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Friday, August 28, 2015

eBay No Longer Allows 2 Non-PayPal Payment Processors After Divorce From eBay

http://ift.tt/1D6oyxE eBay and PayPal have now completed their divorce, and one of the terms that they agreed to is that eBay still has to process a large number of its payments using PayPal. That could be the reason why eBay is eliminating competitors ProPay and Skrill from the payment options for shoppers and for sellers.

eCommerceBytes points out that the timing is interesting, since PayPal also happened to raise fees for sellers who process more than $3,000 per month in payments using the service

In their e-mail to sellers about the change, eBay said that the two services had very few users, which means that perhaps letting buyers use them isn’t worth the bother for the company anymore. However, eBay does have an incentive to make sure that as many online payments as possible come from PayPal.

That’s part of the terms of the companies’ split: 80% of payments through the site must come through PayPal, or eBay will owe its former partner money. “eBay will be incentivized to grow new users and increase PayPal penetration rates through referral services and penetration rate payments,” the company explained in a statement earlier this year. eBay aso receives a bonus from PayPal if more than 80% of sales come through PayPal.

eBay Bans Sellers from Offering PayPal Rivals [eCommerceBytes]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Burger King Joins Nabisco Brand Party, Tries Chips Ahoy Milkshake

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Fast-food and coffee chains want to serve up drinks and desserts that are flavored like chocolate chip cookies, but these aren’t just any old chocolate chip cookies. No, chains including Dunkin’ Donuts, Dairy Queen, and now Burger King are selling Chips Ahoy-branded items in their restaurants, a confusing bit of cross-branding.

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A new offering from Burger King is even stranger. It may be in the testing phase, and was spotted in Visalia, California. It combines two flavors to create the Chips Ahoy S’mores Milkshake. What is so s’morey about it isn’t entirely clear, unless the ice cream is supposed to be marshmallow-flavored. The reader who reported its existence to The Impulsive Buy says that it consists of…crumbled-up chocolate chip cookies and ice creamy goodness, with whipped topping.

There are no graham crackers in sight, and no chocolate other than the chips. On the other hand, now I want to try pressing a toasted marshmallow between two cookies. Someone find me a campfire.

FAST FOOD NEWS: Burger King Chips Ahoy S’mores Shake [The Impulsive Buy]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Amazon Lets Third-Party Merchants Limit Where They’ll Ship Prime Items For Free

http://ift.tt/1N0ZkVt Amazon’s Prime program includes third-party merchants, whose shops let the online Everything Store expand its inventory without building more warehouse space. While the company is experimenting with making these merchants part of the Prime program for items that already have free shipping, However, some of these merchants get to limit how far they will ship an item for free.

This is logical for smaller companies that don’t have the same bargaining power with the U.S. Postal Service and private carriers as Amazon, and who simply don’t want to subsidize cross-country two-day shipping. The Wall Street Journal reports that sellers can define which geographic regions they’re willing to provide free Prime shipping for, and customers in other areas pay standard shipping fees.

Another Amazon shipping experiment that the WSJ learned about from an unnamed source is called “Amazon Day,” a service that would combine all of a household’s Amazon orders on the same day of the week. This would cut back on shipping costs for Amazon, which doesn’t really want to send multiple items in multiple packages to the same Prime-addicted house.

The Amazon Day (not to be confused with Prime Day) idea is still being “studied” though, and not in the testing phase yet.

In New Amazon Prime Program, Not All Goods Ship for Free [Wall Street Journal]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

American Airlines Will Honor Super Low “Mistake Fares” That Discounted Flights Up To 90%

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Unlike its fellow major carrier United Airlines, American Airlines says it will honor super cheap fares some lucky customers nabbed last week due to a glitch in its booking system.

Airline Reporter points to a post from Aug. 20 on Flyertalk that shared the workaround with fellow customers.

The fares were achieved in part by changing the country of origin to Brazil: One Flyertalk user posted a screenshot of a round-trip business class ticket on American from Sao Paulo to Hong Kong for R$1,255 Brazilian Reals (BRL), or approximately $350 U.S. dollars. Usually that fare would cost R$12,000 or about $3,350 in U.S. currency.

It’s thought that perhaps the error was caused by transposed currency values when the data was entered, causing the U.S. dollar to be highly overvalued against BRLs. Currently, R$1.00 is about $0.29 U.S. Switch those two around and bang, you’ve got a discount.

American apparently had a few mistake airfares squeak through on a variety of international routes with ridiculous discounts on tickets, though it’s unclear exactly how many customers got away with it. The airline caught the slip quickly, but those that managed to pull a fast one will be able to fly for a tenth of the price.

American confirmed in a statement to Airline Reproter that it “will honor mispriced fares that were booked last week,” adding that it hopes “customers enjoy their experience with American and book with us again in the future.”

This stands in stark contrast to United, which blamed a software glitch for allowing travelers to get cheap fares by setting the reservation site to Denmark and then refused to honor those fares. Its decision was backed by the Department of Transportation, which said United was off the hook because those fares weren’t meant for U.S. citizens in the first place.

The DOT said then that its policy is to not enforce the prohibition against post-purchase price increases “when the fare offer is not marketed to consumers in the United States.”

Even more reason to enjoy that flight, you lucky folks.

American Airlines Mistakenly Discounts Airfare by 90% – Then What? [Airline Reporter]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Court Rules NSA Phone Data Collection That Is Now Changing Anyway Is Still Legal

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After several years of back-and-forth rulings, an appeals court in Washington, D.C. has ruled today that the NSA’s controversial bulk phone data collection program can indeed continue… at least until November, when it gets shut down anyway because Congress changed the law in June.

If you’re feeling a bit confused by what is or isn’t legal, there’s a good reason for that: this case has been going back and forth for years. And while it’s been doing so, the law itself has changed.

This particular legal saga began when the ACLU and others filed a lawsuit against the NSA. In December, 2013, a U.S. District Court judge dismissed the lawsuit, finding that the bulk phone data surveillance program did not violate any existing law.

The ACLU appealed. In May, 2015, an appellate court vacated the ruling from the first judge, reinstating the ACLU’s lawsuit and kicking it back down to the lower court. The appeals court found that the NSA’s actions did outstrip the scope permitted to it by law.

Today’s ruling is the third round in that same lawsuit. This time, an appeals court has once again kicked the suit back. The court found that, “unlike some others who have brought legal challenges to the bulk collection program, plaintiffs lack direct evidence that records involving their calls have actually been collected.” Without that evidence, the plaintiffs have no standing to sue, therefore, and the original injunction is lifted.

But between the second and third go-rounds in the lawsuit, the law itself changed. Congress passed the USA FREEDOM bill in June. The amended law does not end NSA surveillance programs, but it does curtail them a bit. The bulk phone data collection that the NSA has done under Sec. 215 of the Patriot Act is now ended… and replaced with a slightly different phone data collection program.

Or at least, it will be. The law changed only a matter of weeks ago, and the wheels of bureaucracy do not spin so fast. The transition away from the existing bulk phone data collection program isn’t scheduled to be complete until November. And so until then, the NSA can indeed continue the old program thanks to today’s ruling.

A D.C. appeals court has lifted an injunction against the NSA phone call records program [Washington Post]


by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Wayback Burgers, Denny’s Vie For The Affection Of Burger King After McDonald’s Turned A Cold Shoulder

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After an offer to “settle the beef” in the name of raising awareness for Peace Day was unceremoniously shot down by McDonald’s with a rather passive-aggressive note, Burger King has received a proposal – or two – of its own to consider.

Would you consider ordering a Slampper or a Whipple Whipple next time you’re at Burger King? Those two collaborations could certainly be making an appearance on the menu board if the company accepts a proposal from either Denny’s or Wayback Burgers, respectively.

Fortune reports that just days after McDonald’s shot down The King’s call for a truce – and the creation of something called the McWhopper – smaller burger chain Wayback Burger made its love for Burger King known, offering to take over the Golden Arches’ spot in the proposed collaboration.

The Connecticut-based chain – which operates around 100 locations in the U.S. and overseas – extended an olive branch to Burger King, while also taking a jab at McDonald’s rejection.

“Wayback Burgers would be happy to take Burger King up on its offer to partner to raise money for UNICEF surrounding International Day of Peace,” Wayback Burgers President John Eucalitto said in a company statement. “Our nine patty burger, The Triple Triple, could be a great vehicle to work with. Perhaps we could create the Whiple Whiple. Besides, wouldn’t Burger King prefer to partner with a fresh and innovative brand that is on the rise? Either way, we hope to hear from you.”

While Burger King’s first alternative proposal comes from a smaller burger chain, the second is from an entirely different genre of restaurant, Adweek reports.

Not one to shy away from a little fun on social media, national diner chain Denny’s quickly jumped into the collaboration fray suggesting several mash-ups of menu items with Burger King, including: the Slampper, the Whammper and the Whoppaslamus-rex.

So far, Burger King hasn’t responded to the offers from either Wayback Burgers or Denny’s, but we wouldn’t be surprised if the fast food chain is taking its times deciding between its suitors.

Move over McDonald’s, Wayback Burgers wants to partner with Burger King [Fortune]
Denny’s Offers to Partner With Burger King, Since McDonald’s Is Being a McChicken [AdWeek]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Time Warner CEO Isn’t Worried About Cable TV’s Fate: “Netflix Is Good, But Not That Good”

http://ift.tt/1PDrFyH While cable companies’ investors might be shaking in their boots whenever the word “Netflix” pops up, the streaming video service isn’t the giant slayer it’s been made out to be — at least according to Time Warner Inc. Jeff Bewkes, who says his HBO is better than Netflix.

Bewkes spoke at a cable conference in Amsterdam yesterday, saying investors don’t need to freak out as customers continue cutting cords and leaving cable providers for services like Netflix, reports Bloomberg.

“Netflix is good, but not that good,” Bewkes said. “The pessimism in the market about the sector is overdone — our industry will figure out how to take content and sell it on demand.”

It’s true that they’re making an effort: traditional broadcast and cable networks like HBO, Showtime, Starz and CBS have all hopped on the streaming bandwagon recently. But most of the pay-TV competition isn’t coming from cable, it’s coming from Netflix (with 65 million subscribers) and the likes of PlayStation and Dish, both of which offer streaming content without a cable contract.

Bewkes’ reassurances come on the heels of a slew of disappointing second-quarter earnings reported earlier this month by companies like Time Warner, Discovery Communications, and the biggest player, Disney, which has continually had to defend its high-cost sports behemoth ESPN.

The Time Warner CEO says his company doesn’t need acquisitions to grow, and instead is just going to sit back and distribute its HBO’s video-on-demand service HBO Now, which has been thriving on the backs of popular shows like Game of Thrones and True Detective, as well as expanding the service to more countries.

These comments aren’t all that different from those made by Comcast’s David L. Cohen at an industry conference in July, who, while admitting that cord-cutting is partly the fault of cable companies who “have made video too expensive,” noted that traditional cable companies won’t ever entirely go away. In fact, Netflix relies on some of those same cable companies to beam its service to customers over the Internet.

“Remember, you can’t get Netflix without broadband service,” Cohen said, which is good for Comcast as it’s a broadband provider as well as a company.

Netflix also needs companies like Comcast and Time Warner, both which create original programming that could at some point, ostensibly, be licensed for viewing through Netflix.

Bewkes Says TV Can Withstand `Not That Good’ Netflix [Bloomberg]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Fake Boss Wire Transfer Scammers Have Now Stolen $1.2 Billion From Companies

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fakemegAll year, we’ve been sharing information about a scam hitting companies all over the world, where very clever and resourceful scammers impersonate bosses and extract money on false pretenses. The best protection against this kind of fraud is education, and while law enforcement are doing their best to let people know about the scam, the number of victims is only increasing, and law enforcement estimates that the scammers have drained $1.2 billion worldwide from businesses’ bank accounts.

The scam itself is very simple: our fake e-mail up top sums up the basics. A scammer e-mails an employee, pretending to be the CEO, boss, or other person in charge. They ask for a certain amount to be transferred to an imaginary supplier.

While the return address will appear real, the actual domain name that the message comes from and that the user replies to will be a fake version that the scammer has registered: perhaps bossmeg@c0nsumerist.com or consumeri5t.com.

Scammers are becoming more sophisticated, and the FBI now warns companies to keep information like when your company’s bosses plan to travel off public websites and social media, since the premise of these e-mails is usually that the person requesting a wire transfer is out of town.

BUSINESS EMAIL COMPROMISE [FBI] (via Krebs on Security)


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Bank Of America Reportedly Settles Overtime Lawsuit For $36 Million

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When working a few extra hours, you have a reasonable expectation to be compensated for that time. Unfortunately, that doesn’t always happen, which was the case for nearly 400 employees of Bank of America who sued the company alleging it failed to pay them overtime. Now, the company has agreed to settle the case, providing $36 million to the wronged employees.

The San Francisco Business Times reports that a lawyer representing the 365 current and former employees announced the settlement just days before the case was set to go to trial on Aug. 31.

“Employers take grave risks by cutting corners, and not fairly compensating their employees in tune with state and federal law,” the lawyer says.

The settlement, which must still be approved by the court, stems from an April 2013 lawsuit that alleged Bank of America and its subsidiary Landsafe Appraisal Services incorrectly applied “administrative” and “professional” exemptions to residential staff appraisers.

According to the suit, employees – primarily based in Northern California – regularly worked form 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. without overtime compensation from either company.

The case illustrated how companies often use in-house overtime rules that differ from federal guidelines, the Business Times reports.

A portion of the nationwide, class action lawsuit was previously settled for $5.8 million.

Bank of America to pay $36 million in California overtime infraction case [San Francisco Business Times]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Hermès Says It’s Talking With Jane Birkin About Crocodile Leather Used In Namesake HandBags

http://ift.tt/1Ui0F9m If you’ve got a product named after you, should you be able to control how that item is made? Actress Jane Birkin is certainly trying to have her say, telling the company to take her name off the luxury handbag named after her because they’re made from crocodiles who are inhumanely slaughtered.

Hermès International SCA says it’s holding talks with Birkin, noting that it was also shocked by an animal-rights group’s video showing reptiles who were still alive and moving after being shot by a bolt gun at a Texas farm, Hermès Chief Executive Officer Axel Dumas said, according to a report from Bloomberg.

“We agree that the best international rules should be applied in our crocodile farms,” Dumas said at an earnings presentation in Paris. Hermès is making an effort to show Birkin that its practices are often better than others, though it’s unclear what that means.

Birkin demanded her name be removed from the bags, which sell for anywhere from $9,400 to $68,000, after watching the footage in July. She told Hermès to rename the bags until better practices replace the “cruel” methods used at some slaughtering facilities. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals said some workers at the farm were told to cut into 500 conscious alligators with knives when the bolt gun didn’t work, among other alleged mistreatment.

Hermès has pledged to penalize any breach of its animal welfare code, and said it was investigating the farm and that the crocodile skins it receives from that supplier — which it does not own — aren’t used for Birkin bags.

Hermès Holds Talks With Actress Jane Birkin Following Complaint [Bloomberg]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Woman Says Walmart Tech Totaled Her Car, Company’s Effort To Make It Right Falls Short

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A Texas woman who took her car to her local Walmart’s service center for a routine oil change says a technician totaled the vehicle and now the company isn’t offering her a fair settlement, leaving her stranded and her business suffering.

NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth Investigates took a look at the case this week after the woman claimed the company continues to give her the run-around nearly two weeks after the incident occurred.

The ordeal began last month when the woman brought her SUV to Walmart’s service center for an oil change. A technician for the company totaled the car when he drove it into a wall to avoid hitting another person after the throttle reportedly became stuck.

While the retailer’s insurance company offered to pay the woman $3,200 – the estimated value of her 1998 Ford Expedition – and cover costs for a rental car, the woman says the deal isn’t enough and the company has yet to cover rental fees, leaving her in a bind.

The woman says the $3,200 won’t be enough to cover the cost of a new, dependable used SUV and it doesn’t account for the money her company has lost while she’s been without a vehicle.

As a florist, the woman says she relies on her SUV to make 15 to 20 deliveries a day.

Because there’s been confusion regarding the retailer’s promise to cover the cost of a rental vehicle during the two-week investigation into the accident, the woman has had to hire someone else to make deliveries, or borrow a vehicle from a friend.

“I’ve had to turn away deliveries because I couldn’t go that far or send somebody that far to deliver,” she tells the station.

While Walmart’s insurer has completed its investigation, the woman says it’s far from over.

In fact, she said her conversation with the insurance rep made it seem as if the company still hadn’t come to a conclusion on why the incident happened.

Since the conclusion of the investigation, the woman says an insurer has agreed to pay $140 for a tow charge and a day’s rental fee. But the woman says that’s simply not enough as her costs continue to mount.

A rep for the company says he’d need to get approve for compensating her for additional costs.

“I just need to get a vehicle. I need for them to reimburse me for the time and money that I’m out of, you know, and just make it right,” the woman says.

When NBC 5 Investigates contacted Walmart about the rental car issues and the compensation offer, the company declined to answer questions, instead saying, “We always want to take care of our customers as quickly as possible and we’re pleased this has been resolved.”

According to NBC 5 Investigates the company’s insurer is now considering further compensation.

Wal-Mart Offers Woman $3,200 After Totaling Her Car [NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Class Action Suit Alleges Nestle Benefits From Fishing Vessel Slavery To Make Fancy Feast

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If they knew, cats would probably prefer to catch their own fish. (eren {sea+prairie})

Last week, we shared the news that a Costco customer had filed a class action lawsuit against the warehouse retailer, claiming that they sell shrimp benefiting from slave labor. Now cat owners have filed a similar lawsuit against Nestle, parent company of Fancy Feast cat food, claiming that the company uses mistreated and enslaved workers to catch fish destined for cat food cans.

Lawsuits regarding the treatment of workers in the seafood industry seem to have their roots in a recent New York Times investigative report about the terrible conditions for workers on Thai vessels that catch forage fish far from the shore. These small fish become food for our pets, for meat animals like pigs, and for the fish being raised on seafood farms.

The ships operate so far from land that mistreatment of workers is a serious problem: the Thai government isn’t even aware that some of the vessels exist. Non-governmental organizations and even the U.S. Department of Labor agree that seafood imported from Thailand is likely to benefit from slave labor at least in part.

“Knowing that the much of the fish sold in Nestlé’s pet food is likely the product of
slave labor is material to consumers not wishing to support slave labor with their purchasing power,” the plaintiff’s attorneys say in the initial complaint. As much as cat owners joke about being enslaved by their pets, the cats themselves probably wouldn’t appreciate it, either.

Class Action Filed against Nestlé for Slave Labor, Human Trafficking Used to Produce Top-Selling Pet Food [Hagens Berman]
‘SEA SLAVES’: THE HUMAN MISERY THAT FEEDS PETS AND LIVESTOCK [New York Times]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

10 Things We Learned About The Structured Settlement Purchase Industry

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Report after report finds that payday lenders, auto title loan firms and pension advance operations unfairly target vulnerable consumers with high fees and questionable terms, but a new investigative piece from The Washington Post shows that are some lesser-known, but very lucrative players offering quick cash to vulnerable consumers: structured settlement purchasing companies.

The Washington Post details how this industry has settled into impoverished areas of Maryland, buying hundreds of thousands of dollars in structured settlement payments for pennies on the dollar, sometimes with very negative financial outcomes for struggling, disabled consumers.

Here’s how it works: when a consumer sues a company or an individual and wins their case, they are often provided some kind of settlement.

Traditionally, these settlements are paid in an immediate lump sum. But in some cases, a structured settlement may be agreed upon. The consumer then receives regular payments for a set time period. Such settlements can be structured to last decades, and for the victims of childhood lead poisoning, an injury that can cause life-long mental impairment, a structured settlement can provide long-term stability.

They may sound uncommon, but these structured settlements are big business. Insurance companies have committed an estimated $350 billion to the settlements since 1975.

As a result, a secondary market has sprung up in which firms compete to purchase the rights to those payments in exchange for providing a cash lump sum that is less than the total value the consumer would be entitled to for the life of the settlement.

Those who support this market contend the companies provide needed funds to help cash-strapped people buy homes, go to schools and pay medical bills. But consumer advocates argue the companies are turning a profit at the expensive of very vulnerable populations.

We really recommend that you head over and read the entire report from the Post, but here are the 10 things we learned from the exposé:

1. Though the cause of the phenomenon is in dispute, Baltimore seems to have become a something of a hotbed for companies seeking to buy structured settlements from disabled persons – especially those affected by childhood lead poisoning. Such injuries can lead to life-long mental impairment, which may affect the consumers’ ability to understand the deals they are making with structured settlement buyers.

2. While Maryland signed the Structured Settlement Protection Act into effect in 2000 to better protect consumers, critics say the measure is failing, with companies finding loopholes that put consumers at risk. The bill outlines several requirements that must be met before payments can be signed away, including a stipulation that sellers speak to an independent advisor before selling their payments. But, as the Post shows, these meetings sometimes provide little help to the seller.

3. One such independent advisor tells the Post that he generally doesn’t go “over the terms of the contract. That wasn’t my function. I don’t think any of the other lawyers do that, or else they would never get any repeat business.” His advising was mostly done over the phone and took less than a minute.

The Post reports that some independent advisors, while they don’t work for a purchasing company, often deal with the same businesses over and over, cultivating close relationships. Critics say this presents a conflict of interest that puts consumers at risk.

4. While there are several settlement purchasing companies in the state and across the U.S., the Post focuses on one that appears to operating heavily in Baltimore: Access Funding.

A review of court records, interviews with industry insiders and victims, found that since 2013 Access Funding has filed nearly 200 structured settlement purchases in Maryland. A majority of those cases involved victims of lead poisoning. In all, the sample of cases reviewed by the Post found Access Funding petitioned to purchase $6.9 million worth of future payments for just $1.7 million.

5. In 52 of those deals, the Post found that on average Access Funding paid just 33-cents on the present value of a dollar, or sometimes less. In one case a 24-year-old lead victim sold nearly $327,000 worth of payments for less than $16,200 — or about 9-cents on the dollar.

6. Another example includes an entire family that had been awarded settlements related to lead paint poisoning. In all, the family relinquished $435,000 of their settlement for about $54,000 – or less than 20-cents on the dollar – to Access Funding.

7. Perhaps the most heartbreaking case reported by the Post is that of Vincent, a 25-year-old who grew up in a house that doctors called a “lead pit,” with the level of lead in his blood stream often being three times that of what is considered “elevated.” One medical professional couldn’t determine whether the man was “severely disabled” or just “generally disabled” as a result.

As with other examples cited by the Post, the man sold some of his payments to Access Funding. According to the Post, in an affidavit written by the company and signed by the man in 2013, he sold $90,000 of his settlement for $26,000 to “purchase a vehicle.” The money, the affidavit said, would also be used to “look for work and also need furniture, clothes, school supplies for my young daughter.” But the man doesn’t have a daughter, he has a son. And he doesn’t have a driver’s license.

After that settlement, the man attempted to complete two other sales, one that was eventually dismissed. As with the previous deals, the affidavits included perplexing statements, such as the man didn’t want to incur costs of renting any longer, or that he wanted to make a purchase of a home. However, he had just purchased a home and hadn’t needed to pay rent for months.

In all, he was willing to let go $663,000 of his lead paint settlement for just $50,000. When asked about the settlements by a Post reporter, the man asked “what settlement.”

8. While all of these deals must receive the approval of a court, the Post points out that Maryland law doesn’t require the settlement recipient to show up in court. As a result, many cases take just minutes to become finalized. In fact, one judge has overseen 160 petitions from Access Funding, approving the requests almost 90% of the time.

9. An executive for Access Funding defended the company’s affidavits and petitions.

“What we do is provide equity for those people to buy homes,” he said, noting that the company had no reason to think those who had signed onto deals were impaired or unable to understand what they were doing.

The man says the company doesn’t target lead victims and that Baltimore’s glut of lead-paint lawsuits has artificially inflated the company’s business in the city. Still, he tells the Post that he would welcome stricter legislation and oversight, simply so the company can secure themselves “in the future from any potential questions like this again, so we can say, ‘No, that’s not us.’”

10. Lawmakers are attempting to put an end to these situations by calling for tighter restrictions on the structured settlement purchasing industry. The Post reports that following its exposé on the industry, Members of the House of Delegates and Attorney General ­Brian E. Frosh pressed for increased scrutiny of these transactions.

How companies make millions off lead-poisoned, poor blacks [The Washington Post]
Md. lawmakers want tougher legislation for settlement purchases [The Washington Post]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Ten ISPs Sign On With FCC Fun, Will Expand Rural Broadband To Over 7M Customers In 45 States

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The FCC's map of 25 Mbps broadband deployment as of January, 2015. Yellow areas are served; blue are unserved.

The FCC’s map of 25 Mbps broadband deployment as of January, 2015. Yellow areas are served; blue are unserved.


While those of us who live in or near the country’s medium and large cities see slow but eventual improvements in broadband service and sometimes even some competition, the same is not true for millions of Americans who live in the more rural parts of the country. Running wires outside of the ‘burbs costs more money than it brings in, so carriers aren’t keen to do it without a boost. And that’s where the FCC’s Connect America fund comes in.

The Fund is a big pile of money that broadband carriers can tap into for funds to kickstart their own investments in bringing broadband to underserved rural markets. This week was the deadline for businesses to say if they’re going to take the money and participate or not, and the result is good news for consumers, 7.3 million of whom should be getting some service sometime soon.

The companies that are taking funds from the Connect America Fund to extend rural broadband coverage.

The companies that are taking funds from the Connect America Fund to extend rural broadband coverage.

The funds will be used in 45 states as well as the Northern Mariana Islands, a U.S. territory. (States without participating carriers include Alaska, Delaware, Maryland, Rhode Island, and Wyoming.)

The funding recurs annually, and so the total amount invested from the fund will be approximately $9 billion over the next six years.

“Today we are taking a significant step forward in narrowing the rural-urban digital divide,” FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said in a statement. “Access to modern broadband is critical to life in today’s society. The financial support provided by American ratepayers through the Connect America program is an investment in the future of our rural communities that will pay dividends for all Americans for years to come.”

In the most recent Broadband Progress Report, the FCC found that when it comes to rural areas and tribal lands, broadband is, well, not progressing. Nearly a third of Americans in rural areas lack access even to 10 Mbps broadband, let alone the new 25 Mbps standard the FCC adopted with that report.

The businesses tapping the Connect America Fund have certain benchmarks to meet over the next five years, with a goal of having broadband built out to 100% of the funded locations by the end of 2020.


by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Ashley Madison CEO Steps Down In Wake Of Hacking Scandal

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ashleymadison-580x370Less than two weeks after hackers published two big data dumps full of material stolen from Ashley Madison, a dating website for cheaters, its parent company Avid Life Media announced that effective today, CEO Noel Biderman will be stepping down from his position and is no longer with the company.

In the wake of Biderman’s departure — which happened “in mutual agreement” with Avid — the company says it’ll be led by the existing senior management team.

“This change is in the best interest of the company and allows us to continue to provide support to our members and dedicated employees,” Avid says in a statement. “We are steadfast in our commitment to our customer base.”

In the first AshleyMadison.com data dump on Aug. 19, hackers released 10GB worth of information, affecting up to 30 million of the site’s users. Avid initially suggested that the dump was a fake (though it’s since been shown to be real), which might have prompted the second, even larger data dump of 19GB worth of information on Aug. 20. That also included 13GB worth of email that was apparently both from and to Biderman.

“We are actively adjusting to the attack on our business and members’ privacy by criminals. We will continue to provide access to our unique platforms for our worldwide members,” Avid says in the statement, adding that the company is cooperating with international law enforcement to find those responsible for the hack.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

California Senate Approves Bill To Regulate E-Cigarettes Like Traditional Tobacco Products

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ecigEight months after the California Department of Health declared that e-cigarettes were a threat to public health, the state’s lawmakers are taking steps to ensure the devices are regulated much like their traditional counterparts.

The California State Senate on Thursday passed several bills that would put more regulations on the use and sale of electronic cigarettes, similar to the way in which traditional tobacco products are regulated in the state, Reuters reports.

Among that measure’s provisions are bans on where the devices could be used – essentially prohibiting their use in any places that cigarettes are already banned – and stricter packaging requirements, specifically ensuring they are sold in child-resistant packages.

Additionally, the bill would require businesses to obtain a special license to sell the products, much like they must do with traditional tobacco items.

According to the Health Department’s report earlier this year, the number of stores peddling e-cigs quadrupled between 2011 and 2013 and now includes more than 7,000 retailers.

It also pointed to rising use among the younger generations, saying it could help to addict future generations to nicotine. Citing a state survey of 430,000 middle and high school students in 2013, it points out that 6.3% of seventh-graders, 12.4% of ninth-graders and 14.3% of 11th graders had used e-cigarettes in the past 30 days.

The bill, which passed the Senate on a 25-12 vote, must still get approval from the State Assembly before it could become law. A similar measure previously passed the Senate but later died in an Assembly committee, Reuters reports.

Another measure approved by the Senate on Thursday would increase the legal age to buy cigarettes to 21 from 18. That bill was also re-introduced recently after failing earlier this year.

The flurry of bills regulating e-cigarettes could be a direct response to the Health Department’s report meant to urge lawmakers to regulate the devices and make residents aware of the health risk associated with vaping.

The report found that e-cigarettes generally contain nicotine, drawn into the lungs after it is heated in a flavored liquid – sometimes in flavors like cotton candy and an assortment of fruits that might be appealing to younger consumers. The vapor used in the devices has also been found to contain some formaldehyde and other chemicals, such as benzene and acetaldehyde.

Thus far, California is the biggest state to take such a stance against e-cigarettes, with Alaska as the only other state with a public-education campaign warning about their dangers.

Advocates of the e-cigarette industry have, of course, opposed the California bills and health reports.

Reuters reports that many makers and distributors of the products continue to opine that the devices are a safer alternative to smoking.

Bill to regulate e-cigarettes clears California legislative hurdle [Reuters]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Google Chrome Will Block Flash Ads, Auto-Playing Videos Starting Sept. 1

http://ift.tt/1bKwRCT If you hate the blast of noise and music that hits your ears every time an auto-playing video unexpectedly goes off on a web page you’ve just opened, rejoice: Google Chrome will be blocking all Adobe Flash content deemed not central to a web page starting Sept. 1.

This means auto-playing ads and videos (on non-video websites) will be automatically on pause by default until a user decides to play them, reports Ars Technica, noting that Chrome had a Flash-blocking feature that rolled out in beta earlier this year.

Back then, Google said the reason for blocking Flash was battery life, as auto-playing ads eat up a lot of CPU time. It’ll also help cut down on malware that’s spread through malicious Flash ads, something Flash has become notorious for.

In August, Yahoo had to remove malware from its advertising network that used Flash , and Facebook and Firefox also want to just put Flash out of its misery already after other security holes were identified in July.

Your ears will get a rest, but advertisers are sure to be ticked off by the move. While YouTube has been using HTML5 by default since the beginning of this year, most online advertisers still use Flash, even on mobile (though iOS has never supported it and Android killed support for it off in 2011).

Google automatically converts most Flash ads on its AdWords network to HTML5, notes Ars, but other sites will just stop accepting Flash ads altogether. Amazon already made the move to ban Flash ads as of Sept. 1, saying that the change “ensures customers continue to have a positive, consistent experience across Amazon and its affiliates, and that ads displayed across the site function properly for optimal performance.”

Google Chrome will block auto-playing Flash ads from September 1 [Ars Technica]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Chicago Target Could Be Company’s First To Serve Alcohol To Shoppers

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Who needs to tote around a cup of coffee or soft drink while browsing the aisles of their local big box retailer when they could have a glass of wine in hand instead? While shopping and drinking can certainly be a dangerous combination for some people (not myself, of course), that could be the next step for Target.

The Los Angeles Times reports a Target store in Chicago could be the company’s first to serve boozy beverages to shoppers, after the company applied for two different liquor licenses in the city.

The first license is rather standard and would allow the company to sell packaged liquor – much like other retailers already do.

The second application would allow the company to serve beer, wine and spirits in the store, potentially giving customers the chance to take a break between the grocery section and the shoe department for a little mid-shopping spree libation.

The Times reached out to Target for comment on the possibility that it could soon be employing a mixologist in Chicago, but hadn’t heard back yet.

Serving alcoholic drinks isn’t a new concept for retailers. According to Crain’s Chicago Business, the city is already home to several markets that serve booze including a Standard Market and Plum Market. A new Whole Foods also has a full service bar for downtown workers and shoppers.

Chicago appears to be a hotbed for companies branching into the boozy market. The area is now home to the first Taco Bell to serve adult beverages.

In other areas of the country retailers have latched onto the idea of serving mid-shopping drinks, as Crain’s points out. Grocery stores including Whole Foods, H-E-B and Hy-Vee all have stores that offer bars and prepared food.

Cocktails at Target? It could happen in Chicago [The Los Angeles Times]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Sprint Offering A Free Year Of Cell Service To DirecTV Subscribers

http://ift.tt/1HY3sCt We’ve got a possible love triangle on our hands, friends: Sprint is taking aim at new couple AT&T and its $49 billion beloved, DirecTV, dangling a free year of cell service for satellite subscribers who switch their service.

Sprint is clearly trying to disrupt some of the loving feelings over at the AT&T/DirecTV homestead, where the newly joined couple have already unveiled fairly underwhelming “all in one” wireless/TV service plans to customers. AT&T has been working hard to bring DirecTV subscribers into its fold, offering up to $500 a line if they make the switch.

But Sprint wants a piece of the action, putting an offer on the table that’s only available from Aug. 28 through Sept. 30.

“I think the position to celebrate the merger by offering one of their subscriber bases an attractive offer is just fun,” Kevin Crull, Sprint’s chief marketing officer, told the Wall Street Journal.

But AT&T is not impressed, calling Sprint’s promotion the act of a weakened competitor.

“This ranks right up there with a desperate Hail Mary pass to a petite defensive lineman,” Brad Burns, an AT&T spokesman told the WSJ. “With Sprint’s network and the many asterisks on this deal, we’re feeling good about our offers.”

Sprint says it’d give DirecTV customers who switch a plan with unlimited talk, text and up to 2 gigabytes of data a month, plus a one-time $36 activation fee. The price doesn’t include a smartphone. That’s in comparison to a normal paid plan of $60 a month plus the cost of a smartphone.

Once the year is up, Sprint says bills return to an equivalent plan that starts at $50 per month.

Though some analysts see this move as a head-scratcher, Sprint says the promotion won’t cost it any more than others it’s run, and besides, customers who go over their 2 gigabyte data limit will pay a $15 fee so the company will get money from them that way.

“Once people are now trying our product and trying our network that they’re finding a dramatically different experience from even a year, or especially two years ago,” Crull said.

Sprint, Taking Aim at AT&T, Offers DirecTV Subscribers Free Year of Cell Service [Wall Street Journal]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Man Charged With Operating Debt Collection Scheme That Targeted, Defrauded Spanish-Speaking Consumers

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Deceiving consumers is a trademark for most unscrupulous operations attempting to collect debts that aren’t actually owed. Shady collectors have been known to lie about debts, misrepresent themselves as officers of the law, threaten lawsuits and, in the case of one operator, threaten Spanish-speaking residents with deportation.

The Department of Justice announced today that it had charged the owner of Fonomundo FC with fraud and attempted extortion for allegedly defrauding Spanish-speaking U.S. residents through a series of threats and false accusations.

A grand jury in Miami indicted Cesar Luis Kou Reyna with 33 counts including: conspiracy, mail fraud, wire fraud and attempted extortion stemming from an operation he ran via call centers in Peru and Miami.

According to the Justice Department, Fonomundo FC and its affiliates in South America used Internet-based telephone calling services to place cold calls to Spanish-speaking residents in the United States.

The callers falsely claimed to be attorneys and sometimes claimed to be government representatives. Callers claimed that victims had failed to pay for or receive a delivery of products, although the victims had not ordered these products.

Often the callers claimed that victims would be sued and that the companies would obtain large monetary judgements against them.

At times, victims were threatened with negative marks on their credit reports, imprisonment or deportation unless the person immediately paid “settlement fees.” As a result, many of the victims made payments to the company.

“The Department of Justice is committed to addressing the noted increase in fraud schemes targeting specific communities of U.S. residents,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Mizer. “As this case and other recent examples show, we will track down those responsible for defrauding American consumers, no matter where the fraudster resides, what language the fraudster uses or which population he or she targets.”

Peruvian Man Charged with Leading Conspiracy to Defraud and Extort Spanish-Speaking Consumers through Call Centers [DOJ]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

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Here are eleven 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