome to think about since you were never intended to do that with these little pieces of plastic.”

    [via The Verge]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uWhere To Get Free (Or Discounted) Coffee For National Coffee Day Sept. 29r


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  • (torode)
    If you need caffeine every day like you need air to breathe, tomorrow is your big day: National Coffee Day is Sept. 29, and with it comes a slew of offers from U.S. java joints for free or discounted coffee. We’ve got the goods on where to score your cheap fix in honor of such an important day.

    As always, some deals might not be offered at your local restaurant or chain, so call ahead to make sure you don’t get there and face disappointment.

    Dunkin’ Donuts: Customers can get a free medium cup of Dunkin’ Donuts hot or iced dark roast coffee, with a one-per guest limit at particpating locations.

    Cumberland Farms: Customers can text the word FREECOFFEE to 33733 using their smartphone to receive a coupon for a free hot or iced coffee, in any size, all day long. The coupon must be redeemed on National Coffee Day, Sept. 29.

    Peet’s Coffee & Tea: Free small cup of Peet’s Major Dickason Blend with any purchase of a baked good, oatmeal or fresh food item.

    Panera Bread: Rewards members have been able to score a free coffee every day of September, so that deal will still be in place for National Coffee Day.

    Wawa: Free coffee in the size of your choice.

    Krispy Kreme: Customers can get a free small coffee (12 o.z.) aaaaand a free original glazed donut. Krispy Kreme awards members get double points with purchase on Tuesday when you purchase any coffee drink.

    Whole Foods: Stores nationwide are offer 12-ounce cups of coffee for $0.25 through September.

    Tim Hortons: Get any size coffee in Regular or Dark Roast for just $1 at participating U.S. restaurants.

    McDonald’s: Participating McDonald’s restaurants in Connecticut and Western Massachusetts are giving out free small coffees, so it’s worth calling your local restaurant to check if they’re offering a similar deal.

    Sheetz: Free Kick in the Beans coffee at Sheetz locations in Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, Ohio and North Carolina.

    Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf: Iced coffee, flavored iced coffee and iced Americanos for half off all sizes all day at participating locations. Iced, because this is Southern California we’re talking about.

    Maui-Wowi: Customers shopping online can get 50% off with the coupon code ALOHACOFFEE. It’s not immediate coffee in your mouth, but it is a discount.

    Caribou Coffee: Instead of giving people free coffee, for every cup of Amy’s Blend coffee purchased on Sept. 29, Caribou will donate a cup of coffee to nurses and families in cancer centers throughout the country.



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uReport: Volkswagen Knew Of “Defeat Devices” Eight Years Before EPA Actionr


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  • (Sarah)

    An internal review spurred by the emissions scandal that has engulfed Volkswagen over the past week found that the carmaker knew that so-called “defeat devices,” used to trick emissions tests, were used in more than 11 million VW and 2.1 million Audi diesel vehicles for several years before the Environmental Protection Agency issued a violation notice to the manufacturer ordering it to recall some 500,000 million sedans

    The Associated Press, citing two German publications, reported Monday that VW’s internal investigation has so far found at least two incidents in which VW was made aware that the use of defeat devices were against the law.

    The Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung, a German publication, reported on Sunday that VW’s internal investigation shows one of the company’s own technicians was aware of the software.

    Back in 2011, an engineer reportedly expressed concern that using the device was illegal, but was ignored.

    The same investigation turned up a letter, dated 2007, from parts supplier Bosch that warned the car company not to use the software during regular operations of vehicles.

    According to Bild am Sonntag, sources uncovered the internal communications between Bosch and VW, with the parts supplier insisting that the software was for test purposes and that using it in regular operation would be against the law.

    Bosch, one of the largest car parts suppliers in the world, admitted last week that it supplied many of the key components for the defeat devices as a way to evade emissions standards for certain pollutants with a range of serious health effects.

    According to the EPA’s order [PDF], the “sophisticated software algorithm” in the vehicles is programmed to detect when the car is undergoing official emissions testing, and to only turn on full emissions control systems during that testing.

    However, the effectiveness of these vehicles’ pollution emissions control devices is greatly reduced during all normal driving situations.

    Volkswagen declined to address the new reports, saying it doesn’t comment on “rumors and speculation.”

    “Volkswagen is working with all its strength to conduct a thorough and merciless investigation of this matter,” a spokesperson tells the AP.

    In addition to new revelations that VW was aware that the defeat devices were illegal, CNBC reports that the company’s now former CEO Martin Winterkorn is under criminal investigation by German prosecutors related to fraud.

    Winterkorn stepped down last week, noting that he took full responsibility for irregularities in nearly 11 million diesel vehicles found to contain “defeat devices,” the former CEO is at the center of the latest investigation into the manufacturer.

    Volkswagen said to be warned years ago about illegal emissions tricks [The Associated Press]
    Volkswagen under fire: Former CEO under investigation [CNBC]



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uSlack Fill: The Grocery Shrink Ray’s Sneakier Twinr


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  • eightandsixWhat does it mean to under-fill a consumer product package? We’ve all opened boxes and bags that seemed more full before we saw what was inside, or a few tiny over-the-counter pills in a bottle stuffed with cotton. When is this considered “misleading,” and when is it just a normal thing that protects products?

    Regular readers are familiar with the Grocery Shrink Ray, where the amount of product in a package shrinks over time to keep the price of a product consistent without decreasing profits. Traces of the Shrink Ray are everywhere: even people who aren’t aware of the phenomenon notice the standard 1.5 quart ice cream containers and 59-ounce orange juice bottles that were once half gallons.

    Yet sometimes a manufacturer builds extra space into packaging to protect the merchandise inside, to make a product look more plentiful than it really is, or to make a product take up more space so it’s easier to notice or harder to steal. This space is called slack fill: the difference between a container and the product that fills it.

    While the Food and Drug Administration has regulations on the books that ban companies from building excessive slack fill into merchandise, but couldn’t point our colleagues to any nationwide cases that they’ve actually pursued recently. California has stricter laws. Well, it did: in 2013, the governor signed a bill that changed how existing packaging laws are enforced, strengthening exemptions to the law. That may decrease cases against companies going forward… as long as companies are able to provide an excuse that fits the law.

    The Golden State’s consumer protection laws ban non-functional slack fill or “empty space in a package for no reason,” but the difference has been that district attorneys there have been enforcing the statutes. One prosecutor told our colleagues at Consumer Reports that there have been 27 cases settled against companies selling consumer packaged goods in the last six years.

    For example, you might remember a lawsuit settlement earlier this year where Procter & Gamble settled with the state of California over slack fill in cosmetic products, and CVS had settled for similar store-brand products before that.

    It’s non-functional slack fill that’s against the law, though, and companies will try to find a way to argue that the excess packaging is functional. Sometimes they’re correct. A microwaveable instant pasta package might be larger than its contents to keep the noodles inside from boiling over, for example. Pharmaceutical companies trie to argue that their products need to be in larger bottles or boxes to accommodate required patient information on the package. That’s why bottles of medicine or supplements sometimes come with more cotton than product in them.

    When you notice slack fill that seems excessive and serves no obvious purpose, consider making a complaint to the Food and Drug Administration, or to your state’s attorney general. They aren’t able to check every product on the shelves, and depend on complaints from the consumers who are on the ground, using these products.

    Sometimes competitors speak up, too, like Watkins, a company that decided that under-filling of 8-ounce-size boxes with 6 ounces of pepper by giant competitor McCormick could not stand.

    Otherwise, we’ll all have to depend on crusading prosecutors or annoyed consumers with money to file a class action lawsuit to keep the marketplace free from slack fill. The latter does happen: there’s currently a lawsuit against Motrin filed in federal court by plaintiffs from multiple states for its large packaging compared to the relatively tiny amount of space that its pills take up in the package.



ribbi
  • by Laura Northrup
  • via Consumerist


uRegulators Sue Weight-Loss Marketer Who Used Fines, Lawsuits To Stop Negative Consumer Reviewsr


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  • Screen-Shot-2014-09-22-at-9.28.08-AMFederal regulators on Monday continued their crackdown on deceptive, ineffective weight-loss products, this time by filing a lawsuit against a company that threatened to enforce a so-called “gag clause” by imposing fines and filing lawsuits to stop customers from posting negative reviews and testimonials for the products online. 

    The Federal Trade Commission announced today that it filed a complaint against Roca Labs, Inc., Roca Labs Nutraceutical USA, Inc. and their principals for harming consumers by unfairly barring them from sharing truthful, negative comments about the company or its “Formula” and “Anti-Cravings” powder.

    The products – which sold starting at $480 for a three- to four-month supply, bringing in more than $20 million since 2010 – were advertised online and through online search and social media advertising such as Google, Bing, Yahoo, and Facebook.

    The company represented its products as safe and effective alternatives to gastric bypass surgery, claiming that users could lose as much as 21 pounds in one month, and that users have a 90% success rate in achieving substantial weight loss.

    According to the FTC complaint [PDF], Roca Labs sued or threatened to sue consumers who shared their negative experiences online or complained to the Better Business Bureau.

    The company claimed that these customers were in violation of a non-disparagement provision of the “Terms and Conditions” they supposedly agreed to when buying the products.

    “Defendants have warned purchasers, through package inserts included in product shipments, that they agreed not to write any negative reviews about the Defendants or their products and would owe Defendants hundreds of dollars should they do so,” the FTC complaint states. “These practices… have caused or are likely to cause purchasers to refrain from commenting negatively about the Defendants or their products.”

    Since 2014, the FTC claims that versions of the company’s terms include a “gag clause” purporting to prohibit customers from disparaging Roca Labs, its products and its employees.

    “You agree that regardless of your personal experience with RL, you will not disparage RL and/or any of its employees, products or services,” the policy states. “This means that you will not speak, publish, cause to be published, print, review, blog, or otherwise write negatively about RL, or its products or employees in any way. This encompasses all forms of media, including and especially the internet.”

    “If you breach this Agreement, as determined by RL in its sole discretion, all discounts will be waived and you agree to pay the full price for your product. In addition, we retain all legal rights and remedies against the breaching customer for breach of contract and any other appropriate causes of action.”

    Roca Labs used testimonials and supposed third-party reviews to illustrate the weight-loss success consumers achieved with their products.

    To do so, the company asked for “success videos” from purchasers by offering to pay 50% of the products’ price for providing positive reviews.

    If customers posted negative reviews, the FTC claims, the company would claim that those users would owe the full price of the products, often totaling hundreds of dollars more than the advertised or actually paid price.

    According to the FTC, in addition to threatening, fining and suing consumers, Roca Labs’ weight-loss claims are false and unsubstantiated. The FTC also charges that the defendants failed to disclose that they compensated users who posted positive reviews.

    The FTC alleges that in some cases, the defendants violated consumers’ privacy by disclosing their personal health information to payment processors, banks, and in public court filings.

    “Roca Labs had an adversarial relationship with the truth,” Jessica Rich, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a statement. “Not only did they make false or unsubstantiated weight-loss claims, they also attempted to intimidate their own customers from sharing truthful – and truly negative – reviews of their products.”



ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist


uRejoice, Pork Lovers: Chipotle Says 90% Of Restaurants Now Serving Carnitasr


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  • (su-lin)
    Sound the pork bell and toot the meat horn: if you’re a fan of pork in your tacos and burritos, you’ll be glad to hear that Chipotle is declaring an impending end to the carnitas shortage that started back in January. The other white meat is now available at 90% of its 1,500 restaurants, the chain announced today.

    Chipotle had suspended one of its pork suppliers for not complying with its animal welfare standards — the company requires pigs to be raised with access to the outdoors or deeply bedded barns, without the use of antibiotics, and with no gestation crates.

    By July, carnitas was available in 26 states, and Chipotle assured customers the end of the shortage nationwide was nigh.

    Today the chain announced that it’s restored most of the pork supplies it lost after cutting ties with the offending supplier, and says that it expects to have carnitas back in all restaurants by the end of November.

    The only U.S. locations that don’t have carnitas are in the Cleveland and Atlanta areas, and in North Carolina and South Carolina.

    “The decision to stop selling Carnitas in many of our restaurants was an easy one,” said Steve Ells, founder, chairman and co-CEO at Chipotle in a press release. “We simply will not compromise our high standards for animal welfare.”

    “Now, we are excited to have Carnitas back in nearly all of our restaurants, and want to thank our customers for their patience while we worked to address this issue,” Ellis added.



ribbi
  • by Mary Beth Quirk
  • via Consumerist


uPolice: Women Steal TV From Walmart, Change Clothes And Steal Another Oner


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ribbi
  • by Ashlee Kieler
  • via Consumerist