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Friday, March 13, 2015

Man Wins Lottery Without Knowing It, Loses Ticket, Probably Cries

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rosemead_groceryA man in southern California is living the nightmare of all lottery players: he bought a Powerball ticket in September of last year, and won the game without realizing it. The California Lottery tried to identify the winner as the deadline loomed, releasing surveillance camera footage of him to news outlets. He recognized himself…but he no longer has the winning ticket.


Understandably, this man doesn’t want to come forward and admit to the entire world that he not only forgot to check the lottery numbers, but lost a $1 million slip of paper. It’s bad enough that people who know him have surely recognized him from that surveillance footage. While it’s clear that he was the person who bought the ticket, that isn’t enough to collect the $1.1 million in winnings. According to the ancient and mystical rules of Powerball, he has to present the original ticket. He doesn’t have it. The deadline passed on Thursday, and he was unable to find the ticket in time.


The California Lottery says that unclaimed prizes go to public schools. We suggest that they use it to fund a personal finance curriculum: perhaps one that includes lessons on how to play the lottery without ever losing. Or at least how to successfully use bulletin boards to keep potentially important papers from being swept into the trash.


MAN LOSES WINNING $1 MILLION POWERBALL TICKET SOLD IN ROSEMEAD [ABC7]

He won the lottery! But lost his ticket [Los Angeles Times]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Kia Recalls 200,000 Soul Compact Cars Because Gas Pedals Shouldn’t Break In Half

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The accelerator pedal might just be one of the more important components of a vehicle, so when reports start surfacing that the pedal might break or bend, that’s kind of a big deal. Such is the case for more than 200,000 Kia Soul vehicles that are now subject to a safety recall.


According to a notice [PDF] from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Kia is recalling 208,858 model year 2014 and 2015 gas and electric Soul compact vehicles because the gas pedal may bend or fracture.


Kia says that if the pedal becomes bent or splits, the driver would likely have difficulty accelerating, which in turn, could lead to an increased risk of a crash.


A chronology [PDF] submitted to NHTSA shows that Kia first became aware of the issue in October 2014 through vehicle warranty claims. In all, the company received 12 warranty claims related to the pedals, but no consumer complaints.


A subsequent evaluation of accelerator pedals collected by Kia found they could fracture due to excessive force. At that point, the manufacturer opted to conduct a voluntary recall.




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Why People Can Resell Old Lululemon Running Shorts For $800

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Tradesy is an online consignment market, where people can sell designer and luxury goods that they no longer want. The top brands that sell on the site are pretty much what you’d expect: Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Hermès, and Tiffany. Yet brand #3 in their top five is one that you might not expect: Lululemon, an athletic wear company. Are people really that crazy over yoga pants?

Yes. They are. Racked looked into the Lululemon resale market, and discovered an entire hidden world. Instead of getting a discount on yoga pants that someone else has already sweated in, this business is actually about taking merchandise that’s scarce, holding on to it until it’s valuable, and then reselling it.


This works for items that are brand new with tags, but used items retain their value because of the durability the clothes. The company doesn’t condone this secondary market, but at the same time offers limited-edition products and brings different items in different colors into and out of circulation. This makes the items artificially scarce, and therefore valuable to someone.


In an interview, the CEO of Tradesy told Racked that the secondary market for Lululemon gear is something that they hadn’t really anticipated. “We always see markups in rare Chanel bags or vintage Louis Vuitton, so it’s interesting to see it happening with pants that make your butt look good and only retail for $80.”


What kind of markups? How about some rare running shorts that are currently bid up to $1,000 on eBay? Limited-edition leggings with a tie-dyed effect sell for hundreds of dollars.


One flipper describes searching resale values on eBay from the dressing room of her local Lululemon outlet. Yet this flipper, who makes a nice profit simply flipping Lululemon products on eBay, worries that she could end up banned from the company’s stores, just like how Sephora bans suspected makeup resellers from making online purchases.


Inside Lululemon’s Booming Underground Resale Market [Racked]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

If You’ve Ever Wanted To Smell Like An Old Book, New Perfume Will Make Your Dreams Come True

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In the latest entry into the somewhat puzzling “Smell Like The Thing You Love The Most” product category, an “old book” scent is joining previous odd fragrance notables Bitcoin and pizza.

Yes, yes, we know — every time you walk into a library or used bookstore, you just looooove the smell of old books. I’m right there with you, I mean I love getting nose-deep in an old copy of Crime and Punishment, but I can’t say I want to tingle the olfactory organs of friends and strangers alike with the scent.


But because there’s probably someone out there who will want to buy it, a company called Sweet Tea Apothecary (via New York Magazine) has mixed up a concoction it calls “Dead Writers” to fool your nose into thinking you’re a musty old book, just waiting to be whiffed.



At $80 for one-ounce, the unisex fragrance is an oil perfume that “evokes the feeling of sitting in an old library chair paging through yellowed copies of Hemingway, Shakespeare, Fitzgerald, Poe, and more,” the company’s site says.


More specifically, it “contains black tea, vetiver, clove, musk, vanilla, heliotrope, and tobacco.” It’s part of a fragrance lined inspired by historic figures and places — you can also smell like Marie Antoinette (pre-guillotine, probably) and Henry VIII (pre-gout/wife-executing, hopefully).


Again, love those old books. Not quite sure if I’d love smelling like one.


Now You Can Smell Like an Old Book [New York Magazine]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Lawsuit That Brought GM Ignition Switch Defect To Light Settled For Second Time

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The lawsuit filed by the family of a Georgia woman who died in a 2010 car accident that spurred the recall of 2.5 million General Motors vehicles with faulty ignition switches has been settled out of court.

The Associated Press reports that terms of the settlement, which are the result of a second suit levied by the family, were not released.


A lawyer for the family, who first filed the suit against GM in 2011, hired engineering experts who eventually discovered the ignition switch issues in several smaller model vehicles.


According to a deposition provided by the family’s lawyer, a GM engineer experienced the problem – in which the ignition switch could unexpectedly shift out of the run position, disabling safety devices and increasing the risk of a crash – while test driving one of the vehicles in 2004.


Initially, the family had agreed to settle their lawsuit with GM for $5 million, but rescinded the agreement last year; instead opting to file a second suit alleging that the company concealed the defect and withheld vital information from the family.


To date, GM has recalled millions of compact cars – including the Chevrolet Cobalt and Saturn Ion– that have been linked to at least 64 deaths and 108 serious injuries.


Lawsuit that showed GM hid ignition switch problem settled [The Associated Press]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Report: Google Error Leaks Hidden Data For 280,000 Domains

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Usually when we hear that a company has had a bunch of data leaked to the world, hackers are responsible. But in the case of a Google leak involving hidden data for 280,000 domain names, a bug in Google’s system is apparently to blame.

Ars Technica reports on a discovery by Cisco Systems’ researchers that the complete hidden WHOIS data for 282,867 domains registered through Google Apps for Work service in a partnership with registrar eNom has leaked, including names, phone numbers, email addresses, physical addresses and more.


The accounts that were leaked account for 94% of the addresses Google Apps has registered. Its services include a $6 per year fee to shield all personal information included in WHOIS records from the public view, promising that it will stay in the hands of eNom barring a court order.


But starting in the middle of 2013, information began trickling out of Google due to a software defect in Google Apps. Once a domain registration was renewed, the bug caused data to become public.


Cisco’s Talos Security Intelligence and Research Group discovered the leak on Feb. 19, and it was plugged five days later.


While a lot of WHOIS data is likely false — what with what it calls “obviously fake” names, addresses and other data in public WHOIS records — users who thought their data was protected by the privacy service Google offered are likely not happy about that information becoming public.


“The reality of this WHOIS information leak is that it exposed the registration information of hundreds of thousands of registration records that had opted into privacy protection without their knowledge or consent to the entire Internet. This information will be available permanently as a number of services keep WHOIS information archived,” Cisco researchers explain.


Cisco points out that while some people use fake information to register domains, those who don’t could be at risk: Villains with access to that information could send targeted spear phishing emails using the victim’s name, address, etc, to make the phishing attempt seem more legitimate. Identity theft is also a possibility, so Cisco recommends users “adopt safe browsing habits and make use of layered defenses like antivirus and anti-spam technology.”


Google emailed a notice to users of its service last night, writing:



Dear Google Apps Administrator,


We are writing to notify you of a software defect in Google Apps’ domain registration system that affected your account. We are sorry that this defect occurred. We want to inform you of the incident and the remedial actions we have taken to resolve it.


When the unlisted registration option was selected, your domain registration information was not included in the WHOIS directory for the first year. However, due to a software defect in the Google Apps domain renewal system, eNom’s unlisted registration service was not extended when your domain registration was renewed. As a result, upon renewal and from then on forward, your registration information was listed publicly in the WHOIS directory.



A Google spokesperson also told Ars that the bug was traced to how Google Apps integrates with eNom’s domain registration program interface. The spokesman reiterated that the root cause has been identified and fixed.


Epic Google snafu leaks hidden whois data for 280,000 domains [Ars Technica]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Would You Pay 20¢ To Read One Wall Street Journal Article?

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As more news consumers have started to migrate online instead of getting their news in dead-tree form, this has caused problems for the entire business model of publishing. It raises an interesting question, though: what if there were a news equivalent of buying the one song you like from a new album for 99¢ or less? That option may be coming soon to our national newspapers like the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post.

Will news fans use it, instead of buying all-you-can-read online subscriptions or pasting the article’s URL into a different Web browser? A startup in the Netherlands called Blendle will soon launch in this country, and has been doing pretty well in its native country. The New York Times was an early investor in the company back when it was exclusive to the Netherlands.


Better yet: if you open an article and don’t like it, you can request a refund. The idea has its detractors, who argue that there’s no shortage of free online news outlets in English, and that the system won’t work outside of the relatively tiny and specialized Dutch-language market.






N.Y. Times, WSJ, Washington Post Reach Pay-Per-Article Deals [Bloomberg News]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Dairy Queen Free Cone Day Is March 16

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I scream. You scream. You know what happens next — we all scream… for ice cream. And on Monday, all that screaming will be greeted with free cones at Dairy Queen as part of the company’s 75th anniversary celebration.

Customers can pick up a free five-ounce vanilla soft-serve cone all day on Monday, March 16, at participating Dairy Queen and DQ Grill & Chill locations throughout the United States.


Much like other restaurants’ food giveaways, these aren’t free cones just in the name of feeding hungry customers — DQ locations are promoting free cone day to fuel donations to the Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals, with participating stores accepting donations.


All donations collected will stay in the communities where they’re raised to support the local kids at CMN Hospitals.




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

GM Recalls Chevrolet Volts That Can Silently Emit Carbon Monoxide

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It’s possible for a car engine to be too quiet. Two people so far have suffered from carbon monoxide poisoning when their Chevrolet Volt cars switched imperceptibly to their gasoline engines. When this happens, the engine remains so quiet that it’s possible to forget that the car is running, and the combustion engine gives off the silent gas that can be deadly in an enclosed space. Like a garage.

Chevrolet is recalling Volt cars from model years 2011 through 2013, but the only repair is a software upgrade that will limit how long the car can run while parked. The number of cars affected has been reported as both 50,249 and 64,000: the discrepancy probably represents cars sold outside of the United States.


The dangers of electric and hybrid cars being too quiet go far beyond the walls of owners’ garages: it was almost four years ago that the NHTSA noted that they have a higher rate of accidents involving pedestrians, because people on the street–and not just blind pedestrians–can’t hear them.


General Motors also recalled some Chevrolet Trax and Buick Encore crossover vehicles to correct a possible problem with power steering, but those vehicles hadn’t been sold to the public yet, presumably making it a lot easier to get the recalled vehicles in to the service department.


GM recalls Chevrolet Volt over carbon monoxide [USA Today]

GM recalls 64,000 Volts over carbon monoxide risk [AutoNews]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

TiVo Gets Approval From Bankruptcy Court Judge To Buy Some Aereo Assets

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If Aereo wasn’t dead already, the announcement from TiVo that it’s successfully snagged the former streaming service’s trademarks and customer lists will certainly send any hopes that the company could resurrect itself six feet into the ground. After an assets auction last month where companies picked over Aereo’s bones, TiVo says a U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge has approved its purchase of those assets.

TiVo said in a statement today that the judge’s approval on Thursday in Manhattan finalizes the sale held in late February, and that it will use the customer lists to target more consumers.


“This strategic acquisition of Aereo’s trademarks and customer lists will enhance our ability to serve the growing segment of consumers who want access to both broadcast television and over the top content,” CEO Tom Rogers says. “TiVo has found success in providing a more comprehensive offering and sophisticated user experience than any other player in the marketplace and we look forward to expanding on that success.”


While it’s unclear exactly what form the Aereo name could take now, we pointed out back when news of the sale first hit that TiVo might decide to use it for an upcoming DVR that records over-the-air network feeds.


After the Feb. 24 sale reportedly brought in only about $2 million and not the $100 million Aereo was hoping for, Aereo said the whole thing was a bummer.


“We are very disappointed with the results of the auction,” Aereo’s counsel told GigaOm at the time. “This has been a very difficult sales process and the results reflect that.”


A quick primer on the rise and fall of Aereo for those not in the know: The streaming start-up employed arrays of tiny antennae set up on tall buildings to capture freely available over-the-air TV feeds. It then streamed the content to paying customers, in a method that the company and its supporters likened to a rooftop antenna with a very long cord.


But though each antenna had a single-end user and only allowed users to see broadcast feeds in their own market — something anyone with a good antenna could do on their own — TV networks accused Aereo of violating their copyright by rebroadcasting their signals and charging for it, without their permission and without paying retransmission fees cable companies pay.


Aereo fought its way to winning multiple federal appeals, but ended up losing when the issue was put to the Supreme Court of the United States. A majority of justices ruled against Aereo, saying the company was operating a service that was substantively no different than a cable TV provider.


Aereo shut down its streaming business shortly after, and then tried to argue that if it was going to be classed as a pay-TV operator like the others, it should be able to license the content for a reasonable fee. The last life went out of Aereo however when the U.S. Copyright office disagreed, and a federal appeals court said it wouldn’t listen to the company’s case.




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

NHTSA Chief Says Takata More “Forthcoming” With Investigation, Senators Send Letter Urging Cooperation

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takata A week after Japanese auto parts maker Takata said it would double its production of replacement airbags and three weeks after U.S. federal regulators began imposing a $14,000 per day fine against the company, the head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says the company is being more forthcoming with information related to an investigation into millions of defective airbags.


Speaking during a portion of the Consumer Federation of America Assembly in D.C. on Friday, Mark Rosekind, the new chief of NHTSA, revealed that Takata has started to be more cooperative about documents involving their products.


“They’re starting to become forthcoming,” Rosekind said. “My understanding is that yesterday, things started changing around.”


While Rosekind didn’t elaborate on what the company had done to be more forthcoming, he said that additional information about the matter would be available in the next several days.


NHTSA imposed the $14,000 per day fine on the parts maker after, Rosekind says, the company handed over more than 2.4 million pages without giving indication where specific information about the airbag inflator could be found.


The NHTSA opened an investigation into the defective airbags – which have been found to spew pieces of shrapnel at passengers and drivers upon deployment – in June 2014 after Toyota, Nissan, Honda, Mazda and Chrysler began recalling millions of vehicles.


Rosekind’s statements on Takata and the federal investigation into the company’s defective airbag parts comes a day after Florida Senator Bill Nelson gave an update about a senate committee’s ongoing investigation into the company during a speech on the Senate floor.


Nelson told his colleagues that so far only two million of the 17 million vehicles recalled for the defect have been fixed.


“People are driving around with a lethal bomb in their steering wheel, and if it’s defective and it goes off, they are filled with shrapnel,” Nelson said. “That has killed five people; that’s documented. In this country, it’s killed five people. Nobody ought to be driving, therefore, a car for months when, in fact, they have a known defect that can seriously kill them.”


Nelson went on to say that he and South Dakota Senator John Thune, committee chair for the Senate Commerce Committee, sent a letter [PDF] to Takata Chairman and CEO Shigehisa Takada saying requests for information from the company hadn’t been fully complied with.


The senators sought information from as far back as 2011, including emails from Takata supervisors that may have included warnings about a possible airbag defect.


Several months ago, reports began to surface showing that Takata – which uses an unusual chemical explosive in its airbags – was aware of issues with deployment for years before recalls began.


Since then the auto parts maker has become the center of a number of criminal investigations and lawsuits from families of victims.




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

How A Fight Over $255 Carpet Installation Led To Death Threats

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It all started with a 10 x 10 foot piece of carpet, and now an argument over its installation has erupted into threats from both the customer and the business, police in Indiana say.

A Fort Bend resident says he set up a deal to install carpet in a bedroom at his mother’s home, reports KHOU 11 (warning, link has video that autoplays). His father was set to come home from the hospital after suffering a stroke and the son wanted the room to be carpeted before that.


The customer says after he’d reached an agreement with the company and made two payments for a total of $255, the carpet business kept putting off the installation, and finally stopped returning his calls.


When he reached the owner’s wife on the phone, he says he demanded the carpet get installed or he’d call the police.


“I threatened his wife by saying ‘hey, I’m gonna turn you guys into the police at this point because at this point it’s theft,” he told the station.


A minute later, he says he got an angry phone message threatening to kill him and his mother.


“Hey you, whoever the hell you are, you call and threaten my wife and threaten her one time I will kill you and kill your mother,” said the caller. “Don’t threaten my wife or my family ’cause I will kill you. I will find you and I will kill you.”


When the station got in touch with the carpet business owner, he says he made the threatening phone call because the customer had threatened his wife and made her cry.


In the meantime, the customer has contacted the county sheriff’s office. A spokesperson for that office says that while they’re aware of the case and the death threats and is planning on providing the information to the District Attorney’s office, it’s doubtful that charges will be filed since it’s believed both parties made threats against each other. Instead, they’re advising the installer to return the $255 and have the whole thing end there.


The customer has since had the room re-carpeted by another company. This does go to show, however, that if you’re upset with the service you’re receiving, making threats against a business could return to haunt you. A better move would be to get in touch with the Better Business Bureau to lodge a formal complaint, and contact authorities before saying anything you’ll regret.


$255 carpet dispute leads to death threats [KHOU-11]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Fraud Victim’s Impossible Choice: Eat $1,500 In Charges Or Be Banned From PayPal Forever

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When a customer’s chargeback scheme left one PayPal customer down $1,500 and without the pricey headphones that they had sold, the person who sold the headphones was understandably upset. It’s wrong to rip anyone off, but they’re an individual seller rather than a faceless corporation. PayPal reduced the amount that this person owed to $700, but that was still $700 more than they really owed anyone. What’s a consumer to do? In this case, post to Reddit.

That doesn’t really solve anything for other consumers, but it does prove that making the front page of Reddit has mystical powers that can prod immovable entities like PayPal’s fraud department into action.


The scheme is very simple:


1. Order an expensive thing.

2. Tell your bank that you didn’t order that thing by filing an identity theft claim.

3. The charges are reversed, and you get your money back.

4. You also get to keep the expensive thing that you ordered. Woo-hoo!


From the victim’s point of view, of course, it isn’t nearly as simple. Reddit poster 24bits explained how an identity theft complaint from a customer can cost $1,500–even if that customer never bothers to file a police report.



I was put into negative -$1,414. Paypal took this out of my account without permission, without notification and did not let me contest it. It was automatic. As soon as his bank called Paypal, they deducted $1,414 out of my account and never notified me of any of it.



Sure, the seller filed a police report, but that doesn’t matter to PayPal. Meanwhile, 24bits claims that filing a Better Business Bureau report knocked the balance owed down to $700. Being required to pay half as much money that you never really owed in the first place is an improvement, we suppose, but not by much.


Eventually, having a post on the front page of Reddit ended with PayPal making contact and forgiving the entire balance. That’s awesome for this one user, but what about the rest of us? Short of getting that much attention on your issue, how can you prevent similar problems?


We don’t know how to do that with PayPal, especially after an executive reshuffle following its divorce from eBay. We contacted PayPal to ask what people who have problems with the payment service that don’t achieve Internet infamy should do. We’ll let you know what they say if and when they do.


I see your PSN problem, I raise you my case where I got scammed with a Paypal charge back and forced to repay $1,414.00 or be banned forever. [PayPal]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Police: Active Meth Lab Discovered In Backpack Abandoned In Walmart Bathroom

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While running a successful meth lab isn’t easy even under the best circumstances — and this is coming entirely from watching Breaking Bad, obviously — keeping an active operation going in a Walmart bathroom doesn’t seem like a guarantee for success. To that end, police say they’ve discovered an active meth lab, hidden inside a backpack, abandoned in an Indiana Walmart’s bathroom.

After employees reported a suspicious backpack last night in the Walmart bathroom and alerted a local meth suppression team, state troopers were called in to investigate as well, reports WTHR.com.


Officials on the scene put on protective masks and suits to dismantle the lab and remove the chemicals. Both the men’s and women’s restrooms are now closed and will have to be thoroughly decontaminated, the health department says.


Instead of cooking meth in their home and potentially contaminating where they live or blowing up their own house, some meth cooks will apparently leave behind the explosive chemicals in public places and come back later pick up the meth when it’s done.


Often, notes WTHR, meth makers will dump their trash filled with drain cleaner bottles, over-the-counter medication blister packs, battery casings and bottles with white residue in them in alleys or vacant lots, making it dangerous for anyone who comes across them.


The Indiana State Police Meth Suppression Section is now reminding people to be aware that these traveling labs and their detritus contain chemicals that are toxic, flammable, corrosive, and acidic. They could combine and explode, or burn someone by coming into direct contact with skin, along with damaging internal organs if the fumes are breathed in.


Police are still looking for the owner of the abandoned backpack lab.


Meth lab found inside backpack in Muncie Walmart restroom [WTHR.com]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Allegedly Armed Intruder Chooses The Wrong Wrestling-Themed Restaurant To Mess With

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(via ABC News)

(via ABC News)



When presented with a list of businesses that you might not want to mess with, one that has a wrestling theme and is run by a former WWE star and her husband would probably be right at the top of that list. Nonetheless, police say an armed man got into a tussle at a Chicago wrestling-themed restaurant, and let’s just say he was not successful.

Surveillance video caught the action at The Circled Square restaurant, which is owned by the ex-WWE star who wrestled under the name Victoria, reports ABC News.


A server said a man was acting a bit weird in the restaurant, and she’d asked if he was okay. Instead of replying, he’d apparently walked into the women’s bathroom. The owner’s husband and co-owner of the place bumped into him as he was leaving the restroom, with the suspect then walking toward the kitchen.


“He said some guys with guns were chasing him, and I thought, ‘If guys with guns were really chasing you, then you shouldn’t be out front,’” the co-owner said. “I escorted him back to the kitchen and he was immediately combative with me.”


That’s when he allegedly tried to reach for a gun inside his pants, so the husband says he simply picked him up to have a civicl discussion with him about the decisions he was making.


“I said, ‘Hey, I’m going to put you back down, but if you’re going for a weapon, we’re going to have a problem,” he says.


On the video he then carries suspect into a corner of the kitchen and heard “metal on metal” when he pushed him against the sink, confirming his suspicions that the man was armed.


The chef called the police, and after holding the man down for a few minutes, his captor instructed the chef to take the hidden gun. A few moments later in the video, he’s seen wrestling the suspect onto the floor. Though the suspect was acting up, saying he didn’t want to go to prison, he wasn’t going anywhere, says the husband.


“There was an obvious size difference,” he added. “He wouldn’t be in my weight class. He’d be in my sister’s weight class.”


Police arrived and arrested the suspect, charging him with multiple felony and misdemeanor charges including aggravated assault, the use of a deadly weapon, possession of a controlled substance, battery and not having proper firearm owner identification, Chicago police told ABC News.


Husband of Ex-WWE Star ‘Victoria’ Takes Down Allegedly Armed Intruder in Their Restaurant [ABC News]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Google Expands “Safe Browsing” App To Warn Users About Sites Riddled With Unwanted Software

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googsafe First of all, we’d like to offer a belated Happy Birthday to the World Wide Web, which turned 26 yesterday. You’re closer to 30 than 20 now, so your hangovers will only get worse. Second, to honor that milestone, Google announced updates to its Safe Browsing technology, including a warning when users are about to visit a site chockfull of unwanted software.


The newest developments in its free Safe Browsing system has Google feeding security information into a broader browsing application that now works in Safari and Firefox browsers as well as Google’s own Chrome, reports the Associated Press (Microsoft’s Internet Explorer uses its own system called SmartScreen Filter).


When there’s a risk that a user is about to enter a site distributing unwanted software — the kind that can change your browser’s settings and set loose a slew of pop-up ads or redirect users to sites they didn’t want to visit — a big red warning will pop up letting users know what they could be getting into. The company has started to identify ads that target users with unwanted software as well.


Google says in a blog post that it’s adding information about sites with such unwanted software to its Safe Browsing API, “allowing developers to better protect their users as well.”


Google’s safe browsing system targets ‘unwanted software’ [Associated Press]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

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Here are eight 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

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Starbucks Will Offer Cold-Brew Coffee, In Limited Quantities

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Dedicated iced coffee drinkers and dedicated snobs will tell you that the flavor of cold-brewed coffee is superior to coffee that has been brewed the regular way and cooled down. You’ll soon be able to try Starbucks’ version of the drink in certain regions of the country, but only if you get there early enough.

Because Starbucks didn’t want to fill up its freezers with coffee ice cubes to be combined with hot milk, they’ve put together a special cold-brewing blend of beans that will chill for 20 hours before being served. This long prep time means that each store that serves cold-brewed coffee will only have one batch per day, enough to make about 40 “grande” cups of the beverage.


Cold-brewed coffee is known for being less bitter, but also with a stronger flavor and more caffeine. That makes sense, given the 20 hours of brewing. Some people prefer to dilute it with water. However, Starbucks told media outlets that their blend will only have a few milligrams more caffeine than their typical iced brewed coffee.


Starbucks Goes All In, Introduces Trendy Cold-Brew Coffee [Eater]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Poll: Most People Will Use Tax Refunds To Pay Down Debt, Build Savings

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Are you expecting a tax refund this year? While making changes to how much tax you have withheld from your paychecks during the rest of the year can get you slightly larger checks all year long, most people keep things as they are and enjoy receiving a windfall at the beginning of the year. What do they do with that refund, though?

Rather than treating their tax refunds like a true windfall and doing something fun with it, most people polled by the finance site Bankrate.com say that they plan to use their tax refunds constructively, to pay down debt or put the money away in savings.


Still, financial planners think that we’re all not seeing the big picture. The average taxpayer gets a $3,000 refund. “That’s $250 a month you could have used throughout the year for saving or spending,” a New York-based financial planner explained to Bankrate. Instead, people are lending that money tax-free to the federal government. That isn’t especially useful for anyone.


Since we insist on receiving these refunds, what do we use them for? 34% of people say that they plan to put their refund toward debt. 30% say that they’re going to invest or save the money. 26% plan to use it for necessities, and 3% say that they plan to do something fun with it.


Are they telling the truth? Maybe that depends on how you define “necessity.”


Do you want a big tax refund or bigger paycheck? [BankRate]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

FTC Chair Edith Ramirez Talks Privacy, Data Security

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20150312_153444 You may now be able to change your thermostat from another continent, your fridge might know when you need to buy more eggs, and your connected TV recommends shows and movies. But is your data being used for things other than keeping your house warm, your eggs in stock, and your kids entertained — and, just as importantly — is it secure?


These were the questions put to Federal Trade Commission Chair Edith Ramirez today at the Consumer Federation of America’s Consumer Assembly in D.C.


Speaking with Ed Mierzwinski of the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, Ramirez explained that data collection is an “incredibly important area” for the FTC.


“We want to make sure that as consumers increasingly use mobile devices, that the same consumer protections apply,” she explained. “These devices can provide a lot of benefit to consumers but the challenge is that they’re also collecting a lot of info about us.”


Even if you buy a device that only ostensibly collects data for a specific, known purpose, Ramirez said you’re opening the door to that data being used for “unexpected purposes.”


“The information could be sold to a third-party data broker who might sell that info to someone else,” she clarified. She gave the hypothetical example of a device that collects info about the user eats.


“Maybe it gets back to my insurance company that I’m not eating the healthiest of foods,” suggested Ramirez. “How does that impact my coverage?”


The Chair acknowledged that we’re still in the early days of web-connected devices and many of the companies making the most interesting products in this category are new and may not have the experience or understanding to deploy proper security for the data they collect.


Additionally, said Ramirez, because so many of these devices are small in size and low in price, there are concerns about the amount of security one can build in.


“You have to put privacy-based thinking at the forefront of your product,” she advised to manufacturers and developers. “You need to think about data minimization. Do you really need it? How long do you need to keep it?”


While the FTC doesn’t introduce legislation, Ramirez said there are three important factors that any effective data security bill would need to include.


First, companies must be required to be transparent about their data practices. How is it used, how is it going to be shared, will it be resold?


Second, because companies can obscure transparency efforts by disclosing too much information or using language that is too complicated or technical, the privacy polices would need to be clear and understandable.


“Most policies we see now are opaque and unintelligible,” said the Chair


Finally, consumers need to have control over their collected data, especially sensitive information like geolocation info and anything related to personal health.


“Consumers ought to be required to opt-in to sharing this information,” said Ramirez.


The Chair ended her brief talk with a few comments on the insidious problem of so-called “native advertising,” better known as sponsored content or advertorials — or as she described it, “content that is seemingly neutral but which is not at all independent.”


“The old principles continue to apply, regardless of the new media,” cautioned Ramirez. “If you’re advertising something you need to be clear that it’s advertising, that there’s some sponsor behind it… The information being conveyed needs to be truthful and clear and conspicuous.”




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Study: Raising Legal Age To Buy Cigarettes To 21 Would Result In Fewer Smokers

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By this point everyone can agree that smoking is harmful to your health, and yet there are still new smokers starting up the habit year after year. A new study from the Institute of Medicine says that swell in numbers could be curbed by raising the legal age to buy cigarettes to 21.

Though the Food and Drug Administration doesn’t have the power to raise the minimum age nationwide above 18, 2009’s Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act directed FDA to convene a panel of experts to conduct a study on the public health implications of raising the minimum age to purchase tobacco products.


At FDA’s request, the Institute of Medicine convened a committee with that purpose in 2013, the group says in its new study [PDF] titled “Public Health Implications of Raising the Minimum Age of Legal Access to Tobacco Products.”


The IOM found that the age smokers start using tobacco is critical, saying that among adults who become daily smokers, about 90% of them report using cigarettes for the first time before turning 19. Almost all say they used cigarettes before 26.


The committee studied scientific literature on smoking to see how changing the age of minimum legal access — or MLA — to 19, 21 or 25 would impact smoking rates.


It found that at 19, smoking prevalence would drop by 3% by the year 2100; at 21 there would be a 12% decrease; and at 25 there would be a 16% person decrease.


The purpose of the report was not to make a recommendation, but the committee concluded overall that increasing the MLA for tobacco products “will likely prevent or delay initiation of tobacco use by adolescents and young adults,” noting that the age group most impacted will be those between 15 and 17.


Though the FDA can’t raise the MLA nationwide, states and cities can set a higher minimum age for their communities, the IO points out. Alabama, Alaska, New Jersey, and Utah have set the minimum age to 19, and New York City and several other localities have raised it to 21.




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist