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Friday, February 6, 2015

Did This Laundry Service Respond To A Bad Yelp Review With A Violent Threat?

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Not the establishment in question. (Scott Lynch)

Not the establishment in question. (Scott Lynch)



Emma used the same wash-and-fold laundry service at a laundromat in her neighborhood in Brooklyn, NY for years, and had a bad experience in August. She did what people normally do in that situation: she left them a one-star but respectful Yelp review, and switched to using a different place. Just another day in the free market… until she received a threat by private message that contained her home address.

Here’s what she found in her Yelp private message inbox (it contains some nasty language):


laundry


The blurred out part is her home address, obviously. People say terrible things on the Internet, sure, but they don’t usually contain the exact floor that your apartment is on and come from the people who used to deliver your underclothes to your door. She shared her message with Twitter (which is how we learned about it) and her local subreddit. While the account that sent this message wasn’t affiliated with the business in any way, you can’t blame Emma for assuming that it was.


We contacted the laundromat, speaking to the owner and to his son. Both men seemed shocked at the nastiness of the threat and said that they don’t use Yelp, to respond to customer reviews, let alone using it to bully former customers into taking down bad ones. That is not a very well thought-out business tactic. Michael Calascione, the owner’s son who was working in the shop at the moment he talked to Consumerist, mentioned that a worker who had recently been fired had threatened to ruin the business’s reputation online.


The person who sent the threat seemed to have very specific interests, though, leaving two reviews of other laundromats in the same neighborhood, making sure to bad-mouth Laundry on 3rd in both of those reviews. Posting a few bad fake Yelp reviews is one thing, but once Emma shared the threat she received, her complaint against the laundromat left Yelp and spread everywhere. We can’t prove anything definitively, but it looks like the threat came from a person with a grudge against the business. The people who run the business think that they know who that person is. So what happens next?


We spoke to Public Citizen’s Paul Alan Levy, an attorney who has been involved in cases where a company would like to unmask a Yelp reviewer. He told Consumerist that it is possible to subpoena websites as part of a criminal investigation or a civil lawsuit. The business owners could file a civil suit against the person who made the threat if the police don’t want to get involved, but that would involve hiring a lawyer to sue the person who made the threat.


If this is found to be a serious threat, the local prosecutor would investigate, sending a subpoena to Yelp asking for the information they have about the person behind the account that sent the message. That presumes that the local authorities take threats sent by anonymous (but maybe not so anonymous) people seriously.


Between Emma and the laundromat owners, they have the e-mailed threat, and they have messages from the person they suspect of sending it where that person threatens to mar the business’s reputation in online reviews. Will that be enough for the authorities to actually do something about? We’ll keep you posted.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

West Coast Ports Contract Dispute Means Automakers Must Ship Parts By Plane

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The ongoing labor dispute between dockworkers and shipping companies at ports on the West Coast of the United States is affecting more than just the availability of French fries in Japan and Venezuela. McDonald’s has resorted to shipping fries by air, and some auto manufacturers are going to start sending those cargo planes back from Japan filled with car parts.

It’s more economical to assemble vehicles for the American market on the continent where they’ll be sold instead of assembling them in Asia and shipping whole cars across the Pacific. That’s why carmakers based in Japan, South Korea, and China ship parts to assembly points in North America and build the actual cars here, except for a few models with very limited production runs. They use boats, which are slower than air freight but cheaper.


Parts for those cars arrive at the West Coast ports that are currently close to completely shutting down over a contract dispute, though. Due to the labor dispute, automakers have to use air cargo to get parts to their assembly plants in the United States. A representative of Subaru told Reuters that keeping its plants supplied by air cargo costs the company an additional $60 million per month, and without doing so, their plants would have shut down. The company is chartering cargo planes: again, we think they should chat with McDonald’s Japan and arrange to send those planes back full of potatoes.


Honda told Reuters that it is also using air freight to keep American factories going. Toyota commented that it is no longer offering overtime hours to employees, but wouldn’t comment on whether they are keeping factories supplied by air. A representative for Hyundai said that the company mostly sends parts to Eastern ports, since it assembles cars in Alabama.


Japan automakers hit production snags as U.S. port dispute drags on [Reuters]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

University Of Oklahoma Blacklisted After Publishing Jack White’s Guacamole Recipe

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This is not, we repeat not, Jack White's guacamole. (photo: Morton Fox)

This is not, we repeat not, Jack White’s guacamole. (photo: Morton Fox)



One of the most powerful talent representation companies in the world has decided to boycott the University of Oklahoma after a school newspaper dared to publish the rather bland details of a concert contract rider, including the rock star’s secret (not any longer) recipe for guacamole.

Concert riders have long been a source of giggles and schadenfreude for people amused by the petty backstage demands of extremely wealthy musicians and their entourages.


That’s why the recent publication of the contract and rider for Jack White’s concert at OU’s McCasland Field House seems barely worth a mention, certainly compared to the many more outrageous riders that have been leaked over the years.


The former White Stripes frontman doesn’t make any overly bizarre demands — smoked salmon and Fiber One bars aren’t exactly the same as the mountains of cocaine and bowls of barbiturates you hear about from rock acts of previous generations — though he does include a very specific recipe for guacamole (see page 20 of this PDF if you absolutely must have it), but even that is the expected avocados, onions, etc., you’d find in most guac recipes.


The most revealing thing about the contract — which was obtained by the Oklahoma Daily via an Oklahoma Open Records Act request since the school is publicly funded — is that OU paid at least $80,000 for the concert. Again, that’s not terribly shocking for a high-profile artist playing a venue that holds several thousand people.


But these minor revelations, which were published a day before the concert, have apparently ticked the surly rocker off.


“Just because you can type it on your computer doesn’t make it right,” he reportedly told the audience during the show.


Of course we’d counter — you’re extremely wealthy and famous and you got your guacamole, so get back to playing music.


Things have only intensified in the days since, with White’s reps at the all-powerful William Morris Endeavor Entertainment something or other telling the school that it will no longer book any of its music or comedy clients at the school ““until this policy is modified not to disseminate private information.”


Except OU can’t change that policy because it can’t change the Oklahoma Open Records Act — which requires any public entity of the state of Oklahoma to respond to request for records — and it can’t violate that act just to book thin-skinned rock stars who are too secretive about their guacamole recipes.


“OU is basically getting blackballed as a place that’s not welcoming to outside talent,” the Campus Activities Council chairperson tells the Daily. “If [Black Student Association] or [Hispanic American Student Association] want to bring a speaker, any student association, this affects everybody. If they want to bring in musical talent, a speaker, a comedian, it really affects that.”


Rather than give in to the whiny artists’ demands, we’d recommend that every news organization at every state-run school in the country make similar information requests for every big name act that plays at their school.


Being a celebrity does not give you the freedom to hide how much money you’re getting from taxpayers.


[via AVclub.com]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Marvel, Awesome Scientists Help Kids Build 3D-Printed Mechanical Hands And Bring Out Their Inner Superhero

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The dream of becoming a super hero in real life is one that’s shared by millions of kids around the world. But for eight patients of Houston’s Shriners Hospital for Children who are missing part or all of a hand, they got to be the super heroes in reality, teaming up with bioengineers from Rice University and Marvel to build mechanical hands made from plastic parts printed on 3-D printers.

Rice University bioengineering students, staff and faculty worked with Marvel Universe LIVE! and the hospital this week to not only give kids lacking all or part of their hand a free mechanical hand, but also the chance to build those hands themselves, using Marvel superheroes as design inspiration.


Volunteers from Rice and the online community e-NABLE, as well as performers from Marvel, showed the patients and their families how to put the hands together using plastic parts made on 3-D printers at Rice.


Buying a prosthetic hand can cost more than $4,000, a hefty price especially as young patients usually outgrow several of them during childhood, a Rice University press release explains.


One mother said the hand her son built with the team will be his first prosthetic, and that she thinks the new hand will help boost his confidence, as it’ll make it easier for him to tie his shoes and carry his lunch tray. He has symbrachydactyly, which means he has part of two fingers on his left hand.


“This is pretty much the only option he’s got,” she said. “He’s really not eligible for (more expensive prosthetics) because he’s six, and he’s growing quite a bit.”


And now, sit back and watch kids being extremely happy, and let the waves of warm fuzzies wash over you:




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Here’s A List Of Proposed RadioShack Store Closings

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No one who has been paying attention to retail news is surprised that RadioShack filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection yesterday, and that the chain plans to close about half of its stores. Yet you may be wondering: what if I need a soldering kit or a cordless phone battery at 4 P.M. on a Friday? How many of the Radio Shacks near me are going out of business?

This mysterious PDF document has appeared on The Shack’s corporate site. Dated Wednesday, February 4, it’s a list of about 1,800 stores sorted into three waves of closings. We don’t know whether this is a final list: it appears to be an exhibit from the company’s bankruptcy filing.


The list is organized by store number, making it difficult to navigate. Here’s the fastest way to check on your local store: start with the RadioShack store finder and search on your location. Click on the location name on the map, which will be in red. The store number will be the last four digits of that page’s address. If that sounds confusing, the page’s address will look like this:


http://ift.tt/1zGC1HL 1037


Take the last four numbers from this URL and search on it on the store closing list. (You can do that by pressing Control + F if you’re on a Windows PC, Command + F if you’re on a Mac, and if you’re on a mobile device you’re on your own.


If you don’t have the ability to search the page, just scroll through each separate closing wave in numerical order and look for the store number.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Katy Perry’s Lawyers Go After Vendor Selling Figurines Of Super Bowl Phenomenon “Left Shark”

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Whether you watched the Super Bowl halftime show live or were chained to the stove frying homemade mozzarella sticks for your friends, you probably know about “Left Shark” by now — the costumed figure to the audience’s left of pop star Katy Perry who didn’t quite seem to know the right dance moves, and subsequently charmed his awkward way into our hearts. But trying to capitalize on that phenom’s fame likely won’t end well, as one 3D designer found out this week.

A designer who prints politically themed and pop culture sculptures says he heard from Perry’s lawyers this week after he put a Left Shark figure up for sale on his site Shapeways.com shortly after the Super Bowl, reports CNN.


“Our client [Perry] recently has learned that you have been involved in the manufacture, sale, marketing and distribution of merchandise featuring a shark sculpture which embodies and uses the [Super Bowl halftime show], and that you have displayed this product on your website, in connection with such sale and distribution,” the letter posted on Instagram reads.


“As you are undoubtedly aware, our client never consented to your use of its copyrighted work and IP, nor did our client consent to the sale of the infringing product. Your unauthorized display and sale of this product infringes our client’s exclusive rights in numerous ways, including but not limited to, infringement of our client’s exclusive rights to reproduce, display and distribute its copyrighted images under the United States Copyright Act as set forth in 17 U.S.C. §106.”


The letter — confirmed as authentic by a representative from the law firm — demanded that he cease and desist selling the products and hand over any products he had in his possession.


Though he said he’d probably go back to “doing pieces about them and other world leaders,” saying “all this lawyer crap is very stressful,” the designer has posted a GoFundMe link on his Instagram page to raise money for his legal fund.


“If I get pro bono legal council or permission to print these and your donation is greater than 29.99 I will send you a 3d printed shark figurine,” he wrote on Instagram.


Katy Perry sics lawyers on Left Shark vendor [CNN]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Taking Upskirt Photos Of Teen Girls In Target Is Legal In Oregon, Says Court

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There are many reasons that you should never skulk around Target, or any other store, trying to sneak upskirt photos of female shoppers, let alone teenage girls; it’s vulgar, invasive, and inarguably immoral; not to mention the fact that every instinct tells you that it must be illegal. But according to an Oregon court, it doesn’t run afoul of state laws.

The Oregonian reports on a recent ruling in the case of a man who was accused of crouching down in a Target store to take revealing photos of a 13-year-old girl.


While the young woman didn’t notice she was being photographed, another shopper did and reported him to employees. Surveillance footage subsequently confirmed what the shopper had claimed to see.


The 61-year-old was arrested for the Jan. 2014 incident and charged with invasion of personal privacy and two counts of attempted second-degree encouraging child sex abuse.


His defense wasn’t that he didn’t do — those facts are apparently not in dispute. Instead, his lawyers contend that his actions aren’t forbidden by state law.


Oregon’s invasion of personal privacy law requires that the person being photographed or recorded be in a “state of nudity,” which specifically means that the subject’s genitals, pubic area or breasts are “uncovered or less than opaquely covered” in any way.


Additionally, the statute requires the subject of these photos must be “in a place and circumstances where the person has a reasonable expectation of personal privacy.”


The defense team said that since the girl was wearing underwear the incident didn’t meet the first requirement, and that even if you did consider the images were “nude” in nature, she couldn’t have had a reasonable expectation of personal privacy in a huge retail store with dozens of other people present.


Prosecutors countered that the 13-year-old might have been in what is generally considered a public space, but nonetheless “had an expectation of privacy that a deviant isn’t going to stick a camera up her skirt and capture private images of her body.”


With regard to the other charges against the defendant, the relevant state statute posits a few situations in which a person would be encouraging child sexual abuse in the second degree. Two of them involve knowingly paying for child porn, and since the defendant took the photos in question himself, only the first type of violation seems to apply.


It requires that he “knowingly possesses or controls, or knowingly accesses with the intent to view, a visual recording of sexually explicit conduct involving a child for the purpose of arousing or satisfying the sexual desires of himself or another person.”


The defense argued that the images taken in this instance are not sexually explicit and thus don’t qualify as child porn under state law.


Prosecutors contended that the defendant’s intent was to snap photos that were explicit that he could use for his own sexual gratification. The fact that his results didn’t reveal nudity shouldn’t absolve him of trying to snap explicit images, they told the court.


But while the judge agreed that the actions of the defendant were “lewd” and “appalling,” state law left him no choice but to side with the defense.


“From a legal point of view, which unfortunately today is my job to enforce, he didn’t do anything wrong,” explained the judge, who said he was extremely frustrated” the decision. “It’s upsetting to say the least.”




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Sorry Canada, No More Redbox For You

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sorryaboutthat Bad news for our readers to the north: Redbox DVD-rental kiosks are going the way of, well… DVD rental in general, with the announcement the the boxes days are numbered in Canada.


Outerwall, the Washington-based company that own Redbox and Coinstar announced yesterday that the last day for Redbox rentals will be next Friday, Feb. 13, and that the last day you can return rented movies will be March 5.


The kiosks are “not meeting the company’s performance expectations,” explained Outerwall in its latest earnings report.


Is the Canada closure a harbinger of things to come in the U.S.?


Redbox revenue in general is down — $494 million in the last quarter, compared to $496.4 million for the same quarter a year ago — even though the company raised rates in December. Outerwall puts some of the blame on “a challenging release schedule for much of 2014.”


The service did pass the milestone of renting its 4 billionth disc, and says it extended its content agreements with Sony, Paramount and Universal while reaching a new deal with Lionsgate.


The company also claims that the the last week of 2014 “marked the highest rental week in Redbox history,” though it doesn’t say if that was highest in terms of volume or revenue.


And though 2014 saw the end of the Redbox/Verizon streaming partnership, the company seems to believe that the rate hike will help it continue to sell disc-based media.


“The recently implemented Redbox price increase will support further investments in several initiatives to enhance customer experience and drive engagement,” reads the earnings report. “We expect these initiatives will help offset the secular decline in the physical rental market and that our actions to improve operational efficiencies and network optimization will help drive earnings growth.”




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

TurboTax Stops E-Filing Of All State Tax Returns While Investigating Fraudulent Activity

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After Minnesota state tax officials stopped taking all TurboTax e-filed returns last night and other states pressed pause as well amidst possible fraudulent activity, Intuit has announced that it’s halting all state e-filed returns while it investigates criminal attempts to use stolen data to file fraudulent returns and claim refunds.

Intuit says it’s looking into the possibly fraudulent activity after hearing from a handful of states with issues a spokeswoman told MarketWatch.


The company says it appears after a preliminary examination with security experts that it’s systems remain intact and haven’t been breached, but ne’er-do-wells may be stealing identities and then using TurboTax software to file the fraudulent returns.


In a press release, Intuit says that “the information used to file fraudulent returns was obtained from other sources outside the tax preparation process.”


If you’re worried about not being able to file your state return, Inuit says the pause is simple a “precautionary step,” so it would appear at this time that at some point, TurboTax will again accept state e-filed returns.


Utah reached out to Intuit first, notifying the company that state officials had flagged 28 fraud attempts “originate from data compromised through a third-party commercial tax preparation software process,” and an additional 8,000 returns marked as potentially fraudulent.


Tax officials in Minnesota and Alabama also posted similar warnings about the tax preparation software.


“We understand the role we play in this important industry issue and continuously monitor our systems in search of suspicious activity,” Brad Smith, Intuit president and chief executive officer, said in the release. “We’ve identified specific patterns of behavior where fraud is more likely to occur. We’re working with the states to share that information and remedy the situation quickly.”


If you’ve already filed your return and it’s been paused, you don’t need to take any further action, Intuit says, as it will be submitted when the company resumes filing. Federal tax return filing hasn’t been affected, the company says.


Intuit’s spokeswoman tells MarketWatch that the hope is to resume filing state returns later today.


TurboTax halts e-filing for state returns due to fraud, stealing of refunds [MarketWatch]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

There Are Some RadioShack Stores That Are Very Successful

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The last week has been full of RadioShack-related doom, from the New York Stock Exchange starting to delist the company to rumors of its inevitable bankruptcy and its actual bankruptcy. What most people don’t realize when joking about the doomed nature of Radio Shack, though, is that there are about a thousand Radio Shack-branded stores that are doing quite well, and will continue to do so even if the Shack brand disappears. They’re small-town retailers that serve as Radio Shack dealers.

RadioShack once had thousands of franchisees, or dealer stores. Most of them have now closed, and there are fewer than 1,000 left. The key feature that has helped them survive is that most of the dealer locations were already successful retailers selling other things before Radio Shack recruited them to join the network. The Dallas Morning news recounts that decades ago, the Shack took small local merchants out for fancy dinners and tropical cruises trying to convince them to join the dealer network. The model was successful for everyone, bringing electronics to towns too small to support a corporate-owned RadioShack store.


Most of the original retailers brought in 20 to 30 years ago are now retiring or leaving the business for the same reasons that any brick-and-mortar businesses, even in small towns, are closing down. Yet some of the stores remain open and successful. CNN visited a few dealer locations that are thriving, which continue to succeed mostly on the strength of their customer service, their relationships with customers, and the fact that they’re the only place for miles around where you can buy a mobile phone at all.


One business owner who owns two Radio Shack dealer stores in New England told CNN that he would be fine even if the Radio Shack brand ceased to exist. Another store in Wisconsin is similar to what RadioShacks will become in the future: it’s a co-branded store that is also a storefront for Cellcom, a regional mobile provider. The announced post-bankruptcy plans for RadioShack are that about half of its stores will remain open, and they will be co-branded RadioShack/Sprint retail locations.


My RadioShack store will be fine [CNN]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Deputy Fired For Threatening To Arrest Photographer Who Took Pictures Of Police In Public

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As we’ve covered before, courts have ruled time and again that police can’t force citizens to stop taking photographs of them in public so long as you don’t interfere with their work. That doesn’t stop cops from ordering people to put their cameras away, and didn’t prevent on sheriff’s deputy in Washington state from making multiple empty threats of arrest against a Seattle news photographer who took pics of a police action in public. But after an investigation by the sheriff’s office, that deputy has been dismissed for abusing his authority.

The incident occurred in July 2014, when Dominic Holden of Seattle newspaper The Stranger attempted to photograph a man being arrested.


According to Holden, he kept his distance from the scene and was not interfering with the arrest in any way. And yet a King County Sheriff’s deputy told him he couldn’t stand there because he was on technically standing on private property owned by King County Metro, the transit authority for the region.


Even when Holden relocated to what was definitely a City of Seattle public sidewalk, the deputy threatened him with arrest unless he left the block.


“You need to leave or you’re coming with me,” the deputy allegedly told Holden.


As he left the scene, Holden asked some Seattle city police officers if they could identify the officer in charge. They said they didn’t know because it was a county police scene, but one officer wanted to know why Holden was asking.


He explained that he’d just been threatened with arrest by the deputy and was hoping to speak to someone in charge.


After some more back and forth, during which Holden identified himself as a reporter, the officer allegedly said, “I’m going to come into The Stranger and bother you while you’re at work,” and even asked for Holden’s business card so he could have the address.


Following Holden’s story on the arrest and harassment threats from these officers, the city cop was penalized with a one-day suspension while the King County Sheriff John Urquhart investigated the claims against the deputy.


At the end of January, Sheriff Urquhart concluded his investigation and recommended [PDF] that the deputy, who reportedly has a history of crossing the ethical line, be dismissed.


Not only did the Sheriff Urquhart conclude that the deputy overstepped his authority by telling Holden that he couldn’t take the photos, but also that he attempted to avoid accountability by recasting the events in a way that made him out to be the good guy.


“[Y]ou claim you interacted with Mr. Holden in a civil, professional manner that was nothing more than ‘social contact’; you did little more than tell him for his benefit that he couldn’t ride [his bike] on Metro property because doing so is a $66 infraction… you calmly pointed him in a direction you were suggesting he leave,” reads the Sheriff’s summary of the deputy’s side of the story, which also claimed that two other deputies also told Holden to leave.


“But the evidence is that you approached Mr. Holden because you took exception to him lawfully exercising his right to take photographs of you and your colleagues while lawfully standing on public property; you were agitated and confrontational; you essentially ‘squared off’ with him; you expressly and/or implicitly threatened to arrest him if he did not leave immediately in the specific direction you pointed, not once but five times (misidentifying public property in the process),” concludes the Sheriff, who also notes that the two other deputies deny any statements attributed to them by the now-dismissed officer.


Earlier this week Sheriff Urquhart confirmed to Holden that the deputy had been fired.


“You have a constitutional right to photograph the police,” explained the Sheriff, who added that threatening to arrest a citizen for legally taking photos of cops while on public property, he added, “is a constitutional violation, as far as I am concerned.”


While courts have long held that police can’t stop people from photographing them in public, two recent federal court rulings have helped to clarify the issue.


In 2011, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit ruled in Glik v. Cunniffe that private citizens have the right to record public officials, including police, in a public place.


The court held that the First Amendment’s proscription on laws “abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press… encompasses a range of conduct related to the gathering and dissemination of information.”


The ruling cites an earlier Supreme Court pronouncement that people have the right to gather news “from any source by means within the law.”


“The filming of government officials engaged in their duties in a public place, including police officers performing their responsibilities, fits comfortably within these principles,” wrote the Appeals Court. “Gathering information about government officials in a form that can readily be disseminated to others serves a cardinal First Amendment interest in protecting and promoting ‘the free discussion of governmental affairs.’”


The Supremes had previously stated that “[f]reedom of expression has particular significance with respect to government because ‘[i]t is here that the state has a special incentive to repress opposition and often wields a more effective power of suppression.’”


And the First Circuit said this applies even more so to law enforcement officials, as they “are granted substantial discretion that may be misused to deprive individuals of their liberties.”


“Ensuring the public’s right to gather information about their officials not only aids in the uncovering of abuses but also may have a salutary effect on the functioning of government more generally,” wrote the court.


The court explained that, much like police are expected to withstand verbal challenges from citizens without threatening arrest, this “same restraint demanded of law enforcement officers in the face of ‘provocative and challenging’ speech must be expected when they are merely the subject of videotaping that memorializes, without impairing, their work in public spaces.”


In terms of camera phones, the 2014 Supreme Court rulings in Riley v. California and U.S. v. Wurie make it rather clear that police can also not force you to delete images from your phone at a crime scene, as doing so would require a warrantless search of your device.


In these cases, SCOTUS held that a warrant is needed to search a citizen’s phone, even if that citizen has been arrested.


And since there is no way to tell if a photo has been taken — or what the content of a photo might be, or if it’s been deleted — without searching that phone, this tells us that an officer barking at you to “delete those photos!” can ask all that he or she wants, but it’s up to you whether or not you want to erase the images.


[via BoingBoing]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Brewery’s “50 Shades Of Green” Beer Touts “Performance Enhancing” Ingredients

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Whips not included.

Whips not included.



Because business just cannot resist hitching their wagons to sexy risings stars, the upcoming premiere of the Fifty Shades of Grey movie is proving quite promotionally fertile for everyone from sex toy makers to booze. Making beer sexy might seems like a stretch, but the brewers behind 50 Shades of Green are doing their best by touting the beer’s “performance enhancing” ingredients like ginseng and other aphrodisiacs.

Scottish brewer Innis & Gunn has released a limited edition ale dubbed 50 Shades of Green, reports TheDrinksBusiness.com, named as such for its blend of 50 different types of hopes from around the world.


For those in the know about such things, that includes sorache ace from Japan and pacific jade from New Zealand.


Its makers say the “mellow” beer boasts “a full body, intense flavour and seductively spicy aromas” offering notes of “grapefruit, lemongrass and passion fruit.”


And then there’s the sex angle — the beer has certain ingredients known for their stimulating qualities, like ginseng to boost sexual desire and gingko biloba to get the blood pumping.


There will only be 200 bottles of the pale ale made, and will be availbel for pre-order on the company site for about $46 per 12-ounce (ish) bottle.


“We had a lot of fun making this beer, doing things that have never been done before in brewing, much like couples all over Britain will be doing behind closed doors once they’ve seen the film,” said Innis & Gunn CEO Dougal Sharp.


Just make sure to leave it at home with your other Fifty Shades of Grey products before you head to theater, folks.


INNIS & GUNN LAUNCHES 50 SHADES BEER [TheDrinksBusiness.com]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Towel Thieves Beware: Hotels Using Chips To Track Linens

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I’m not going to say that I’ve ever helped myself to a hotel hand towel, but I’ve heard they could be used to wrap souvenirs when packing. It’s a good thing I’m not this sort of linen thief, as some hotels are using tiny, wash-safe trackers to crack down on guests’ sticky fingers.

The Daily Mail reports that a Miami-based technology company has designed a tracking device for towels that purports to have reduced the rate of missing linens from between 20% and 30% each month.


Nearly 2,000 hotels have signed on to use the technology, which was initially designed to keep an eye on linens as they left the hotels to be cleaned.


William Serbin, executive vice president of the company tells the Daily Mail, that the hotels using the technology like to remain anonymous, so they don’t alarm guests.


Still, he says that while all hotels are different, most properties using the trackers save about $50,000 a year in lost linens.


The microchip trackers allow managers to track each and every towel in real-time using UHF Radio Frequency Identification Technology (RFID).


The small, flexible chips, which are supposed to last up to 300 washes, send signals to antennae positioned at the hotel’s entrance or exit when they are as far as six feet away.


While the tracker does not tell hoteliers the exact coordinates of a missing towel, robe or sheet, Serbin says that several guests have successfully been asked to return the stolen property.


In addition to keeping track of snatched linens, the trackers can be used by housekeeping staff if they want to find out when a towel was removed from the closet, so it can be restocked.


“Our solution not only provides total inventory information, but provides additional data like dwell time, wash count and laundry reconciliation which assists properties to become more efficient,” Serbin says.


Have YOU swiped a robe from your room? Hotels using tracking devices to keep tabs on linen… and the guests who steal them [The Daily Mail]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Taco Bell’s Quesalupa Spotted In The Wild, Does Not Look Like A Case Of Lupus

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Twitter user @uscgmitch sent us these images of his Quesalupa.

Twitter user @uscgmitch sent us these images of his Quesalupa.



A few days back, Taco Bell unleashed it’s latest vaguely Mexican-ish-sorta-sounding fast-food Voltron, the Quesalupa — or as Conan O’Brien dubbed it, the “Case of Lupus” — but only in Toledo. Because none of us live anywhere near the Ohio city and because fast food items tend to look very different than what’s advertised, we asked readers to send in photos of the Quesalupa in the wild. You obliged, and the results are surprisingly not horrifying.

Given the not-exactly-flattering real-life results for the Double Down Hot Dog at KFC, who shares a parent company with Taco Bell, we were expecting the worst but so far haven’t received any grotesque shots that look like the Quesalupa was run over by a Zamboni.


Steven was the first to share his Quesalupa pics with us, and the only reader to provide any feedback on the experience.


“They taste just like a regular Chalupa,” he writes, “but are a lot more cheesy with the stuffed shell.”


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Then Wendy sent in a photo of her first Quesalupa, which also didn’t look terrible:


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Finally, this morning Mitch Tweeted a series of pics of his meal:






Now it’s possible that Taco Bell is telling franchisees to be ultra careful about the look of the new menu item so that disappointing photos don’t scuttle customer anticipation ahead of a wider rollout. Given the sheer number of fast food items made in a day, it’s inevitable that we will eventually see pics of Quesalupas that look more like crime scene photos than something you’d want to eat.


Until then, we leave you with the video that started it all:





by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Police: “Brisket Bandit” Has Robbed Texas Restaurants Of Thousands Of Dollars Of Meat

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Desperate times often call for desperate measures, but while the current brisket shortage might seem like a reason to go out and do bad things to get your hands on some of that tender meat, robbery is no way to go. Police in San Antonio have alerted local restaurants to keep on the lookout for a person dubbed the “Brisket Bandit,” who’s suspected of stealing thousands of dollars worth of meat.

The San Antonio Police department issued an alert after a recent spate of heists at three different BBQ joints, reports KENS 5 News.


The restaurant owners think it’s the same person sneaking in and hauling out bags full of meat. After one heist, the thief left behind a machete.


“They got it all done in 20 minutes,” said one, while another noted the suspect was “all dressed in black, no flashlight.”


“The brisket bandit is what I’ve coined him,” said another owner, who said a thief took away $2,500 worth of meat in one night.


“The surveillance showed him coming in with a back pack and then walking out with six duffel bags worth of food,” he said.


The recent heists have led others to beef up security, pun intended, as brisket is too expensive at the moment and losing it cuts into restaurants’ profits.


The SAPD hasn’t been able to definitively connects the three cases yet, however, as they’ve had a hard time getting a clear image of the person. Whoever it is, they probably smell delicious.


‘Brisket bandit’ wanted by multiple S.A. barbecue joints [KENS15]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

New Mexico Man Sues Over $500K Lottery Ticket Dubbed A Misprint By Officials

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A New Mexico man who saw his champagne wishes and caviar dreams dashed by lottery authorities who said his winning ticket was actually a misprint is now suing, claiming he’s owed the $500,000 prize that appeared on his scratch card.

The 65-year-old man bought a $20 scratch card and uncovered two $250,000 grand prizes on the ticket, but lottery officials said it was a misprint as the maximum prize per ticket is $250,000.


He’s now filed a lawsuit against the New Mexico Lottery for refusing to pay up, and is asking for $500,625, reports ABC6 News.


“We believe the statute is very clear, that the game is about matching numbers,” said the man’s lawyer. “He matched those numbers, they need to pay, or basically they are cheaters.”


The New Mexico lottery isn’t commenting while the lawsuit is pending, but back when the man first tried to collect on the ticket, a spokeswoman said there had been other defective tickets that had been discovered and removed.


“Absolutely, we feel for him. Printing presses, I don’t care if it is the New York Times’ printing press, a press that prints bumper stickers or whatever else, they are mechanical and parts will become disabled, bent, out of alignment, jammed or otherwise disabled,” she said at the time. “If it had been a winning ticket, we would have gladly paid.”


Man Sues, Lottery Says Winning $500,000 Ticket Is Misprint [ABC 6]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Owner Says Camp Bow Wow Is Responsible For Dog’s Missing Toe

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11toedogWhen I drop my dog off at a boarding facility, I expect her to return home with all of her body parts still attached. One family trusted the local Camp Bow Wow to watch over their dog, and but she was taken to the vet after workers found her with a paw caught in the kennel. Now they disagree with the camp on who should cover the vet bills.


Dogs are left unattended in their kennels at the boarding facility for about half the day, from 7 PM to 6:30 AM. Dogs are normally okay with that kind of downtime, but the workers’ off time was disastrous for Curly, a Rhodesian ridgeback/German shepherd mix. She caught her toe in her kennel (probably between some wires) resulting in what employees called “a lot of blood.” Her owners gave permission to rush her to a vet, where they amputated the injured toe and charged the owners more than $1,800.


The family reports that their eleven-toed dog isn’t the same. The injury happened in the summer of 2014, and Curly still isn’t able to run more than a few miles without limping. “She used to run six to seven miles with my husband,” the owner explained.


The family wants Camp Bow Wow to cover the entire vet bill, and the facility says that they’ve offered to cover half. According to the owner, the offer they’ve made is for $700 and a refund for the dog’s stay.


Call Kurtis Investigates: Dog Returned From Boarding Facility With Toe Ripped Off [CBS Sacramento]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Is Apple Planning A Street View Upgrade For Its Map App?

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Unconfirmed sighting of what may or may not be an Apple mapping van. (YouTube)

Unconfirmed sighting of what may or may not be an Apple mapping van in Brooklyn, NY (YouTube)



Because it’s not the easiest thing to drive around town with cameras strapped all over a car and not arouse some kind of attention, a new rumor has Apple embarking on its own street view mission, similar to the feature on Google Maps.

Although we’re sure there are plenty of technological get-ups popping up around town, this one has people buzzing due to the equipment used: According to the Guardian, a van equipped with 12 cameras and a lidar sensor (which scans the environment using a spinning laser) attached to the roof has been cruising San Francisco.


A local blog called Claycord News & Talk was the first to spot the unmarked vehicle in San Francisco this week. By tracing the license plate, it’s been confirmed that the vehicle has been leased to Apple, which set off the rumor that the company is readying a big update to its map apps for iPhone and iPad that could be something like the street view Google uses.


That blog notes in an update that a similar vehicle has been spotted in Brooklyn and captured on video, which happens to be where 1/6 of the Consumerist staff resides and will thus be on the lookout. It’s unclear whether that vehicle was also leased by Apple.


The next update to iOS is expected this summer, which is when the new feature would likely be included. But that would mean a big chunk of change for Apple and a fleet of cars to capture all the highways and byways needed for such a thing, so don’t hold your breath waiting for that function just yet.


If it does release its own street view capability, that could perhaps go a long way toward winning back users who fled in the wake of Apple’s first attempt at mapping, which was notoriously buggy and often led people places they didn’t want to go.


UPDATE with PICS/VIDEO: The Mystery Van Driving Around Claycord [Claycord News & Talk]

Apple camera car on San Francisco streets leads to ‘street view’ speculation [The Guardian]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Target Workers Caught On Camera… Helping Teen Job Interviewee Tie His Tie

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targettie Most of the time when we hear about a retail employee being photographed doing something other than their jobs, it’s bad news, if not downright creepy. But here’s a pleasant change of pace.


WTVD-TV in Raleigh-Durham has the story of Target employees who were caught taking a break from shelving affordably priced home goods and groceries to aid a young man in his pursuit of a job.


When reporters talked to employees about the photo that went viral online, they say they were helping out a customer heading to a job interview at a nearby Chick fil-A and looking for that final finishing touch to make himself look more professional.


“I asked him if he needed help and he told me he needed clip on ties,” says one employee who noticed the young man wandering around the store.


But the store doesn’t carry clip-ons, so this employee asked a co-worker to assist the young gentleman.


The teen bought a tie from the Target and then went over to the employee who helped him tie it correctly.


“We took the wrapping off it, and I tied it on my neck, and fit it over head adjusted it and tightened it…fixed all his collar buttons and he was set to go,” says the worker.


Store staffers also gave the teen a boost by prepping him for what to expect at his interview: “We said, ‘Make sure you look him in the eye.’ I’m saying make sure you give him a firm handshake, and she showed him… he tucked his shirt in.”


While all this was going on, a curious Target shopper noticed the heartwarming scene and snapped a photo.


“It was a very quiet simple moment, but it was very profound honestly kindness… from strangers… in a Super Target,” she recalls. “He leaves and all these Target employees are screaming ‘Bye! Good luck! Tell us how it went.'”


“We were just here to help a young man get a job and forward his future,” said the employee who tied the tie.


The Target workers later popped by the Chick fil-A to talk up the teen and see how he did on the interview. The manager said he’d make a decision by the end of the week.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

JetBlue, Virgin Atlantic Now Stream College Course Lectures 30,000 Feet In The Air

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Each day there a thousands of opportunities for you to expand your mind. And that includes while you’re essentially held captive in a seat with little leg room, flying 30,000 feet in the air. No, we’re not talking about the usual flight safety and etiquette lessons shoved down our throats while traveling, we’re talking about JetBlue and Virgin Atlantic’s newly launched initiative to stream college course lectures during flights.

TIME reports that the two airlines have begun providing travelers with complimentary audio and video of select college lectures in addition to the typical inflight entertainment lineups.


While the new entertainment options might teach us a thing or two we didn’t know, don’t expect the courses to go toward a degree of any kind.


The new offerings started back in December for JetBlue, which streams portions of 10 recorded lectures via Coursera, a platform for open online classes.


Courses shown on JetBlue flights include marketing classes from University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, a Brown University archeology class, and an introduction to guitar and rhythm from the Berklee School of Music.


The airline is also using a company called Rouxbe to stream video cooking lessons such as “How to brine meats” and “How to read labels on chocolate.”


More recently Virgin Atlantic joined the business of sculpting minds by offering audio and video from Great Courses, a series of lectures from well-known professors.


Available videos include “The Inexplicable Universe: Unsolved Mysteries,” by Cosmos host and director of the Hayden Planetarium, Neil deGrasse Tyson.


Both JetBlue and Virgin Atlantic say they plan to rotate in new lectures every month or two.


Travel blogger Gary Leff tells TIME that the new education entertainment offerings will likely be a welcome surprise for passengers.


“People seem to like the serendipity” of unexpected audio and videos on long flights, he says.


Even if you aren’t interested in learning any new subjects on your next flight, the courses might help lull you to sleep, you know, like they do for actual college students from time to time.


These Airlines are Offering In-Flight College Classes [TIME]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Couple Allegedly Steals 57 Blocks Of Cheese From Walmart, Because Who Doesn’t Want Cheese

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From past experience, we know shoplifters enjoy perusing the meat department at Walmart and occasionally stuffing some items down their pants or sitting on top of them on their motorized scooter. But what’s the next best thing to take from the big box store? If you’re a couple from Tennessee, then the answer is cheese… 57 blocks of it.


WBIR-TV reports that the two 21-year-olds face theft and drug charges after police say they walked out of the retailer with hundreds of dollars worth of stolen items, including the aforementioned cheese.


According to police, security caught the couple walking out with a cart full of items they didn’t pay for.


When police searched the couple’s vehicle, they found $300 worth of cheese stuffed beneath the floorboards and in a diaper bag.


Additionally, officers say they found 10 bottles of Tide, clothing and a candle. In all, $600 worth of stolen goods were found in the car, along with marijuana.


The couple was taken to jail and a family member came to the scene to pick up their child.


Tenn. couple accused of stealing 57 blocks of cheese from Walmart [WBIR-TV]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Minnesota Stops Taking Returns Filed With TurboTax, Citing Possible Fraudulent Activity

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Some TurboTax customers have already had quite a headache this year, and it looks like a whole bunch of Minnesotan customers are about to join the frustration club after the state announced last night it wouldn’t be taking any more returns filed with Intuit’s software because of possible fraud.

Revenue Department officials announced the news late Thursday after two taxpayers reported that they’d logged into their accounts to file, but were notified that a return had already been filed, reports the Star Tribune.


Because usually you’d remember something like that, state officials are concerned there’s been fraudulent activity, and have blocked new TurboTax returns coming in. They’re also combing through the couple thousand returns that have already been filed using TurboTax.


“If we identify a problem, we will contact the taxpayer,” said Revenue Commissioner Cynthia Bauerly.


Intuit opened a dedicated phone number for people concerned about the issue: 1-800-944-8596.


Minnesota is still accepting returns filed with Intuit professional prepare products like Lacerte, Intuit Tax Online and ProSeries.


Meanwhile in Utah, state tax officials chimed in that they’ve found 28 fraudulent filings from third-party vendors, with some taxpayers logging into to TurboTax to file and getting the same message as the Minnesotans — that their returns were already filed. Officials there say 18 states have identified similar issues.


Not being able to use TurboTax to file returns is likely going to cause a headache for many taxpayers, as almost 30 million people across the country use it, amounting to 60% to 65% of the market.


Minnesota stops taking TurboTax returns due to possible fraud [Star Tribune]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

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Here are thirteen of the best photos that readers added to the Consumerist Flickr Pool in the last week, picked for usability in a Consumerist post or for just plain neatness.















Want to see your pictures on our site? Our Flickr Pool is the place where Consumerist readers upload photos for possible use in future Consumerist posts. Just be a registered Flickr user, go here, and click “Join Group?” up on the top right. Choose your best photos, then click “send to group” on the individual images you want to add to the pool.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist