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Friday, September 18, 2015

Consumer Reports Suspends “Recommended” Status For Recalled VW Vehicles

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jettadieselgrabEarlier today, the Environmental Protection Agency took the unusual action of issuing a motor vehicle recall for nearly 500,000 Volkswagen and Audi sedans that used software to circumvent emissions tests. In light of this development, our colleagues at Consumer Reports have suspended their rating for two of the cars involved in the recall.

CR had previously given a “Recommended” rating to the diesel versions of both the VW Jetta and Passat.

“These recommendations will be suspended until Consumer Reports can re-test these vehicles with a recall repair performed,” reads at a statement from the publication. “Once the emissions systems are functioning properly, we will assess whether the repair has adversely affected performance or fuel economy.”

In addition to the Passat and Jetta, recalls for issued for the diesel editions of the VW Beetle and the Audi 3.

The EPA determined, following an independent analysis by researchers at West Virginia University, that the automaker intentionally installed “defeat device” software in 482,000 diesel 4-cylinder vehicles between model years 2009 and 2015 as a way to evade emissions standards for certain pollutants.

According to agency, the “sophisticated software algorithm” in the vehicles is programmed to detect when the car is undergoing official emissions testing. When it determines that a test is being performed, the vehicle’s full emissions control system will be deployed.

But the EPA says that when a test is not being performed, these cars “emit nitrogen oxides, or NOx, at up to 40 times the standard.”

“Using a defeat device in cars to evade clean air standards is illegal and a threat to public health,” Cynthia Giles, Assistant Administrator for the Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, said in a statement.

passatdieselgrab


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Report: PetSmart Considering Adopting Petco, Buying It A Leash And Collar

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(Clean Wal-Mart)
Petco and PetSmart are the two largest pet retailers in the United States: about 50% of all money spent in pet stores nationwide goes to one of the two chains. The two companies have given each other a good sniff and considered merging in the past, but after some changes of ownership are considering it again.

Last year, PetSmart, formerly a publicly-traded company, sold itself to a group of investors for $8.7 billion. Petco, meanwhile, is also owned by a private-equity firm, and the company recently filed for an initial public offering of stock. However, sources involved in the deal tell Reuters that the companies have started preliminary talks about getting together to form one big mega-pet store chain.

One concern as the companies keep sniffing is how much confidential information the two companies might share with each other. Last year, PetSmart’s leadership didn’t go forward with merger talks because they assumed regulators wouldn’t approve such a merger. While there are antitrust concerns about a rather similar big-box merger between OfficeMaxDepot and Staples, it seems more plausible. It may be too soon for such a deal, though: PetSmart’s deal to go private only closed in March, and they may not be ready to acquire their biggest rival.

Exclusive: Petco begins merger talks with PetSmart – sources [Reuters]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Walmart In Courtroom Battle With Texas Over “Irrational” Liquor Law

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Having spent a large part of my life in a state where getting wine or booze meant going to a state-operated “wine and spirits shoppe,” it doesn’t seem all that awful that Walmart and other publicly trade companies are barred from selling hard liquor in the state of Texas. But for the nation’s biggest retailer, that law makes no sense — and it’s in the middle of a legal battle with the Lone Star state for the right to dispense spirits.

The Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission is responsible for handing out liquor licenses to retailers and other businesses in the state, but Sec. 22.16 of the Texas state code prohibits just about any company held by a public corporation from obtaining a “package store permit” for selling anything stronger than wine or beer.

“Wal-Mart is therefore irrationally banned from competing with privately owned companies that are, unlike publicly traded corporations, allowed to obtain package store permits,” writes the company in lawsuit [PDF] filed against the TABC in federal court earlier this year.

The retailer notes that even if public corporations were allowed to obtain package store permits, “Texas law irrationally prohibits companies and persons from owning or holding” more than five of these licenses.

“Therefore, even if Wal-Mart were allowed to obtain package store permits, it is irrationally prohibited from owning or holding more than five package store permits.”

While you might say “Hey, five stores with booze is better than none,” Walmart would likely point out that it has 543 stores in Texas that are allowed to sell beer and wine, so those five would represent less than 1% of those locations.

Another “irrational” thing about the Texas law, argues the retailer, is that publicly traded hotel corporations are exempted from this prohibition, meaning hotel stores can get permits to sell liquor, regardless of whether a hotel belongs to a publicly owned chain.

In case you’re wondering how Walmart really feels about this issue (or perhaps as an indication of Walmart’s need for a thesaurus), the company uses some form of the word “irrational” at least 14 times over the course of 24 pages.

Walmart claims the Texas laws that block it from selling booze are “protectionist provisions that unlawfully discriminate against publicly traded companies and interstate commerce, and are unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause, Commerce Clause, and Comity Clause of the U.S. Constitution.”

While the stated purpose of the public corporation ban is to ensure fairness in the booze market, Walmart alleges that it’s a legislative effort to favor Texas residents over non-Texans.

Until 1994, getting a liquor permit in the state required at least one year of Texas residency before applying. A federal appeals court struck down that rule and the state subsequently enacted the ban on public corporations.

Interestingly, this ban only applies to corporations that didn’t have licenses before April 1995. That means the Texas-based corporations that were able to meet the previous residency requirement could hold on to their licenses, while out-of-state or new-to-Texas applicants had to be privately owned.

Walmart also taxes exception with a “close family member” loophole in the five permit limit rule that allows blood relatives to continually acquire licenses, consolidate them into a single private entity, transfer ownership of the private entity to one family member, and then repeat the process.

In response, the state argued that it has the authority to restrict the sale of alcohol and promote temperance, and that doing so is not a violation of the Equal Protection Clause. It pointed to a case in Kentucky where a federal appeals court upheld a law banning supermarkets from selling liquor, but permitting drugstores to sell it.

The TABC also cited an appeals court ruling in Missouri that upheld a state regulation allowing the sale of liquor at bowling alleys and soccer stadiums, but not at billiard parlors, on Sundays.

The plaintiffs in both these cases tried, unsuccessfully, to make a claim under the Equal Protection Clause, so Texas argued that Walmart’s case should be dismissed.

Walmart says they don’t directly apply in this matter because these rulings address issues involving when, where, and how alcohol could be sold — not about a permit applicant’s eligibility.

In July, a district court judge denied the TABC’s motion to dismiss the case, pointing out some of the shortcomings in the state’s arguments against giving permits to Walmart and other public companies.

“Defendants suggest allowing public corporations to own package stores would result in the proliferation of these establishments, leading to greater and easier access to liquor,” wrote the judge in his order [PDF]. “But this purported rationale provides no explanation for the Code’s ‘grandfathering’ of public corporations granted permits issued before April 1995, or the exemption of hotels, even if owned by a public corporation. Similarly, while the five-store limit for non-public corporations could conceivably limit the number of package stores, the exclusion permitting consolidation by family members contradicts that asserted rationale.”

Even if you allow that temperance-promotion is a driving intention of the Walmart ban, the judge appears likely to agree with Walmart that this is an arbitrary way of handling the issue, citing a 1985 Supreme Court ruling where the court held that a general interest in avoiding construction on a flood plain was not sufficient to justify a city ordinance specifically forbidding the construction of a home for the mentally ill while allowing for other institutions to be built on the same land.

“The State may not rely on a classification whose relationship to an asserted goal is so attenuated as to render the distinction arbitrary or irrational,” reads the SCOTUS ruling in that case.

The TABC claimed the rationale for the ban is not arbitrary, that the state legislature believed that excluding public corporations from the liquor market encourages family-owned businesses.

But the judge noted that the language of the Texas statute itself undercuts the state’s argument.

“First, the Code does not require an entity holding a package store permit to be ‘family-owned.’ Rather, the Code permits entities with up to thirty-four shareholders, as well as hotels, even if owned by a public corporation, to hold such permits,” wrote the judge. “Second, families, or at least certain close family members, can accumulate an unlimited number of package store permits – hardly a restriction of access to alcohol. Third, as Wal-Mart points out, the family members are in no way required to live in the area where the store is. Indeed, even if a person or entity held a single package store permit, there is no guarantee that person lives in or is otherwise involved in the local community. In addition, Wal-Mart has alleged family-owned “chains” own a significant portion of the package stores in three large Texas counties. In sum, Wal-Mart has alleged sufficient facts which rebut the community involvement justification offered by Defendants.”

The judge did, however, dismiss Walmart’s claim of a violation of the Privileges and Immunities Clause of the Constitution, which prohibits one state from treating the people of other states differently.

Even though recent Supreme Court cases have conferred certain aspects of personhood on corporations, the judge noted that SCOTUS has not yet disagreed with earlier precedent that clearly found this clause only applies to individuals.

So now that TABC’s motion to dismiss has largely been denied, the case can move forward toward trial. The Houston Chronicle recently noted that a trial date has been set, but that it’s still a year away.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

USDA Issues Public Health Alert About Aspen Foods Stuffed Chicken Products Produced Since July Recall

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You may remember that a few months ago, millions of stuffed chicken breasts from two different companies were recalled for possible Salmonella contamination. The U.S. Department of Agriculture has issued a public health alert urging consumers not to eat chicken products made after the period included in the recall. The agency’s testing found more of the same strain of Salmonella bacteria in samples from the facility, but Koch Poultry has refused to recall the products made during this period, from July 30 to September 17.

The USDA is advising consumers to not eat the chicken breasts if found in their freezer, and to throw the items away or return them to the store where they were purchased. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, some patients who became ill from salmonella reported using a meat thermometer to check the internal temperature of the stuffed chicken breasts before eating, so following the cooking instructions to the letter may not be enough to prevent illness.

There are numerous brands and products that this recall includes, since Aspen Foods manufactures stuffed chicken breasts for multiple store and other private-label brands, including the foodservice mega-supplier Sysco. They may be chicken cordon bleu, chicken Kiev, or chicken stuffed with broccoli.

Here are the brands you might find the products under, but the best thing to check is the USDA establishment number on the package. For affected products, it would be P-1358.

Acclaim Antioch Farms Buckley Farms Centrella Signature Chestnut Farms Family Favorites Kirkwood Koch Foods Market Day Oven Cravers Rose Rosebud Farm Roundy’s Safeway Kitchens Schwan’s Shaner’s Spartan Sysco

The symptoms of salmonellosis are diarrhea (which can be severe), abdominal cramps, and a fever. The illness lasts for 4 to 7 days, but it can be more severe in people who are very young, very old, or who are already sick or immunocompromised. People are hospitalized and can die from this infection.

FSIS Issues Public Health Alert For Stuffed Chicken Products Due To Possible Salmonella Contamination [USDA]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Some Best Buy Stores Now Taking Apple, Android Pay

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Best Buy continued its love affair with Apple this week, as several locations of the electronics retailer started accepting the tech company’s mobile payment system. Alert consumers began noticing a few days ago that some Best Buy locations now allowed customers to pay with both Apple Pay and Android Pay, just a month after the retailer’s exclusive agreement with MCX – a consortium creating payment platform CurrentC – ended. The retailer announced back in April that it would start offering Apple’s payment option at some point in 2015, but failed to elaborate on a timeline. [Apple Insider]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Taco Bell Abruptly Closes Its Upscale ‘American-Inspired’ Taco Restaurant

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Last year, Taco Bell opened a new restaurant in southern California called U.S. Taco. It promised “American-inspired” tacos, whatever that means, and alcoholic milkshakes, which are definitely American. The first test restaurant opened in Huntington Beach, California, last summer, but was never able to secure an alcohol permit or very many customers. It abruptly closed yesterday.

That’s kind of weird, because with the announcement that the chain would expand their fast-casual “Cantina” restaurants, Consumerist actually asked a Taco Bell representative about their future plans for U.S. Taco. They said that there was nothing to report, and they would let us know when there would be. Closing the only restaurant in a planned mini-chain should count as news, right?

This may not be the end of U.S. Taco, though. The Huntington Beach location was never able to get an alcohol permit, which may have kept it from fast-casual greatness. The company hasn’t ruled out opening more U.S. Taco outlets elsewhere, but being unable to serve craft beer and booze shakes in their Orange County location really hurt that vision.

“U.S. Taco Co. remains a fantastic concept, and was very successful as a place to experiment and learn,” the company’s head enchilada, Brian Niccol, told the Orange County Register. That concept included tacos drawing inspiration from American regional cuisines, like lobster rolls and brisket.

U.S. Taco closes: Taco Bell shutters experimental upscale eatery in Huntington Beach [Orange County Register]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

BBC Launching Netflix-Like Service Next Year

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Screen Shot 2015-09-18 at 1.41.29 PMBetween Netflix, Hulu, SlingTV, Amazon Prime and other similar companies, cord-cutting consumers (or those considering cutting the cord) have several options for streaming video. The latest entrant into the over-the-top [OTT] ring comes from the other side of the pond: the BBC.

Reuters reports that BBC’s Director General Tony Hall broke the news at an industry event in Cambridge today.

“We’re launching a new OTT video service in America offering BBC fans programs they wouldn’t otherwise get,” said Hall, “showcasing British actors, our program-makers and celebrating our culture.”

While Hall didn’t elaborate on just what shows U.S. viewers would get, the company already allows some content – such as Doctor Who and Top Gear – to be shown in the states via BBC America, a partnership with AMC Networks.

Additionally, many BBC shows are available on other OTT services like Hulu and Netflix.

Hall was also mum on a timeline for the project or what it would be called.

The streaming service announcement comes as the company searches for ways to boost revenues and catch up with other companies that already using multi-platforms, Reuters reports.

“While every major global player is creating a more integrated system, it would make no sense for us to go the other way and break up a system that is delivering returns that are essential to support public service programs,” Hall said.

BBC to launch online U.S. subscription service [Reuters]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

FCC: Net Neutrality Doesn’t Violate Internet Service Providers’ First Amendment Rights

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(Steve)

(Steve)

About a week after the FCC narrowly voted to approve new net neutrality rules that prevent Internet service providers from deciding which types of online content get preferential or detrimental treatment, the telecom industry was ready with lawsuits. One of those plaintiffs argues that net neutrality is a restriction on ISPs’ First Amendment right to free expression, but the FCC counters that this is like trying to claim that your TV or radio have their own constitutionally protected rights to free speech.

“People know… that ordering broadband service from their local cable company is not the same as buying an online subscription to The Wall Street Journal, ordering a new coffee maker from Amazon, or downloading music from iTunes,” writes the FCC in a brief [PDF] filed in federal court this week in response to lawsuits brought by trade group USTelecom and tiny Texas ISP Alamo Broadband. “The first involves signing up for a transmission service that supplies access to those online applications, services, and content; the others are themselves the providers of online content and services.”

When cable/phone/wireless companies pipe data to your smartphones/computers/TVs/ thermostats/crock pots, they are not, per the FCC, “speaking” but “instead merely acting as conduits for the speech of others.”

In its brief [PDF], Alamo claimed that “Broadband providers are speakers because they engage in speech, and they exercise the same editorial discretion as cable television operators in deciding which speech to transmit.”

The company claims the the Order compels providers to “carry all speech, including political speech with which providers disagree.”

But the FCC counters that American consumers don’t associate their ISPs with the content they deliver.

“Nobody understands broadband providers to be sending a message or endorsing speech when transmitting the Internet content that a user has requested,” writes the Commission. “When a user directs her browser to the New York Times or Wall Street Journal editorial page, she has no reason to think that the views expressed there are those of her broadband provider.”

Additionally, the FCC contends that there is no evidence to show that mass-market retail broadband providers are “seeking to convey any particularized message to their users.”

In Texas v. Johnson, the U.S. Supreme Court held that in order for conduct to merit First Amendment consideration, it must manifest “an intent to convey a particularized message” and “be understood [as a message] by those who viewed it.”

“The provision of broadband service lacks these essential characteristics,” writes the FCC, whose brief quotes Duke University law professor Stuart Minor Benjamin: “there is no real basis for contending that mere transmission of bits is ‘speech.’”

In a 2014 Harvard Law Review article, Benjamin likened broadband service to FedEx’s shipping of documents. If the government were to ban shipping companies from charging express delivery rates, it might raise other legal questions, but it wouldn’t be a First Amendment issue.

“Transporting documents does not entail a communication, and thus the First Amendment would not seem to encompass FedEx’s deliveries,” wrote Benjamin in 2014. “FedEx’s delivery of a document communicates no information about the content of that document.”

The FCC also points to the Supreme Court ruling in Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic & Institutional Rights, Inc., which SCOTUS held that a law requiring universities to allow military recruiters on campus property did not infringe on the schools’ right to free expression.

The court explained in that case that this law “regulates conduct, not speech… the schools are not speaking when they host interviews and recruiting receptions.”

In the FCC’s eyes, net neutrality similarly regulates ISPs’ conduct — by not allowing them to speed up, slow down, or block data based on its source, destination, or its content — but it doesn’t stop these companies from expressing themselves freely.

One of the more controversial aspects of the 2015 Open Internet Order was the reclassification of broadband as a “common carrier,” meaning it would be treated much like landline phone service.

The FCC points to numerous times the Supreme Court has stated that common carriers are not the same as broadcasters. For example, in the 1994 opinion in FCC v. League of Women Voters, the court stated that “Unlike common carriers, broadcasters are ‘entitled under the First Amendment to exercise the widest journalistic freedom.'”

“Like telephone companies, transportation companies, and other traditional common carriers, broadband providers do not have a First Amendment right to restrict or refuse carriage for speech or speakers they dislike,” writes the FCC in its response brief.

As for Alamo’s likening of broadband ISPs to cable TV providers — who are allowed to pick and choose which stations to carry — the FCC contends that this ability to cherry-pick a channel lineup is needed for pay-TV systems, not because of any constitutionally protected free expression, but because of the limits of the technology delivering the TV signal.

But for ISPs, who are merely operating the on- and off-ramps to the Internet for most users, the FCC says “no technological obstacles prevent broadband providers from allowing customers to access all lawful Internet content at all times. The Commission’s no-blocking and no-throttling rules will not reduce access to competing content or to any content offered by the broadband company itself. Nor, in contrast to cable systems and newspapers, is there any established tradition of broadband providers exercising editorial control over Internet content.”

The FCC’s brief notes that it’s this very lack of editorial control over the content being served up to customers that has allowed ISPs to distance themselves from users who violate copyright or are involved in potentially illegal communication.

ISPs do sometimes have ownership stakes in several online media outlets, including Verizon’s recent purchase of AOL, Comcast’s large network of NBC news and entertainment websites, not to mention its recent investments in BuzzFeed and Vox Media.

Had the Open Internet Order interfered with these ISPs’ relationship with their media properties, that would be a definite First Amendment issue. However, the FCC notes that such non-telecom arrangements are “left untouched” by the order.

Nor does net neutrality say anything about which devices consumers can use to go online.

Neutrality does not ‘regulate the Internet,'” says the FCC, using a favorite phrase of neutrality opponents.

[via Ars Technica]


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Volkswagen Ordered To Recall 500K Vehicles Over Emission Violations

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The federal government on Friday ordered Volkswagen to recall nearly 500,000 vehicles over concerns the automobiles expose people to harmful pollutants. Unlike most recalls handed down by government agencies, this one didn’t come from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Instead, it came from the Environmental Protection Agency.

The EPA initiated the recall through a notice of violation [PDF] of the Clean Air Act, after an investigation found the automaker intentionally installed software in 482,000 diesel 4-cylinder model year 2009 to 2015 Volkswagen and Audi vehicles as a way to evade emissions standards for certain pollutants with a range of serious health effects.

The software – known as a defeat device – was first detected during independent analysis by researchers at West Virginia University who were working with the International Council on Clean Transportation, a non-governmental organization. The findings raised questions about emissions levels, and the EPA, along with the California Air Resources Board, began further investigations into the issue.

“Using a defeat device in cars to evade clean air standards is illegal and a threat to public health,” Cynthia Giles, Assistant Administrator for the Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, said in a statement.

According to the notice, the “sophisticated software algorithm” in the vehicles is programmed to detect when the car is undergoing official emissions testing, and to only turn on full emissions control systems during that testing.

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

“This results in cars that meet emissions standards in the laboratory or testing station, but during normal operation, emit nitrogen oxides, or NOx, at up to 40 times the standard,” the notice states.

Under the Clean Air Act, vehicle manufacturers are required to certify to the EPA that their products will meet applicable federal emission standards to control air pollution, and every vehicle sold in the U.S. must be covered by an EPA-issued certificate of conformity.

Motor vehicles – such as the Volkswagen models in question – equipped with defeat devices, which reduce the effectiveness of the emission control system during normal driving conditions, cannot be certified.

“By making and selling vehicles with defeat devices that allowed for higher levels of air emissions than were certified to EPA, Volkswagen violated two important provisions of the Clean Air Act,” the EPA alleges.

Models covered by the recall include the model year 2009 to 2015 Volkswagen Jetta, Beetle, Golf, and Audi A3, as well as model year 2014 to 2015 Volkswagen Passat sedans.

“It is incumbent upon Volkswagen to initiate the process that will fix the cars’ emissions systems,” the EPA says. “Car owners should know that although these vehicles have emissions exceeding standards, these violations do not present a safety hazard and the cars remain legal to drive and resell.”

Friday’s order comes more than a year after the EPA and CARB imposed a record $100 million penalty against Hyundai and Kia for not being completely truthful about their vehicles’ fuel economy estimates.

The EPA charged that the automakers overstated fuel economy figures by an average of six miles per gallon for the Hyundai Accent, Elantra, Velostar and Sante Fe, as well as the Kia Rio and Soul.

The complaint filed jointly by the United States and the California Air Resources Board alleges that Hyundai and Kia sold close to 1.2 million cars and SUVs whose design did not conform to the specifications the companies certified with the agency.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

GameStop Ditches Digital Downloads In Console Bundles

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With consumers abandoning their stacks of CDs, DVDs and video games in favor of digital downloads that can easily be viewer or played for any number of devices, GameStop’s latest attempt to keep its bread-and-butter — the sale of trade-ins — goes against the no-disc trend: only selling game console bundles that include physical discs.

In a shareholders call this week, GameStop chief operating officer Tony Bartel said the company had worked with partners such as Sony, Microsoft and EA to offer free discs rather than free download codes in game bundles, according to a transcript of the call from The Street.

Bartel said the change was most recently seen in the current sales of the Madden ’16 Xbox One bundle.

Additionally, ArsTechnica reports that GameStop’s bundle was also missing a free 12-month subscription to the EA Access program, which offers a selection of legacy titles as free downloads.

“We expect that if a game is provided as a promotional item in a hardware bundle, GameStop will see more of these physical offers than digital pack-ins on upcoming third-party releases,” Bartel said.

Bartel went on to make it clear that even if companies continue to include digital downloads, GameStop will “see more physical bundles from third parties as opposed to digital bundles.”

GameStop CEO Paul Raines hinted in the call that the decision to scrap the inclusion of download codes in bundles sold at the store was a result of consumer preference.

“Consumers prefer those physical bundles, because they know that disc has value in the trade-in program at GameStop,” he said.”

It makes sense for GameStop to favor physical disc, as resale of those items account for a large chunk of the company’s sales.

And as Bartel notes,”we sell things at full price and provide great value through our trade program and that we have physical discs.”

GameStop swaps console game downloads for physical discs in bundles [ArsTechnica]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Apple Asks Supreme Court To Hear Appeal Of E-Book Price-Fixing Case

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Three months after a federal appeals court upheld a 2013 decision that found Apple liable for conspiring with publisher to raise the price of e-books, the company is taking the fight to clear its name to the country’s highest legal authority: the Supreme Court.

Apple’s move to ask the Supreme Court to review the case is just the latest chapter in seemingly never-ending, years-long legal battle that started when the company first launched the iPad and its iBook store in 2010.

According to a filing [PDF] Apple made with the Supreme Court on Wednesday, the company asked for a 30-day extension of time for filing formal submissions that would initiate the higher court’s review process.

In the filing the company claims the previous judgements conflict with the Supreme Court’s precedent regarding the liability of Apple’s conduct in the supposed price-fixing scheme.

“This case concerns the imposition of per se antitrust liability on the basis of vertical conduct that was geared toward a new market entry and the disruption of a competitor’s monopoly,” the filing states. “This case also presents issues of surpassing importance to the United State economy. Dynamic, disruptive entry into new or stagnant markets—the lifeblood of American economic growth—often requires the very type of vertical contracting and conduct” that the company engaged in.

For those unfamiliar with the case, here’s a bit of background: In 2012, the Dept. of Justice sued Apple and many of the nation’s largest book publishing companies for allegedly conspiring to set high prices on the e-book market.

Part of Apple’s argument before the federal appeals court in December 2014 was that it was just trying to snap the stranglehold Amazon had on the e-book market, but that apparently didn’t convince the court.

In a 2-1 ruling by the Second U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Manhattan [PDF] in June, the judges sided with the lower court’s decision to hold Apple to the November agreement with private plaintiffs and 33 states that joined the Justice Department’s 2012 lawsuit.

“We conclude that the district court correctly decided that Apple orchestrated a conspiracy among the publishers to raise e-book prices,” wrote Second Circuit Judge Debra Ann Livingston. The conspiracy “unreasonably restrained trade” in violation of the Sherman Act, the federal antitrust law, the judge wrote.

Prosecutors had argued that Apple and publishers had ganged up to fight Amazon’s aggressive discounts by agreeing to use an agency model of pricing, wherein the publisher sets the price of books and the retailer gets a cut. Under the agreement, if another retailer was selling an e-book for a lower price, the publisher would have to match that price in Apple’s store.

E-mails from Apple executives, including company co-founder Steve Jobs, were used against the iPhone maker in court to demonstrate that the goal of agency pricing was to increase what people paid for e-books.

“Throw in with Apple and see if we can all make a go of this to create a real mainstream e-books market at $12.99 and $14.99,” wrote Jobs in one message to News Corp, the parent company of HarperCollins.

The publishers had the leverage they’d need to fight Amazon with this new model, Justice Department lawyers said, and prices on many e-books increased immediately. Apple’s legal team had said the company didn’t realize it was leading the publishers’ charge against Amazon.

But the Second Circuit majority said evidence showed Apple knew exactly what it was doing.

“Apple understood that its proposed contracts were attractive to the publisher defendants only if they collectively shifted their relationships with Amazon to an agency model — which Apple knew would result in consumers facing higher e-book prices,” Judge Livingston wrote in a decision joined by Judge Raymond J. Lohier Jr.

Following that decision, Apple had the option to either pay a $450 million fine or ask the Supreme Court to hear the case.

At the time of the June order, Apple hinted that it might continue its battle: “While we want to put this behind us, the case is about principles and values,” the company said in a statement. “We know we did nothing wrong back in 2010 and are assessing next steps.”

On Wednesday, the company made its decision clear, noting in the filing that the “Court’s review of the [case] is essential.”

[via Fortune]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Johnson & Johnson Pull Ads From “The View” Because Nurses Do Indeed Wear Stethoscopes

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Just a small sampling of the photos posted to Twitter with the #nursesunite hashtag.

Just a small sampling of the photos posted to Twitter with the #nursesunite hashtag.

An offhanded, but definitely ill-informed, comment by View co-host Joy Behar about a nurse wearing a “doctor’s stethoscope” has resulted in one of TV’s biggest advertisers pulling its commercials from the ABC chat-fest.

Earlier this week, the View panel was looking at footage from the recent Miss America pageant, and when Miss Colorado Kelley Johnson came on screen in her nurse’s uniform, Behar remarked, “Why has she got a doctor’s stethoscope on?”

The answer, as she soon found out (and as anyone who has received decent medical care probably already knew), is that nurses frequently carry stethoscopes with them… because they are often a vital tool for doing a nurse’s job.

The online backlash against Behar was swift, with nurses and other medical professionals posting photos of themselves and their colleagues wearing the stethoscopes that are not solely a tool for people with medical degrees.

After kicking an Internet hornet’s nest, Behar apologized, saying she was being “stupid and inattentive” during the segment.

“I did not know she was a nurse. I’m used to seeing (the contestants) in gowns and bathing suits so it’s not like I was trying to be funny,” she explained. “I just was not paying attention… I didn’t know know what the hell I was talking about.”

Then last night, Johnson & Johnson posted on its Facebook page that it is “pausing our ads on a certain daytime program.”

A rep for the company explained to AdAge that this halt includes all J&J brands. The company had been advertising its Johnson’s Baby, RoC, and Tylenol products on the show as recently as Wednesday.

The ABC show attempted to do damage control on Friday morning, playing host to dozens of nurses:


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

U.S. Companies Will Soon Be Able To Open Offices, Bank Accounts In Cuba

http://ift.tt/1MgYktl After a half century of travel and trade embargoes against Cuba, American businesses will soon be able to return the island nation and establish offices there. Today, the U.S. government announced a new slate of revised Cuba-related regulations that will ease restrictions on commerce and tourism.

Starting on Monday, according to the Treasury Dept.’s Office of Foreign Assets Control [OFAC], a variety of American business types “will be allowed to establish and maintain a physical presence, such as an office, retail outlet, or warehouse, in Cuba.”

Among the allowed types of businesses: news bureaus; exporters of authorized goods, including agricultural products and some construction materials; parcel services and certain cargo transportation services; providers of telecommunications or Internet-based services; educational and religious organizations; and certain travel services.

These U.S. businesses will also be allowed to hire Cuban citizens alongside their American employees, and have bank accounts in the country.

The revised restrictions also specifically allows for joint U.S.-Cuba ventures in the telecom/Internet field. Software applications developed in Cuba will be permitted for use and sale in the U.S.

Stateside, Cuban nationals will be able to open bank accounts at U.S. financial institutions.

The government is also making some new concessions for travel to and from Cuba. Visiting the country is still not going to be as simple as going to the airport and buying a ticket, but more so-called “authorized travelers,” will now be able to bring close relatives along with them. Previously, family was only permitted to come along for trips related to government business, educational travel, or visits to family members living in Cuba.

Today’s announcement adds “journalistic activity, professional research, and religious activities,” and humanitarian projects to the list of reasons for having your family travel with you.

“These regulatory changes build on the revisions implemented earlier this year and will further ease sanctions related to travel, telecommunications and internet-based services, business operations in Cuba, and remittances,” said Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew in a statement. “A stronger, more open U.S.-Cuba relationship has the potential to create economic opportunities for both Americans and Cubans alike.”


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

CVS Employee Charged With Assault For Dragging Suspected Shoplifter Back Into Store

http://ift.tt/1v4puJ4 A CVS customer tried to return some batteries without a receipt, and was told that she wouldn’t be allowed to. Oh, well: she went to leave the store with her merchandise, and an unidentified man dragged her back inside the store. He was a CVS loss prevention officer, it turns out, but she claims he didn’t identify himself.

The CVS employee took the aspiring battery-returner’s purse and merchandise, but didn’t take her phone, which is how she was able to dial 9-1-1. Her boyfriend, who was waiting in the car, also saw a man grab her and drag her back inside the store, and he followed them back in.

“I grabbed her hand and that’s when they attacked me,” her boyfriend told TV station KHOU.

One would think that police would take the side of loss prevention when they arrived on the scene, but the cops watched surveillance video and ended up arresting the loss prevention officer, not the suspected shoplifter. Police said that he has been charged with assault.

CVS, in a statement, said that they’e investigating the incident:

CVS/pharmacy has specific policies and procedures for interacting with customers who are suspected of shoplifting that are designed to protect the safety of both our employees and our customers. We are fully investigating the incident that occurred at our Westheimer Road store yesterday afternoon. The employee who was involved in this incident will be suspended pending the outcome of our investigation.

Meanwhile, the drugstore chain does accept returns without a receipt, but only if the customer provides ID and with the approval of a manager.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Using Only His Phone, Man Scams 217 Macy’s Stores Into Issuing Fraudulent Refunds

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If you plan to go on a scamming spree, you probably shouldn’t use your actual email address when completing the transactions. That was ultimately the undoing for a Georgia man who federal authorities say duped more than 200 Macy’s stores in 31 states into issuing fraudulent refunds — and all without having to drive to the mall.

According to a criminal complaint [PDF] filed by the FBI, the man – who was recently arrested on fraud charges – allegedly conducted a phone scam in which he called 217 Macy’s department stores posing as the head of the company’s customer service department.

“Once the caller is connected with the Executive in Charge (EIC), he identifies himself as Mark or Mike Miller, Director of Customer Service in New York,” the complaint states. “To legitimize his identity as Director of Customer Service, the caller mentions the names of actual Macy’s management personnel.”

The man then allegedly claims to be following up on a complaint from a customer who is “very unhappy” after attempting to exchange a dress at Macy’s.

He then directed the EIC to refund the cost of the merchandise back onto the customer’s credit card, also giving them directions to send confirmation of the refund to his personal email address.

In all, the man was able to trick customer service managers and associates in 31 states into processing a total of 304 refunds for products that were never actually purchased, according to the complaint.

Investigators eventually found over 100 receipts for refunded transactions that contained the same two email addresses. They were able to trace this information back to one man in Georgia.

“The person was giving email addresses that were trackable, he had a Facebook page that was trackable, he gave photographs and even used his phone number … not the smartest criminal,” said Brent Brown, who runs a corporate security firm, tells the Atlanta Journal Constitution. “They [Macy’s] probably need to look at some internal checks and balances.”

[via Atlanta Journal Constitution]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

One Detroit Neighborhood Actively Looking For Squatters

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(Google Maps)

(Google Maps)

Some neighborhood groups would look at squatters — people who live rent-free in vacant buildings — as a negative to be shooed away in favor of paying tenants. But the folks in one part of Detroit would rather have squatters occupying the empty homes in their area than see these buildings stripped or burned to the ground.

The Detroit News has the story of an effort by the Northwest Brightmoor Renaissance neighborhood group to get decent people into empty homes, even if they are violating state law by squatting.

“We want squatters,” the group’s co-founder, Jennifer Mergos, explains. “There’s so much abandonment here, we need them to turn the neighborhood around.”

According to the News, at least 350 homes in this area have some sort of fire damage, and the 1-in-3 homes that sit vacant are being stripped of materials by scavengers.

Mergos points to a 95-year-old abandoned farmhouse that currently sits empty as an example of a property that could be lost forever to flames or vandals — resulting in more blight for an already troubled city.

“The neighborhood is rallying around this house because it’s a tipping point to stop the continued destruction that’s happened around here,” she explains.

And Mergos speaks from experience. She purchased a home two doors down from this farmhouse at auction in 2013. It’s been set on fire twice since. So she turned the land into a community garden. When that came under attack from vandals, she installed beehives as a deterrent.

“I’m trying to bring something positive to the neighborhood,” she explains about the neighborhood she grew up in. “There’s nothing to do now and nowhere to go, so lighting homes on fire is the entertainment.”

Even though squatting is a crime in Michigan that could land someone in jail for up to two years, Riet Schumack, co-founder of Neighbors Building Brightmoor — a group that maintains some 200 properties — points out that neighbors in the area are already breaking the law by trespassing in order to trim lawns or board up windows and doors.

“It’s not black and white,” says Schumack. “You want someone in the house when it’s still functioning. Otherwise, it will be destroyed in 24 hours.”


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Turbulence On Hawaii-To-Philippines Flight Leaves 15 Injured

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(Rachel)

(Rachel)

More than a dozen passengers flying from Hawaii to the Philippines on Friday were injured when the plane hit an unusually rough patch of air.

The Associated Press reports that 15 people received medical attention after the Philippine Airlines flight safely landed at Manila airport.

The plane, which was carrying 132 passengers, experienced clear air turbulence after departing Honolulu around noon on Thursday, the Ninoy Aquino International Airport tells CNN.

Medical personnel, airport officials and PAL customer relations officers met the plane at the gate to provide assistance to the passengers, the airport statement said.

Clear air turbulence is unusual as it is not associated with clouds and cannot be detected visually or by conventional weather radar.

Passengers on the flight tell local reporters in the Philippines that the plane suddenly fell and rose during the trip, throwing many off-balance or out of their seats.

Turbulence on Hawaii-Philippines Flight Hurts 15 Slightly [The Associated Press]
At least 15 passengers injured in PAL flight turbulence [CNN]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Comcast Must Pay $33M To Settle Charges It Listed 75,000 Unlisted Phone Numbers

http://ift.tt/1Mvi13u Nearly a year after the California Public Utilities Commission held a hearing to determine if Comcast should be held liable for a screwup that published more than 75,000 phone numbers, names, and addresses that were supposed to be unlisted, the cable and Internet giant has reached a $33 million deal that puts an end to the matter.

As part of the settlement announced on Thursday, Comcast will pay $25 million in penalties and investigation costs to the California Department of Justice and CPUC, as well as $8 million in restitution to customers whose information was improperly disclosed.

The settlement comes after a year-long investigation and three days of hearings, the CPUC reports.

“Our investigation revealed that many Comcast customers complained to Comcast that their names, addresses, and phone numbers were published, though they had paid for that information to be kept private,” CPUC commission Catherine J.K. Sandoval said in a statement. “It is imperative that customer complaints be quickly addressed and that systems are established to identify and correct the root cause of the problem and protect consumer privacy.”

According to a complaint [PDF] filed with the California AG’s Office, the problem arose after Comcast implemented a new process for producing and disseminating listing information for its residential phone customers in late 2009.

Under the system, Comcast sent non-published listings to a third-party company, while placing a “privacy flag” on the non-published listings. However, the flag was never attached to approximately 75,000 non-published/non-listed subscribers.

As a result, that information – for which customers paid between $1.25 and $1.50 per month to keep unlisted – appeared in certain county phone books for the years of 2010 and 2011.

The issue came to light in 2012, following a CBS Sacramento story about a Comcast customer who paid to have her information kept private, but whose number could be easily discovered by calling 4-1-1.

At the time, Comcast apologized and refunded her the fees, saying it was a rare occurrence. But then in early 2013, it revealed to the CPUC that, during a 27-month period starting in July 2010, it had goofed and allowed the 74,000 unlisted numbers to be shared with third-party phone directories.

Still, the company maintained that the issue with the CBS13 view was “not the same” as the one involved in the CPUC investigation.

Under the settlement, the $8 million in restitution will be provided to customers as follows:

• $100 credits (or checks to former customers) for each of the 74,774 affected customers ($7,477,400);
• $432,000 for home security and/or safety-related services for approximately 216 customers with specific and acute safety concerns related to the unauthorized disclosure; and,
• $517,714 in non-published fees collected from former customers whom Comcast had not previously been able to reach.

Additionally, the company has agreed to a permanent injunction that requires it strengthen restrictions placed on its vendors’ use of personal information about customers.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

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

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


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Thursday, September 17, 2015

6 Things We Learned About Bluetooth ATM Skimmers In Mexico

http://ift.tt/1K0TazN If you took a summer vacation this year, you may have spent it on a beach, on a boat, or at a theme park. Security journalist Brian Krebs spent his summer vacation doing something that sounds super-fun to us: hunting down compromised ATMs in Mexico. He found quite a few, and also learned who might be behind all of his fraud.

Check out the whole series of stories: they have handy photos and videos, and will give you a healthy dose of paranoia before the next time you travel internationally.

  • An ATM is only as secure as the employees who have access to it. A source in Mexico explained to Krebs that men with Eastern European accents offered ATM technicians impressive amounts of money to allow them access to the innards of the machines they maintained. One person said yes, and the devices they found inside compromised machines provided clues about how to find other compromised ATMs.
  • They’re easy to find. Simply scanning the area for Bluetooth devices would turn up ATMs giving off a telltale signal: Bluetooth beacons that were part of the scheme bore the name of the non-criminal manufacturer that made them.
  • You can’t just wander by and harvest the data from a Bluetooth skimmer: the bundles of customer data are locked up with a code that only the criminals have.
  • Compromised devices were thick on the ground. Once Krebs knew what to look for, he found compromised ATMs everywhere. There were some in the airport. One of the ATMs in the hotel in Cancun where he stayed was compromised. Sometimes there was more than one telltale Bluetooth signal visible from where he was standing.
  • It’s hard to find anyone to tell when you do find a compromised machine. By the time tourists notice fraudulent withdrawals, they’ve already gone home. Hotel employees seemed concerned at first, but the Bluetooth signal kept on signaling until he left town.
  • There’s no one to tell. The criminal justice system in Mexico can easily be manipulated with bribes, and someone with a cash-extracting business has lots of money to pay bribes. Compromised ATMs belonged to independent ATM-servicing companies, not banks.
  • The ATM you’re using might not dispense money at all. Some ATMs didn’t have Bluetooth beacons, but “malfunctioned” and wouldn’t spit out a receipt when used. It’s possible that there are fake ATMs on the ground that just capture your account information, and in a tourist town it’s possible that no one would notice.

In summary, always travel internationally with large wads of cash. But that isn’t safe, either, so don’t do that.

Tracking a Bluetooth Skimmer Gang in Mexico [Krebs On Security]
Tracking Bluetooth Skimmers in Mexico, Part II [Krebs On Security]
Who’s Behind Bluetooth Skimming in Mexico? [Krebs On Security]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Buffalo Wild Wings Severs Ties With “League” Star Who Lied About 9/11 Experience

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bwwaddYesterday morning, actor and new Buffalo Wild Wings shill Steve Rannazzisi — best known as Kevin on FXX’s The Leagueadmitted to having told terrible untruths about being in the World Trade Center on the morning of September 11, 2001, when terrorists flew commercial jets into the building’s two towers. In the wake of the actor’s confession, BWW said it was “reevaluating our relationship” with Rannazzisi, and now it looks like that relationship has been terminated.

“Upon careful review, we have decided to discontinue airing our current television commercials feature Steve Rannazzisi,” the wing chain said in a statement to Bloomberg.

For years, Rannazzisi had been saying interviews that he was working for Merrill Lynch on the 54th floor of the WTC’s south tower when the first plane struck the north. He used the tale to explain how it changed his life and put him on the path to a career in acting and comedy.

Problem is, while Rannazzisi was in Manhattan on that fateful day, he was nowhere near the Trade Center, nor was he employed by Merrill Lynch. He admitted yesterday that he was actually working for a different company miles away in Midtown at the time.

With The League‘s seventh and final season debuting earlier this month, Rannazzisi had just begun a new gig starring in commercials for Buffalo Wild Wings, playing up his association with the FXX show about a group of friends who are a little too serious about fantasy football.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Android Users Give Apple’s ‘Move To iOS’ App Bad Reviews For Some Reason

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move_to_iosWhile Samsung is trying to recruit current iPhone users as customers with a free “test drive,” Apple also wants to recruit new users for the iPhone. To make the move easier for future customers, Apple introduced its first-ever Android app to help them transition. This app is available in the Google Play store, so you can guess what happened next.

There are all sorts of reasons why you might want to move from one smartphone platform to another. Our staff is multi-platform, and we don’t judge. It’s also important to us to help people who have problems moving from iOS to other phone platforms. However, among some reviewers over at Google Play, the audacity of Apple to help people switch platforms and to design the app to look like their own products is simply too much.

Rages one reviewer:

An Android app looking like a iOS?? IMHO, Apple should have showed some respect and followed android material design! How does Google allow such kind of thing? Come on!!!

Its average review dipped to one star earlier today, and there were unfortunate references to lobotomies and brainwashing. Now the average score has now reached two stars, perhaps since some Apple fans or people with a sense of proportion stepped in.

The app moves over a user’s contacts, text message history, photos and videos, e-mail accounts, and calendars. That eases the transition, and if it works correctly would be a fun and very useful product.

However, it’s worth noting that an app meant to do the reverse wouldn’t appear in Apple’s own iOS App Store: its rules prohibit software that promotes other mobile operating systems. Whoops.

Apple’s New Android App Helps You Move to Apple [Digits]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Feds Say Vision-Improvement App Not Backed By Science

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Screen Shot 2015-09-17 at 4.10.37 PMThey say that staring at a computer for hours at a time can ruin you vision, so it might be hard to swallow claims that a mobile app can improve your vision… especially when science doesn’t back it up.

Carrot Neurotechnology, the maker of Ultimeyes app, agreed today to pay $150,000 to settle Federal Trade Commission charges it deceived consumers with claims that its app could improve users vision.

According to the FTC complaint [PDF], since 2012, Carrot Nuerotechnology and its co-owners Adam Goldberg and Aaron Seitz advertised and sold Ultimeyes on the company’s website and through third-party app stores including the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, claiming it is “scientifically shown to improve vision.”

The app which sold for between $5.99 to $9.99, brought in more than $350,000 in sales from January 2012 to June 2015, the complaint states.

The FTC alleges that ads for the app deceptively stated it would “Turn Back The Clock On Your Vision,” and that users would benefit from “comprehensive vision improvement” for activities such as sports, reading and driving.

Among other unsubstantiated claims, the app purportedly improved vision on average by 31% and two lines on the Snellen eye chart.

Additionally, the operators claimed that using the app would “reverse, delay, or correct aging eye or presbyopia, including, but not limited to, by improving night vision, improving users’ ability to read in dim light, and diminishing the need for glasses or other visual aids.”

Carrot Neurotechnoloy claimed that the app’s capabilities were supported by studies and “scientific research” conducted by co-owner Aaron Seitz.

However, the FTC alleges that these studies don’t prove the app works as promised, and that Carrot Neurotechnology failed to disclose Seitz relationship to the company.

In addition to paying a $150,000 fine, the proposed settlement [PDF] orders Carrot Neurotechnology and its owners to provide “competent and reliable scientific evidence” before making the vision claims about Ultimeyes and other products.

The order also prohibits the company from misrepresenting any scientific research, and it requires it to clearly disclose any connections with anyone conducting or participating in scientific research they cite as substantiation for their claims, and with anyone endorsing their products.

FTC Charges Marketers of ‘Vision Improvement’ App With Deceptive Claims [Federal Trade Commission]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

T-Mobile Claims $.20/Minute Coverage In “All” Of Europe, But What About Andorra? What About Andorra??

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T-Mobile's Simple Global option covers "all of Europe," except for the glorious 181 square miles that is Andorra.

T-Mobile’s Simple Global option covers “all of Europe,” except for the glorious 181 square miles that is Andorra.

Today, T-Mobile brashly announced — using italics to stress how big a deal it is — that its Simple Choice plans can be used to make “low flat-rate calls for just $0.20 a minute in a total of 145 countries and destinations worldwide—including all of Europe,” but for some reason the magenta-infused wireless provider apparently missed the five minutes in high school European History class where their teacher offhandedly mentioned something about Andorra.

That’s right, while T-Mobile’s list of countries and territories covered by the Simple Global option gets so granular as to include little-known places like the autonomous Ă…land Islands region of Finland, and Svalbard, an unincorporated Norwegian archipelago with population of around 2,600, that list leaves off lovely, landlocked Andorra.

In spite of its tiny size, Andorra — situated along the border of France and Spain in the eastern Pyrenees mountains — is still a pretty significant tourist destination, with millions of people popping by for the scenery… and most likely to buy “I went to Andorra and you didn’t” T-shirts.

Unfortunately, if T-Mobile customers want to call their friends back home and brag about their rad new Andorran souvenir, they’ll have to go to either France or Spain to make an affordable call. Or go to any of the smaller sovereign states — like Vatican City, San Marino, Monaco, or Lichtenstein — that are covered by Simple Global.

Thinking the omission of Andorra from T-Mobile’s list may just be a typo, we checked with the company and were dismayed to find out that no, the Principality of the Valleys of Andorra, is not currently covered — in spite of T-Mobile’s “all of Europe” claim.

“Our apologies to the Andorran people,” a rep for T-Mobile tells Consumerist, as if we have the heart to break the bad news to the 85,000 citizens of this glorious nation.

If, like us, you believe this is an egregious slight that should not be allowed to continue, let T-Mobile and its CEO John Legere know where you stand with the hashtag #whataboutandorra

Or you can just go on with your life and pretend this never happened.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

McDonald’s All-Day Breakfast Menu Spotted In The Wild Ahead Of Nationwide Rollout

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McDbreakfastDespite the fact that McDonald’s new all-day breakfast menus are slated to roll out across the country on Oct. 6, it seems there could be a few locations who couldn’t wait: Consumerist reader Victor spotted an all-day breakfast menu at the drive-thru of his local Mickey D’s in Northern California this week, and sent in the evidence.

As we reported before, each McDonald’s location will be able to pick which breakfast items they want to offer all day long, depending on that restaurant’s equipment or perhaps based on customer demand in that area.

In this case, McMuffins rule the roost, with the option for an Egg McMuffin (which comes with Canadian bacon), a Sausage McMuffin or a Sausage McMuffin with cheese. Sausage burritos, oatmeal, a parfait, hash browns and hot cakes have also made the cut. Each entree can be ordered as part of a combo as well, which comes with a small coffee and hash browns.

There is a chance that this particular McDonald’s was involved in previous tests of the all-day breakfast menu, though previous reports indicated that the San Diego area, Nashville and some locations in Mississippi were the only markets included in menu trials. We reached out to McDonald’s to see if that’s the case or if this location just went rogue and decided to break out the all-day breakfast menu a few weeks early.

If you notice an all-day menu popping up in your area — one that definitely wasn’t included in earlier tests, let us know in the tipline: tips@consumerist.com.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Cheap Gas Makes Car-Buyers Lose Their Short-Term Memory

http://ift.tt/1grTRsS It wasn’t that long ago that Americans were sneering at SUVs and clamoring for compact, hybrid, and compact hybrid cars. That was years ago, though, and you can’t expect adults to remember things that happened during the period that they’ve owned their current car. That’s why shoppers now aren’t giving much thought to fuel economy.

Today’s SUVs use less fuel than my 11-year-old sedan, and they definitely consume less gas than the SUVs of decades past, but do you know what’s even more efficient? Smaller cars. One car dealer group CEO mused to Boston station WBZ that it’s as if car buyers don’t think long-term.

“We couldn’t give away SUVs,” he said. “And everyone was trading in their Chevy Suburban for a Toyota Camry or Toyota Corolla or a Toyota Prius, and they were worth nothing.” Maybe they don’t have to think long-term if they’re looking into a three-year lease instead of purchasing a vehicle, but changing trends mean that even prices for used SUVs are high right now.

On the other hand, you can probably get a great price on a used Prius. The important thing is to think long-term: calculate how much you’d be paying for gas with your current driving habits if prices doubled tomorrow. If the amount would break your budget or just frustrate you, consider a lighter vehicle.

Car Buyers Rethinking Choices As Gas Prices Drop [WBZ]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist