Menu

Friday, April 10, 2015

California Utilities Commissioner Calls For Rejection Of Time Warner Cable Deal

http://ift.tt/1Liu55m

With Comcast set to take over Time Warner Cable’s millions of California customers, state regulators there have been scrutinizing the deal to see how it would affect consumers. Earlier this year, the state’s Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) suggested a number of conditions that would make the merger more acceptable, but today a CPUC commissioner publicly called for the state to block the marriage of Comcast and TWC, at least in California.

Mike Florio, one of four commissioners and a president who make up the CPUC leadership, issued an alternate proposal [PDF] that would deny the transfer of TWC operations in California to Comcast. It also proposes denying transfer of control of some Bright House and Charter systems in the state to the merged Comcast/TWC.


“The proposed merger would create the largest broadband service provider in the United States,” reads the proposal, pointing out that the combined companies would control around 40% of the broadband market in the U.S., and that this percentage would be higher if you go by the recently up-revised definition of “broadband” to mean 25Mbps downstream and 3Mbps up. “In addition, the merger would more than double the size of Comcast’s footprint in California, increasing the number of California households served by Comcast from approximately 34 percent to 84 percent,” much higher than the national average of around 60%.


If the merger is allowed, the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, which measures market concentration within an industry, for fixed broadband service in the U.S. (7,895) would be more than three times the level at which a market is considered “highly concentrated” (2,500). An HHI of 10,000 is considered a full monopoly. Florio contends that, “just based on the significant increase in HHI this merger should be denied.”


And that’s just for any sort of broadband service. When you factor in the higher-speed Internet access (25 Mbps and up), the proposal states that “Comcast will have a monopoly in approximately 78 percent of census blocks.”


Furthermore, contends Florio, “the transfer of Charter customers to Comcast in California… will eliminate another competitor in a market that is already lacking in competition.”


While Comcast and TWC might not compete with each other anywhere in California, the existence of two major providers has allowed the state to compare the two in terms of reliability, customer service, prices, and service offerings “in order to gauge the companies’ relative performances and contribution to the state.”


But, as Florio notes, “eliminating this benchmark will harm consumers’ ability to compare suppliers’ relative performance and prices and enhance Comcast’s already substantial ability to set the bar for consumers’ expectations.”


Speaking of which, the proposal points out that consumers have come to expect very little from either TWC or Comcast.


It calls out recent J.D. Power rankings of ISPs, where Comcast’s Xfinity came in 7th place out of 8 providers in the West region and achieved the lowest possible scores in 4 out of 5 categories.


“Time Warner is slightly above at #6, while Charter was closer to the top at #4,” notes the proposal. “Looking back over a longer period from 2009-2014, in five of the last six years J.D. Power’s studies assigned Comcast and Charter Communications a sub-average score for Overall Customer Satisfaction. In each of the six years from 2009-2014, Time Warner failed to earn one average mark for overall customer satisfaction.”


Not to mention the American Customer Satisfaction Index, where Comcast, Charter and TWC bring up the rear among ISPs and among all consumer-facing companies in the U.S.


These are just a few of the problems brought up in the proposed denial of the service transfer. CPUC will be holding a public hearing regarding the merger on April 14 in Los Angeles. The commission is expected to vote on the deal as early as May.


The release of the proposed denial was applauded by opponents of the Comcast/TWC merger, including our colleagues at Consumers Union, whose objections to the deal are noted in Florio’s proposal.


“This mega merger is a lousy deal for California and the nation,” said Michael McCauley of Consumer Union. “We can’t afford to let one corporation have so much control over our choices and how much we’ll pay to connect and communicate.”


“California creators, innovators and now regulators are coming to realize what consumers have long known: allowing the two largest cable companies to merge would stifle innovation and choke off creativity,” said Todd O’Boyle, Director of Media and Democracy for Common Cause.


The Writers Guild of America, West has been very vocal of its concerns about the merger and today was no different.


“Handing Comcast a near-monopoly in high-speed Internet service in California threatens continued progress towards a more diverse and competitive media landscape,” reads a statement from the WGA. “The decision correctly recognizes that the merger would cause too much harm to Californians, and no conditions can effectively mitigate these harms.”


If CPUC voted to deny the transfer of TWC service to Comcast in California, it wouldn’t kill the deal outright. More than likely, Comcast would go to court to challenge the state’s authority to restrict the acquisition, as control of the L.A. market is one of the main reasons it is purchasing TWC.


In the end, California may ultimately be able to use the threat of a lengthy legal battle as leverage to get Comcast to agree to merger conditions that would benefit the state. In the draft conditions released in February, the CPUC recommended 25 conditions — a number of them involving improvements to Comcast’s Internet Essentials program for low-income consumers. Thus far, Comcast has objected to making Essentials easier to access and remain enrolled in.





by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Can Danish Butter Cookies Come From Indonesia?

http://ift.tt/1CBbx8G

51-FGrJGNOLWhen is a Danish butter cookie not a Danish butter cookie? When it’s made in Indonesia, as Danisa cookies are. The Campbell Soup Company, which happens to own a competing brand of “Danish” butter cookies, recently complained about Danisa’s origins to the National Advertising Division, a self-regulation board where companies sort out their ad disputes before state or federal governments get involved.


The NAD’s investigation was sort of an existential meditation on the nature of cookie names. The Food and Drug Administration does have a published definition of what a “butter cookie” is: the only shortening ingredient used in the product can be butter. Anything else is a “butter flavored cookie.” That was part of Campbell Soup’s objection to the product: they performed lab tests on the cookies and found fat inside the cookies that was not from butter. If true, that would make the “butter cookies” label misleading.


What about the “Danish” part, though? The competitor claimed that Danisa cookies were really Denmarked up, from the crown and “Copenhagen” on the container lid to claims that the treats were “Baked following the original recipe from Denmark” and “Produced and packed in Denmark.” Are these misleading when the cookies are actually made in Indonesia? The NAD agreed with Campbell’s that it is, and that Danisa cookies need to cut back on the “Scandinavian imagery.”


Takari, the company that imports the cookies and sells them here in the United States, had a twofold argument. Here is our paraphrase:



  • They just import the cookies, and don’t know whether the cookies contain 100% butter or other shortenings.

  • Ads for the cookies that imply Danishness are “commercial speech protected under the First Amendment.”


Takari agreed not to import the cookies as they’re currently marketed, and won’t advertise them to consumers or to retailers using any of the contested language or Danish imagery.


NAD Reviews Advertising for ‘Danish’ Butter Cookie Made in Indonesia; Recommends Distributor Discontinue Claims [ASRC]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

U.S. Patent Office: No, Patent Troll Company Does Not Entirely Own Podcasting

http://ift.tt/1O05O2A

“Podcasting” might as well have been the word of the year in 2014, when “Serial” shot the form straight to the top of the pop-culture buzz charts for a few months. But while everyone in America was plugging in earbuds and trying to decide whodunit, the U.S. Patent Office had the more important end of the challenge: deciding who actually owns the patent for the idea of podcasting.

In short? Score one for the good guys. The decision addresses a few very specific elements of the patent claim, but no, the U.S. Patent Office found, this company does not actually have the exclusive ownership of releasing episodic audio content over the internet in a regular, updated way.


The matter came to a hearing at the Patent Office last December. Personal Audio, your basic “non-practicing” patent troll entity, claimed that they owned a patent on the tech that allows podcasting to work, and therefore lots of big, powerful companies with deep pockets — like CBS and CNN — owe them money.


The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which often represents people and companies trying to assert their rights in the digital world, stepped in and challenged Personal Audio’s claims last October, and the issue went to a hearing in December. The Patent Office released the result of that hearing today.


In their decision (PDF), the Patent Office works its way through the very, very specific arguments about wording and meaning. It is not unlike reading a geometric proof, in the way it builds a clear argument of facts and existing rulings. Ultimately, however, the dry legalese ends up with one result: the patent troll does not own podcasting.


“Petitioner [the EFF] has shown by a preponderance of the evidence that claims 31-35 of [the patents] are unpatentable,” the order concludes. “Because this is a final written decision, parties to the proceeding seeking judicial review of the decision must comply with the notice and service requirements.”


“We have a lot to celebrate here,” EFF Staff Attorney Vera Ranieri said in a statement. “But unfortunately, our work to protect podcasting is not done. Personal Audio continues to seek patents related to podcasting. We will continue to fight for podcasters, and we hope the Patent Office does not give them any more weapons to shake down small podcasters.”




by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Nice People Doing Nice Thing For Fellow Starbucks Customer Explain Why They Couldn’t Be Nice Faster

http://ift.tt/1FIIxQM
(With permission from kara.mary.alice on Instagram)

(With permission from kara.mary.alice on Instagram)



Proving that heroes can come in every shape, size and age, an elderly couple not only returned a man’s wallet after he’d left it at Starbucks, but wrote a note to him explaining why they weren’t able to catch up with him in time, and expressing concern that he’d been upset when they saw him walking off without it.

Consumerist friend Kara posted a photo of the typed note posted on the board near her local Los Angeles Starbucks, near where the milk and straws are offered.


“Just when you thought kindness was dead,” she writes of the letter. “Frances, you are a gem.”


Frances writes that she and her husband would’ve caught up to the man named David if they could’ve, and they would’ve written their note by hand as well, but they’re older and such things don’t come so easily. Despite that, Frances didn’t leave the note unsigned, scrawling a wobbly yet legible autograph in addition to the typed closing.



Dear David,


My name is Frances and my husband and I found your wallet at Starbucks. We tried to catch up with you when we noticed you left it behind. We are older and could not catch up. Please excuse this impersonal typed note but our arthritis is very bad and [we] can not write very well anymore. We noted you were very upset when you left the store. We hope you are oak and the return of the wallet is helpful. We do not want a reward so have not included our address.


Sincerely, Frances



David sounds ecstastic about the return of his wallet, choosing to post Frances and her husband’s letter on the board with his response, so all can see how the good people of this world go about spreading warm, fuzzy feelings.


“If you wrote this please contact the manager on duty. I would like to thank you personally!” David wrote by hand on the note.


Now we can all go ahead and enjoy the weekend with renewed faith in our fellow humans. Happy Friday, y’all.




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

FDA: Antibiotic Use In Farm Animals Grew In Spite Of Regulation

http://ift.tt/1FIGYm0

Back in 2012, the FDA banned “extra-label” non-medical use in animals for the cephalosporin class of antibiotics, which are commonly used to treat humans for pneumonia, urinary tract infections, and other maladies. Not only did this restriction fail to curb the use of cephalosporins, but a new FDA report shows that the drug use increased following the ban.

The report [PDF] shows that cephalosporin use in 2013 was at 28,337 kilograms, up from 27,654 kg the year before; an increase of nearly 2.5%.


Cephalosporins were not the only class of medically important drugs to increase in use in 2013. Tetracyclines, which are frequently used to treat bacterial infections and acne, are by far the most widely used drugs. In 2013, more than 6.5 million kg of tetracyclines were used on farm animals, an increase of 9% over the previous year.


In a recent Frontline report on antibiotics in farm animals, veterinary scientists in Texas explained that they had hoped to reduce the use of the more important cephalosporins by increasing the use of tetracyclines.


“We actually saw that resistance went up, which is not what we hypothesized,” said one researcher. “Our viewpoint historically has been that, sure tetracyclines aren’t that important for human health so why worry about them in animal agriculture? But they may be more important than we think, not because of their use in human medicine, but because they can expand resistance to critically important drugs.”


In all, livestock-related sales of antibiotics deemed medically important to humans were up 3% in 2013, to more than 10,100 tons, accounting for 70% of all medically important antibiotics sold in the U.S.


“Use of medically antibiotics to produce meat and poultry is troubling,” writes Avinash Kar of the Natural Resources Defense Council, “because when the antibiotics are routinely given to herds and flocks of animals, some bacteria become resistant to the antibiotics. When these ‘superbugs’ multiply and spread, they threaten people’s health by contributing to the growing crisis of antibiotic resistance.”


According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 2 million people in the U.S. fall victim to drug-resistant pathogens every year, with some 20,000 dying as a result.


In late 2013, the FDA issued voluntarily guidelines for the drug industry, asking them to remove non-therapeutic uses — like growth-promotion — from approved uses of their livestock antibiotics. For the most part, the drug companies agreed, though some manufacturer continue to actively market the growth-promotion benefits of their antibiotics.


“The data released today shows us that use of human antibiotics on the farm has continued to rise, including the use of cephalosporins,” says Steve Roach, senior analyst for Keep Antibiotics Working. “This reaffirms just how timid FDA’s approach to addressing the problem of antibiotic overuse really is, and suggests that it may have limited impact.”


Given the time it takes for the FDA to put together these reports, we won’t have numbers for 2014 until sometime next year. That data will show whether the 2013 guidelines have had any impact on antibiotic use or if, as the drug industry itself predicted at the time, it won’t significantly change the numbers.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Feds Give Amazon Approval (Again) To Finally Test Delivery Drones In U.S.

http://ift.tt/1LzGDIc

amazonprimeair2 It’s finally time for Amazon to take its delivery drones to the sky for testing with the government’s approval: While the Federal Aviation Administration already granted the company permission to test a PrimeAir prototype last month, Amazon had complained that the time the feds took to sign off on the testing rendered the earlier design obsolete.


This new approval [PDF] means Amazon — which had complained last month over the FAA taking more than six months since it’d originally petitioned for drone testing in July — will be sending its new designs up into the air soon, reports Reuters.


As long as Amazon’s drones stay under 400 feet and fly no faster than 100 miles per hour, Amazon is good to fly them outdoors for tests, the FAA says in its letter.


Amazon has been working on this idea to deliver packages to Prime customers by air with small, self-piloted aircraft since 2013, an effort that we can only imagine will finally set off the robot revolution and enslave humankind to machines ever after.


Amazon gets green light from U.S. regulators for new drone tests [Reuters]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Judge Says An IP Address Is Not Enough To Identify A Movie Pirate

http://ift.tt/1cj2DHR

Since the dawn of online piracy, media companies have been serving subpoenas on Internet service providers to try to compel them to match up IP addresses of alleged pirates with the names on the accounts tied to those IP addresses. Unless the ISPs put up a fight, courts frequently grant these subpoenas, but one federal judge in Florida has said that a mere IP address is not sufficient to identify someone as a pirate.

In March, the makers of the documentary Manny, a film about Filipino boxing superstar Manny Pacquiao, filed a complaint [PDF] with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.


The lawsuit identifies only a single John Doe defendant who allegedly violated the filmmakers’ copyright by downloading and sharing the film via BitTorrent. The only identifier used for the defendant is an IP address.


It’s worth noting that this isn’t the only lawsuit being filed by producers of Manny. A PACER search for just this particular District Court found 40 cases listing Manny Film as the plaintiff. TorrentFreak reports that the producers have filed more than 200 such claims thus far.


A week after filing this particular complaint, the judge ordered Manny Film to show good cause that the court could rely on geolocation technology to identify the actual defendant, and to show that there was reason to believe the defendant would be located in the district covered by the court.


In response [PDF] Manny Film contended that its allegation that the “subscriber of the IP address used to infringe Plaintiff’s movies, is the infringer is plausible… because Defendant is the most likely person to have committed the infringement. Indeed, by paying for the Internet, Defendant is the most likely person to use it, particularly at such a consistent and reoccurring basis as has occurred here.”


The plaintiffs also questioned the judge’s previous ruling in a case involving a porn company known for being a copyright troll. In that lawsuit, the judge had remarked that the “Plaintiff has not shown how this geolocation software can establish the identity of the Defendant. There is nothing that links the IP address location to the identity of the person actually downloading and viewing Plaintiff’s videos, and establishing whether that person lives in this district.”


Manny Film argued that the IP address isn’t intended to be the sole identifier of the pirate. That information will come from Comcast when they provide the court with the name associated with that IP address.


“[A]ll other courts to consider this issue have specifically disagreed,” with this judge’s stance on the issue, contends the response.


But in the judge’s order dismissing the complaint [PDF], she cites several cases where the court held there was no definitive reason to believe that the name associated with an IP address was indeed the person doing the pirating.


Reasons given by those other courts include the fact that the IP address is shared among all people using the network and there’s no way to show that it’s the account owner — and not their family member, roommate, guest, or someone squatting on their connection — responsible for the piracy.


The judge ruled that Manny Film was unable to show that identifying the owner of the IP address would identify the pirate.


“Even if this IP address is located within a residence, geolocation software cannot identify who have access to that residence’s computer and who would actually be using it to infringe Plaintiff’s copyright,” writes the judge.


[via TorrentFreak]




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Home Depot’s ‘Spring Black Friday’ Stupidity Is Back

http://ift.tt/1IRwMId

black_friday_springRetailers really love the concept of “Black Friday.” They love it so much that they’re trying to expand it in all directions. Instead of the day after Thanksgiving and the kickoff to the Christmas shopping season, Black Friday is now a year-round event that is an inclusive alternative to “Christmas in July.” Now it’s a spring event, too.


Reader T. sent along an e-mail that he received from Home Depot, which included several promotions that included the Black Friday thing. You can see that graphic at the top of this post. Here’s what shoppers saw when they clicked on it.


mulch


Yes, that is some very festive mulch, but that doesn’t explain why it’s called “Black Friday.” The sale being advertised runs from Thursday, April 9 until Sunday, April 12. That’s four days, only 25% of which are actual Fridays.


We looked back in our archives and found that Home Depot was a pioneer of alternative Black Fridays, having pummeled customers with e-mails about it in early April of 2013.


From the point of view of home improvement retailers, a Black Friday sale in the spring kind of makes sense. That’s a hot time to sell outdoor items like patio furniture and garden supplies. Great, but why does it have to be called Black Friday? We asked this question about an almost identical spring Black Friday concept that Walmart and Lowe’s tried last year, and Petco, Target, and Meijer.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Lowe’s Will Stop Selling Pesticides Blamed For Honeybee Decline

http://ift.tt/1Ptt5xF

Jumping on the anti-neonicotinoids bandwagon with Portland is home improvement retailer Lowe’s, which says it’ll stop peddling the pesticide many critics say is to blame for declining honeybee populations.

Other retailers including BJ’s Wholesale Club and Home Depot took similar steps last year, reports Reuters, choosing to pull the pesticide also known as neonics, which are used on many U.S. crops as well as lawns and gardens.


Scientists and other critics of the stuff say bees are dying because of neonicotinoid pesticides, which is bad news for all the plants that honeybees pollinate, including plants that make food consumed by Americans. Basically, bees are free labor and really good at their jobs. Without them, it’d be a lot harder to make sure those crops get pollinated.


A study released in 2014 by Friends of the Earth and Pesticide Research Institute showed that 51% of garden plants bought at Lowe’s, Home Depot and Walmart in 18 cities in North America contained neonicotinoid pesticides at levels that could harm or kill bees.


Lowe’s says it will start phasing out neonics in shelf products and plants by the spring of 2019, pending the availability of alternatives.


Lowe’s to eliminate pesticides that hurt crop pollinating honeybees [Reuters]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Coca-Cola Tripling Number Of Names For Next “Share A Coke” Campaign

http://ift.tt/1GTEhzs

Last summer, Coca-Cola briefly reversed a decade of sagging sales by slapping a bunch of peoples’ first names on Coke bottles and telling folks to share on social media. And because all follow-ups to successful campaigns must be bigger than the original, the beverage giant is tripling the number of names that will be slapped on bottles when the sequel arrives this summer.

For the 2014 version of the soda equivalent of miniature license plates you buy at roadside souvenir shops, Coca-Cola used 250 of the most common first names among the target teen/millennial market.


AdAge reports that this number will at least triple, perhaps giving hope to all the Borts out there that they may someday stumble upon a bottle of sugar water with their name printed on it.


In addition to amping up the name coverage, the names will appear on a wider variety of packaging. Last year, only 20 oz. Coke bottles were involved in the promotion (though some cans carried generic terms like “BFF” and “High Fructose Corn Syrup”).




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

California’s Denim Industry Trying To Get That Distressed Look Without Using Water During Drought

http://ift.tt/1ycSlm0

California is in the middle of a long drought right now, with state officials asking everyone to pitch in and do their best to conserve water. But that’s a bit tricky for the state’s denim industry, which produces about 75% of the “premium” jeans sold worldwide. Because getting that expensive, distressed vintage look is all about washing… and washing again, and again. With water, of course, which is in short supply.

Some companies are now investing in waterless technology as an alternate to washing and distressing denim with water, reports MarketWatch, along with advising consumers to only wash their jeans after 10 wears instead of the common two-wear-and-wash routine.


So-called premium denim is used to make jeans costing anywhere upwards of $100 sold by companies like 7 for All Mankind, True Religion and J. Brand. Repeated washing with stones, or bleaching and dyeing the denim creates that ideal look.


“(The) water issue in fashion in Los Angeles is a big deal,” John Blank, economic adviser to the California Fashion Association, a trade group, told MarketWatch. Making premium denim “requires water. It is all about that processing. It is the repeated washing to get the premium look. This is what people pay for.”


He says Southern California produces 75% of the high-end denim in the U.S. that’s sold around the world, employing about 200,000 people in the area., making it the largest U.S. fashion manufacturing hub, said Blank.


One company called Blue Creations of California Inc. does garment washing and dyeing for several upscale brands, and is now planning on buying a second “ozone machine” soon. Those machines use ozone gas to get the stonewashed look without using water, the company says.


Since it purchased its first ozone machine four years ago, the company says it’s cut its water usage by as much as 50%.


“The drought is definitely having an impact on design and on the manufacturing process of garments,” a company rep said.


Some companies that send their denim to Blue Creations have even required that it use the ozone machine in most styles, which only adds up to about $1 more in cost per item for customers.


Levi is also using the ozone machines to replace the bleach it used to use to lighten denim, and is cutting down on how many times it washes jeans as well. Last year, Levi CEO Chip Bergh urged people to stop washing their jeans to cut down on water usage, saying people can just dry and spot clean then instead.


Why the fashion industry is eyeing the California drought impact closely [MarketWatch]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

FCC Looking Into Verizon “Supercookies” That Track Wireless Users’ Behavior

http://ift.tt/1GXxSRJ

For years, the Internet behavior of all Verizon Wireless smartphone customers was being tracked by “supercookies” on their devices that they could not opt out of. After the tracking became public knowledge, the company recently gave its customers a way to shake off the invasive snooping, but that isn’t stopping the FCC from looking into whether the program violated federal guidelines.

The Hill reports that FCC Chair Tom Wheeler recently sent letters [PDF] to various U.S. Senators who had expressed concerns about Verizon supercookies, which append an invisible header to all web traffic coming out of your phone.


The tracker, called a UIDH (unique ID header) is consistent and permanent. Unlike regular site tracking code, clearing out your cookies and upping your privacy settings doesn’t do anything about these. And they build a comprehensive, unique, entirely trackable history of basically everything you’ve ever Googled or visited on your phone.


“[W]e are looking specifically into carriers’ injection of header information and the collection and use of information about their subscribers’ Internet activity,” writes Wheeler. “As you suggest, we will be considering the extent to which our rules and policies relating to consumer privacy, data security, and transparency may be implicated.”


Fiercewireless notes that AT&T engaged in a similar tracking program, but discontinued it in 2014.


Verizon continues to use the supercookies, but now gives users the ability to opt out.


To opt out of the supercookies, Verizon Wireless users can log into the company’s website and change the setting under “Customer Privacy Settings.” Under that category, you’ll want Relevant Mobile Advertising to get rid of the supercookie. You may also want to consider using this opportunity to opt out of the other two listed programs: CPNI settings and Business and Marketing Reports.


Verizon customers can also call 1-866-211-0874 to opt out of the RMA program.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Time Warner Cable Promises Free Internet Speed Boost To Charlotte Customers Before Google Moves In

http://ift.tt/1DQxJmc

The new rule of the internet might well be: where Google goes, competition flows to follow. And so, Time Warner Cable customers in Charlotte are about to see a big boost in internet speeds long before a Fiber rollout comes to their town.

Time Warner Cable announced the upgrade to “TWC Maxx” this week, for customers in the Charlotte area.


The move is similar to what TWC has done in Austin (also a Google Fiber city) and has promised to do in New York and L.A..


Although the name sounds like an “adult” on-demand channel, the “Maxx” plan is basically an upgrade taking the local network to all-digital delivery, instead of analog, which basically frees up bandwidth on the existing network for increasing internet speeds for consumers. According to TWC, internet customers at all subscription levels will see speed increases, ranging up to 300 Mbps for the top tier, appear for free beginning “this summer.”


Granted that 300 Mbps is nowhere near as fast as the gigabit (1000 Mbps) fiber Google is planning to bring to Charlotte, but it is certainly much faster than TWC’s current 50 Mbps ceiling. It also has the extremely beneficial factors of “no additional charge over my current bill” and “I don’t have to do anything to make this happen” going for it for current TWC subscribers. That doesn’t mean bills won’t keep going up over time (because they will), but it sure beats having to sign up for a new service that isn’t even rolled out yet.


TWC’s move feels like one farther step in a path that Google seems to be carving nationwide: a swath of cities seeing improved service, and price parity, in the face of actual competition from internet providers. Most of us live in monopoly, or at best duopoly, territory for broadband providers.


But when Google announces plans to expand into a new market, competitors either strive to dive in first, like Comcast in Atlanta, or drop prices to match, like AT&T in Austin and Kansas City.


In short, even customers who don’t sign up with Google benefit from Google’s entrance into their local markets. Almost as if competition is a real and valuable thing that spurs businesses to offer better service, at better prices, to consumers.


[via DSL Reports]




by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Someone’s Actually Doing Something Good With Leftover Hotel Soaps

http://ift.tt/1af7ecf

Because no one wants to arrive in their hotel room and find used soap awaiting them in the shower, guests are always given a fresh bar upon checking in. While many of those partially used bars surely end up wasted in the trash, one non-profit group is collecting a bunch of leftover hotel soaps to help people in need.

Clean the World started seven years ago, founded by a tech company worker who traveled often. He tells the Associated Press he was hit with a thought one night while staying at a Minneapolis hotel.


“I picked up the phone and called the front desk and asked them what happens to the bar of soap when I’m done using it,” recalled Shawn Seipler, the group’s CEO. “They said they just threw it away.”


He did some research and found that millions of used bars of soap from hotels around the world end up in landfills every day. Meanwhile, people in developing nations are dying from illnesses that could be prevented simply with better access to personal hygiene products.


That’s how Clean the World began, and it has now expanded to include industrial recycling facilities in Las Vegas, Orlando and Hong Kong, places where there are plenty of hotels and used bars of soap can be collected by the thousands. Heck, they’ll even take half-used bottled shampoos and the like as well.


Though people in the U.S. and other developed countries might take hygiene products for granted due to their ubiquity, soap and other items aren’t as plentiful in many other nations.


“A lot of people are surprised to find out that one of the most effective ways to prevent many deaths is actually just hand-washing with soap,” Global Soap director Sam Stephens said. “We’re hoping to make a difference.”


Clean the World announced this week that it’s teaming up with another initiative called Global Soap to step up production, hygiene education and delivery to those in need.


Together, they say they’re now collecting used soap from more than 4,000 hotels, and have delivered about 25 million bars to 99 countries, as well as homeless shelters right here in the U.S.


Here’s how it works: The soap is collected, shredded, run through machines that get rid of any residual bacteria another guest may have left, and then get shaped into new bars and packaged up. People get soap to wash their hands and possibly prevent the spread of common infectious diseases, and everyone wins.


Group hopes recycled hotel soap helps save lives worldwide [Associated Press]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Countdown Clock For Real Net Neutrality Lawsuits Starts Monday

http://ift.tt/18q2ctw

The Net Neutrality rules narrowly approved by the FCC in February and made public in March will finally become part of the Federal Register on Monday, kicking off a 60-day countdown clock for everyone and their Aunt Peg to file a lawsuit to try to block, neuter, or gut the new regulations.

28 U.S.C. § 2344 sets up a 60-day window for “Any party aggrieved” by a finalized federal order to “file a petition to review the order” with a federal appeals court.


With the neutrality rules officially becoming part of the Federal Register on April 13, that means telecom and Internet companies seeking to block them from being enforced have until mid-June to get their petitions in.


While it was a lawsuit brought by Verizon that ultimately gutted the 2010 neutrality rules, it seems unlikely that individual companies will put themselves out there as the ones looking to kill the order.


Instead, as we recently wrote, the more likely candidates for going to war with the FCC are industry trade groups like the wireless industry’s CTIA and the National Cable & Telecommunications Association (NCTA), which primarily represents the cable industry.


It’s expected that the plaintiffs in these cases will contend that the FCC failed to give the industry proper notice in advance of passing the new rules. They will likely argue that the initial draft rules proposed by FCC Chair Tom Wheeler — which included some allowance for controversial Internet “fast lanes,” where ISPs can charge content providers for improved access to end-users — are so different than what was ultimately voted on by the Commission that more time was needed.


There will also be the argument that the FCC lacks statutory authority to reclassify broadband service as telecommunications infrastructure.


When the 2010 rules were gutted, it was because Verizon successfully argued that the FCC could not impose strict neutrality regulations because broadband was not classified the same way that more highly regulated telephone services are. And so the FCC, in creating the new rules, reclassified broadband to recognize its vital importance to the public.


The FCC is within its rights to reclassify broadband; the plaintiffs will have to prove that the reclassification wasn’t justified or that the Commission erred in the process of reclassification.


A pair of early lawsuits have already been filed by a telecom industry trade group and a Texas-based broadband company no one outside of San Antonio has ever heard of. Those petitions were filed within a 10-day window detailed in 28 U.S.C. § 2112(a) just in case the “declaratory ruling” sections of the rule were actually considered finalized on March 12 when the FCC published the full text of the order on its site.


The two lawsuits have since been consolidated into one case that is now before a federal appeals court in D.C., though some legal experts say it’s likely the complaints will be dismissed for being filed too early.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Former TV Pitchman Heading To Trial After Refusing To Admit He Kicked An Owl While Paragliding

http://ift.tt/1yctlvf

Folks from Utah might remember the zany owner of the now defunct Totally Awesome Computer Chain for his series of wacky commercials. The former TV pitchman and paragliding aficionado is back in the spotlight now as he heads to trial, accused of kicking a barn owl in flight while he soared through the air.

Though Dell “Super Dell” Schanze was originally on board for a plea deal in the case, that fell through as he failed to admit that he’d knowingly harassed the owl in February or March of 2011, reports the Associated Press. In order to have a plea deal, he’d have to acknowledge that he’d done so, as a U.S. District judge pointed out to him.


But he said he refused to admit to a crime that he said would make him appear to be the kind of awful person who goes around kicking avians.


“Do you not see the conundrum?” Schanze told the judge. “I’m not an evil, horrible guy and I’m not going to lie.”


The judge replied that no one was accusing him of being evil, and that he didn’t have to accept the plea deal if he didn’t want to.


After Schanze, who’s facing a misdemeanor charge charge of knowingly using an aircraft to harass wildlife and pursuing a migratory bird, again refused to admit to booting the owl, the judge ordered the case to go to trial April 20.


The charges were filed in October after a federal investigation into a video posted online that seems to show a paragalider near Utah Lake kicking an owl in flight and then bragging about it.


Schanze closed his computer store chain in 2006 amid slow sales and legal trouble. This isn’t his first brush with the law over paragliding activities — he was charged in 2006 with disorderly conduct after buzzing traffic during rush hour, and received a $300 fine. A fan paid that off.


In 2011, he was arrested in Oregon after a video appeared to show him illegally jumping off the 125-foot-tall Astoria Column with a parachute.


Here’s a taste of his past TV work:



Former TV pitchman will go to trial in owl harassment case [Associated Press]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

FTC Temporarily Halts Deceptive Practices Of Mortgage Relief Operation

http://ift.tt/1EheKzT

The Federal Trade Commission continued its crackdown of deceptive mortgage relief companies this week as a federal court granted the agency’s request to temporarily halt a Los Angeles-based company that charged consumers excessive upfront fees for services they never performed.


The FTC announced today that a court granted an order against Wealth Educators, Inc. and its president for deceiving consumers with costly relief programs.


According to the FTC complaint [PDF], since at least October 2012 Wealth Educators – operating under several names including Legal Educators USA & Co., Stargate Mutual & Associates, Providence Financial Advocates, and Providence Financial Audits – used outbound telemarketing and websites to deceptively pitch their programs to consumers in need of mortgage help.


Many of the targeted consumers were homeowners in financial trouble, whom the company promised it could help by lowering their monthly mortgage payment, lowering their mortgage interest rate, or obtaining loan modification or restructuring.


The company’s website advertised Wealth Educators as ““America’s Leading Home Preservation Legal Services,” saying that it would “act on behalf of homeowners to work with your lender and avoid the lengthy and costly process of foreclosure and the stressful act of eviction that follows.”


Wealth Educators allegedly charged consumers an up-front fee ranging from $1,000 to $5,000, promising the money would be fully refunded if the company didn’t provide the promised relief.


Despite promises of a refund, consumers tell the FTC that when they attempted to get their money back from the company they were unable to do so.


The FTC claims that while Wealth Educators told many consumers they could obtain a loan modification, typically through a government-sponsored program, and even quoted a specific amount consumers’ mortgage payments would be reduced, the company often did not provide the expected relief.


Additionally, the complaint claims that Wealth Educators advised consumers to stop communicating with their lenders, delaying them from discovering that Wealth Educators had not obtained the promised mortgage relief.


The FTC charges that Wealth Educators violated the FTC Act and the Mortgage Assistance Relief Services (MARS) Rule, now known as Regulation O, which bans mortgage foreclosure rescue and loan modification service providers from collecting fees until homeowners have a written offer from their lender or servicer that they deem acceptable.


In addition to halting the company’s activities, the FTC seeks to freeze its assets to ensure the preservation of funds for possible consumer redress.


Court Temporarily Halts Company From Offering Mortgage Relief Services [FTC]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

http://ift.tt/1Ds0wLX

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




(CJ Pietri">CJ Pietri)

(<a href="CJ Pietri“>CJ Pietri)










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

Comcast Tries To Refute Philly Customer Service Study, Does About As Good A Job As You’d Expect

http://ift.tt/1Hsmn9q

Yesterday, Philadelphia finally got around to releasing the results of a long-in-the-works Comcast customer service survey of city residents, and the results weren’t very favorable for the cable company. Of course, Comcast, which had more than a month to review the report before it was made public, is now trying to discredit it, saying the consultants that put it together should have asked Comcast — and not the citizens of Philadelphia — for accurate data about customer service.

In a blog post inexplicably titled “A Philadelphia Love Story,” Comcast’s Exec VP David Cohen — who was the Chief of Staff for then-Mayor Ed Rendell the last time Comcast’s franchise agreement came up for renewal — writes that “We appreciate some of the positive conclusions in the consultant’s report [Ed. note: No duh], but overall believe many of the findings are inaccurate, over-stated, or misleading, and we will deliver comprehensive proof of those facts to the City.”


Cohen actually complains that the consultants hired to do the report chose to speak to actual Philadelphia residents about their Comcast experience rather than rely on data from the company.


“[The consultants] never contacted Comcast to solicit objective, verifiable data,” states the blog post, “resulting in conclusions that are not based on easily available and decisive data, and that are simply untrue.”


What’s curious is which statistics from the survey Cohen cherry-picks to complain about.


He claims that the 15% of survey respondents who said they got a busy signal while trying to call Comcast are lying, because Comcast’s in-house data puts it at only .05%.


As for the 61% of people whose calls weren’t answered within 30 seconds, Cohen claims that Comcast has this down to less than 10%, putting it in compliance with the FCC customer service standard.


But that’s it.


Sure, Cohen claims that “Similar discrepancies can be found in virtually all aspects of the consultant’s findings and report,” but why not single them out? If you’re going to debunk something, go all the way.


Which is why we note that Cohen doesn’t dispute the fact that Philadelphia had the lowest customer satisfaction level of all six markets surveyed by the consultants in the last six years, while also having the highest rates for service in those markets.


The Comcast post doesn’t take issue with the fact that nearly 2/3 of Philly subscribers had to call customer service in the previous year, or that billing issues were the top reason for calling the company.


It doesn’t try to explain away why 99% of the 1,759 written comments on the survey were unfavorable, with complaints about price hikes, bad customer service, slow and expensive Internet, and Comcast’s regional monopoly dominating those comments.


Whatever the actual data for busy signals and customers put on hold, the fact remains that a large portion of Philadelphia residents are unhappy with Comcast and the lack of options available.


If Comcast truly loved its home town, then it will have to do a better job of explaining why it chose Atlanta for the launch of its ultra-high-speed 2Gb fiber service over Philadelphia, which has the third-lowest level of broadband penetration among large American cities.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Sprint Opening For Business Inside 1,435 RadioShack Stores Today

http://ift.tt/1DrZMX7
A rendering of what the new SprintShack store branding could look like.

A rendering of what the new SprintShack store branding could look like.



Things move fast when you’re in the newlywed phase, and Sprint is no exception: Only a few weeks after Standard General acquired 1,740 RadioShack stores at a bankruptcy auction, Sprint will be opening stores inside 1,435 RadioShack locations today. Soon, those stores will bear new co-branded Sprint-RadioShack signage.

The move will more than double Sprint’s retail locations, the company says in a press release. No existing Sprint stores will be closed, a spokesman tells FierceWireless, “since we picked these locations based on among other things our existing store footprint.”


Before teaming up with RadioShack, Sprint had about 1,100 company-owned retail stores, compared to AT&T’s more than 2,000 retail locations and Verizon Wireless’ roughly 1,700 stores (not including a large amount of other dealers).


This won’t necessarily mean every single Radio Shack store slated for change will get a Sprint makeover today. Instead, Sprint is planning to have that done in the second half of the year.


“The rebranding and build-out of the store-in-a-store concept will take some time to be complete in all the stores and we will be doing that in waves,” a Sprint spokesman Scott Sloat told FierceWireless.


The stores-within-the-stores will take up about 1/3 of each location’s footprint, where Sprint’s retail employees will sell phones and service. Sprint is paying for overhead costs, distribute commission on its merchandise and pitch in with advertising. At most of those co-branded stores, Sprint’s logo will be more prominent than RadioShack’s.


Sprint set to open 1,435 co-branded locations with RadioShack tomorrow [FierceWireless]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist