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Friday, November 13, 2015

Pink Potato Slime May One Day Save Us All From Antibiotic-Resistant Bacteria

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(Studio d'Xavier)
When root vegetables are stored in an area that’s too damp, they can grow a pink slime that breaks down cell walls and is generally gross. The rot comes from a bacteria, called Clostridium puniceum, that normally only grows only in areas with no oxygen. Why would it grow in an environment where there’s plenty of oxygen? The answer is in the slime.

The bacteria produces the slime, which in turn keeps the bacteria alive. It contains two proteins that allow them to live in an environment full of oxygen. When the researchers engineered bacteria that couldn’t produce one of the proteins and infected a potato with it, the bacteria couldn’t grow without its protective slime.

This matters because slime is gross, because potatoes are an important crop and it’s unhealthy when they rot, and because those proteins in the slime also have antibiotic properties that makes them kill competing bacteria, including the “superbug” methicillin-resistant Staph aureus (MRSA) that should frighten you if it doesn’t already.

Why do potatoes grow pink slime? [PBS NewsHour]
Plant pathogenic anaerobic bacteria use aromatic polyketides to access aerobic territory [Science]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Late Pizza Delivery Driver Calls Customer Morally Bankrupt And Fat

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(Gary J. Wood)
Pizza Pizza is a chain restaurant that some readers outside of Canada might remember faintly from a line in a Moxy Fruvous song. No? All you need to know is that it’s a pizza chain, it delivers, and it has a 40-minute guarantee. If your pizza arrives in 41 minutes, it’s free. Simple enough: unless the driver gets mad about it.

Two sisters in Toronto ordered a pizza earlier this week, and they were regulars at the local Pizza Pizza. Normally, they would receive their delivery within twenty minutes, so after 40 minutes had passed, they called customer service. When the driver arrived shortly afterward, they handed him the phone so he would know that they didn’t owe any money. Pizza transaction complete, right? No. That’s when the texts started, the sister who went to the door explained to the Toronto Sun.

The driver claimed to have called multiple times before knocking on the door, and that the sisters didn’t answer.

Here’s a partial transcript, with rage-texting errors lightly corrected.

U know.. maybe u should use all that spare energy and time in strategizing on how to get a free pizza out of people and use it towards learning how to pick up ur cell phone…

Its not a healthy state of mind trying to cheat small hardworking business owners who make an honest living out of their money

U know I called three times before 1237am due time but it is really funny how u kept such a straight poker face when accepting the free pizza

I don’t know how you can enjoy eating a cheated pizza with a straight conscience… if I were u I know I couldn’t..

Then the driver remembered that not only was he mad at the woman, but food was involved, so he called her fat.

pizzapizza

Ultimately, this wasn’t about paying for the pizza: it was about the driver altering the terms of the deal. If Pizza Pizza wants to offer a “40 minutes and it’s free, but the driver will berate you” guarantee, they could advertise that. That’s not why you give your cell phone number to a pizza place.

Eventually, they contacted a regional manager, who explained that the driver “didn’t understand the protocol” for what happens when a customer gets a free pizza, and had been fired.

Now the sister who received the pizza and spoke to the media says that she’s fearful for her safety: the driver doesn’t like her, and now she got him fired, while he has her sister’s cell number and knows where she lives.

Pizza Pizza gave her a courtesy credit for a future delivery, but she says that she doesn’t plan to use it.

Pizza Pizza delivery man fired over offensive texts to customer [Toronto Star]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Sears Holds Members-Only Holiday Season Sale, Welcomes Anyone

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(Pete Kraynak)
For a while now, we’ve found something kind of confusing about communications that come from the parent company of Sears and Kmart, Sears Holdings. They refer to their customers as “members,” even though they are not a warehouse club and anyone can shop there. This holiday season, though, they’ve arranged a special members-only event: an exclusive sale the Sunday before Thanksgiving.

Hey, that’s great! Only this members-only perk isn’t very exclusive. You can sign up for the Shop Your Way Rewards program in seconds by handing over your e-mail address or linking your Facebook or Twitter account. You can even get one without signing up by texting the word “EXCLUSIVE” to 73277, though Sears then has your cell phone number.

A “members-only” sale is meant to be exclusive, but this one is open to anyone who is interested in being a member. Shop Your Way is one of the more logical customer loyalty programs that we’ve ever seen, since your points simply have cash value that you can use as a discount on your next order. However, Sears still isn’t Costco, and it’s silly to simultaneously promote something as “exclusive” yet let anyone willing to hand over an e-mail address in.

Sears’ Black Friday TV Deals Are Good, Not Great [Consumer Reports]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Hershey Ditching Artificial Flavors In Some Chocolate Products

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(Great Beyond)
The Hershey Co. is hopping on the trend bandwagon and tweaking the ingredients list for of its most two popular products: the candy company is taking artificial flavors out of milk chocolate Hershey’s Kisses and bars.

Instead of using vanillin, Hershey is making those candies with real vanilla, reports the Associated Press, and lactose will also be removed from both chocolates. An ingredient called PGPR, which makes chocolate flow like Willy Wonka’s chocolate river in a manufacturing plant (I imagine), will no longer be used in the bars. Hershey is opting for cocoa butter as an alternative to get the right texture. It wasn’t included in Kisses.

Over on the official Hershey site, you can already see the switch in the ingredients for Kisses, with “natural flavor” replacing vanillin (yes, chocolate gets much of its flavor from vanilla — who knew?). Hershey says the reformulated chocolate has been shipping for weeks, and should be on shelves across the country soon, if they aren’t already.

This is the first step in Hershey’s somewhat recent plans to use simpler ingredients, and it’s in line with the industry: companies like Panera, Campbell’s, Schwan, Subway, Aldi, Mondelez and more all recently removed or have promised to stop using artificial flavors and additives in some of their products in response to consumer demand for less processed foods.

Hershey kisses artificial flavors goodbye in some chocolates [Associated Press]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Lack Of Windows 3.1 Technicians Causes Traffic Backup At French Airport

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Yes, this disk is in French. (fdecomite)
In your office, there might be an ancient, dusty computer lurking in a corner that no one remembers to take to the electronics recycling place. Maybe it runs some scary-old operating system like Windows 95, and you wouldn’t use it for a mission-critical function. Would you? At Orly airport outside of Paris, France, the breakdown of a program that provides weather and visibility updates to pilots grounded dozens of planes. The problem: that program only runs on Windows 3.1.

The computer, Vice News explains, has an important use in the business of getting planes out the door: air traffic control uses it to send weather information to pilots. That was crucial on the day of the weather computer breakdown, since there was heavy fog around the airport, and the computer runs a program called DECOR, which tells pilots how far down the runway they can see at the moment. That’s useful when it’s foggy.

“The tools used by Aéroports de Paris controllers run on four different operating systems, that are all between 10 and 20 years old,” a representative of the Paris air traffic controllers’ union explained to Vice News. There are some Unix systems, and some fresh and new computers running Windows XP. Orly, the city’s smaller airport, handles flights within France and within Europe, but Roissy-Charles De Gaulle, one of the busiest airports on the planet, uses the same systems.

When there are so few computers out there still running these operating systems, there aren’t as many people around capable of troubleshooting and maintenance. There are three technicians in all of Paris for DECOR, the program that malfunctioned, and one of them is getting ready to retire. Windows 3.1 is not a hot topic in French IT training, as far as I know.

Planes trying to land at Orly were redirected to other airports, and everything ended happily here. Just try not to think about how many important systems run on ancient software that no one remembers how to troubleshoot.

Windows 3.1 Is Still Alive, And It Just Killed a French Airport [Vice News]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Tim Cook: Apple Employee Kicking Black Teens Out Of Store Was “Unacceptable”

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(Adam Fagen)
Earlier this week, video showing an Apple store employee in Melbourne, Australia explaining to a group of black teens that they’d been asked to leave the premises because “we’re worried you might steal something.” The company apologized yesterday, saying Apple believes in equality “for everyone, regardless of race, age, gender, gender identity, ethnicity, religion or sexual orientation.” CEO Tim Cook also addressed the situation in an email, calling the treatment of the teens “unacceptable.”

The video showed three black teenagers from Sudan and Somalia asking why they weren’t allowed in an Apple store, at which point the employee says workers are worried they’ll shoplift.

After Apple’s public apology, Cook fired off a company-wide email (obtained by BuzzFeed News), writing that “what people have seen and heard from watching the video on the web does not represent our values.”

“It is not a message we would ever want to deliver to a customer or hear ourselves. None of us are happy with the way this was handled,” he added.

He went on to echo the company’s earlier stance on inclusiveness, writing that “our stores and our hearts are open to people from all walks of life, regardless of race or religion, gender or sexual orientation, age, disability, income, language or point of view.”

Though he says he believes this was an isolated incident, Cook writes that “store leadership teams, starting in Australia, will be refreshing their training on inclusion and customer engagement.”

It’s unclear if the manager involved is facing any disciplinary measures, but Cook says the employee “immediately expressed his regret and apologized to the students.”

In addition, another Apple store employee apologized to the students at their high school, and reassured the teens and their peers that they’d always be welcome at the store.

You can read the entire email at the source link below.

Here’s Tim Cook’s Email About Black Teens Barred Entry From Apple Store [BuzzFeed News]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Backlash Prompts Nordstrom To Pull “Chai Maintenance” Hanukkah Sweater

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chaimaintenance2‘Tis the season — and by that of course, I mean the holidays can prove to be tricky for the retail industry to maneuver: from security breaches to product delays, layaway debacles to shipping mistakes, we’ve seen all kinds of incidents that turn shoppers against brands and stores. In the latest brouhaha, Nordstrom found itself apologizing to customers for a Hanukkah sweater some called offensive.

The blue sweater from brand Faux Real is emblazoned with a menorah and the phrase, “Chai Maintenance” across the chest. Chai is the Hebrew word for life, and sounds somewhat like “high” when pronounced. Some on social media called it an unfair stereotype of Jewish women.

“I’m disappointed to see that Nordstrom is selling such an offensive item that perpetuates negative stereotypes of Jewish women,” wrote one Facebook user. “I hope you remove it from your inventory.”

“Very disappointed that Nordstrom’s would sell such a degrading item, that makes fun of Jewish Women,” another wrote.

There is a version for men, as well: it says “Mazel tov” on the top front and “Oy vey” on the back, and Happy Hanukkah on both sides.

“Cute and kitschy is one thing but perpetuating negative stereotypes as supposedly cute or fun holiday wear is disgusting,” another post read. “I expect more of a large high end retailer such as Nordstrom. Especially when the version for men is just cute, why is the version for women derogatory?”

Not everyone found the sweater’s message offensive, however.

“I don’t see the problem with this,” one customer posted. “Chai maintenance T-shirts have been around for years!” She added, “there are more serious issues to be concerned about… move on!

“Really how is this offensive? We have been sporting the Chi Maintenance fashion for years!” another person wrote. “And we have given ourselves the acronym Jewish American Princess! So now that some manufacture is making money off it, it suddenly offensive? ”

Amid the controversy, Nordstrom announced today that it would pull the sweater, and issued an apology to customers who were offended by it.

“We made a mistake by not looking more closely at the words on the sweater before we posted it — had we done so, we wouldn’t have offered it,” said a Nordstrom spokeswoman. “As soon as we heard from customers, we removed it from our site right away. We’re terribly sorry for offending people and sincerely apologize.”

Nordstrom isn’t alone in feeling the heat from shoppers this holiday season: Target recently came under fire for selling a Christmas sweater reading “OCD — Obsessive Christmas Disorder,” which some said made light of mental health issues. Target apologized, but said it plans to keep selling it.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

The FDA Will Now Have Oversight Of Fresh Produce Safety Before Anyone Gets Sick

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(Jason Bachman)
No one expects to add more fresh fruit and vegetables to their diet and end up with a stomach bug, a serious illness, or dead. Yet that’s beginning to happen, with multi-state outbreaks of foodborne illness happening, especially in items like fruit and salad greens that are generally eaten without cooking, and apparently not washed sufficiently. The Food and Drug Administration wants to change that.

In the announcement of the program, the FDA cites outbreaks in the last decade or so of E. coli in spinach in 2006, and salmonella in peanut butter in 2007, 2008, and 2012. Pathogens are invisible to farmers and cooks, but are potentially deadly. When the government is constantly pushing Americans to eat more fruit and vegetables, how can they also keep current fool policy outbreaks in foods like this can hurt people? Here’s a wacky idea: inspect before something goes wrong.

The new rules mean more obligations and inspections for farmers, including testing the water they use for irrigation, training workers on sanitation (namely: please do not poop on or hear the cilantro) and look out for wild animals that could also contaminate food items by, um, pooping on them.

The regulations on a crop depend on how it’s grown and what it’s generally used for. The more restrictive rules, which also apply to farms abroad that supply U.S. markets, would apply only to foods that will most likely eaten raw, like salad ingredients or strawberries.

New produce safety rules aim to prevent illness outbreaks [Associated Press]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Internet Giants Come Out In Support Of Municipal Broadband

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(Steve)
Nearly half the states in the U.S. have laws that ban or severely limit cities and counties from operating broadband networks or from selling that service directly to consumers. This week, a trade group representing the biggest names on the Internet — Amazon, Google, Facebook, Netflix, Twitter, reddit, Yelp, among others — came out in support of breaking down these anti-consumer barriers.

Earlier this year, on the same day that the FCC approved the new net neutrality rules, it also overturned two state regulations — one in Tennessee, and one in North Carolina — that prohibit municipal broadband networks from selling to anyone outside their very limited borders.

Both states have sued the FCC in federal court to uphold these laws that were heavily supported (and allegedly written) by cable companies like Comcast and Time Warner Cable. They claim that the FCC overstepped its authority.

In response to that lawsuit, big-time Silicon Valley trade group the Internet Association, has filed an amicus brief [PDF] in support of the FCC and muni broadband expansion in general.

“Access to the Internet is today the modern equivalent to access to railroads, electricity, highways, and telephony in previous eras,” reads the brief. “And just as the federal government recognized and executed its role in encouraging, promoting, and facilitating universal access to those services, the federal government today similarly recognizes its role in promoting and facilitating access to broadband services.”

The Tennessee regulation prevents Chattanooga’s city-run EPB utility — which provides fiberoptic Internet, TV, and phone service, in addition to electricity — from offering access to nearby communities if they are outside EPB’s electric footprint. The North Carolina law prohibits the city of Wilson from selling its Greenlight broadband service outside of its home county.

Both cities petitioned the FCC, which ruled that has an obligation under the Telecommunications Act of 1996 to “encourage the deployment on a reasonable and timely basis of advanced telecommunications capability to all Americans” by “removing barriers to infrastructure investment.”

The Internet Association describes this decision as a step forward “toward broadband abundance” and that any reversal of the FCC decision would be “a step in the opposite direction, toward retrenchment, even in the face of the startling evidence regarding the state of broadband deployment and competition in America.”

The brief cites the FCC’s recent Broadband Progress Report, which found that 55 million Americans have no access to broadband.

“This failure is especially acute in rural communities, where over 50 percent of Americans lack access to broadband services,” explains the brief. “On tribal lands and U.S. territories, nearly two-thirds of residents lack broadband services. And about 35 percent of schools in the country lack access to broadband services.”

With 17% of the country lacking any broadband access, and 45% only having one option for a broadband provider, the Internet Association contends that the majority of Americans are being harmed by this lack of competition.

The brief points to some rather dire-sounding stats about broadband connectivity in the two states trying to overturn the FCC decision.

“Almost one fifth of Tennesseans lack an option for accessing the Internet at broadband speeds, more than 65 percent have access only to one option, and 17 percent have access to two providers,” explains the Association.

Because of the state regulation, EPB can’t provide service to certain neighboring communities where, according to the brief, “almost one third of residents have no provider offering broadband services,” and “nearly two thirds have access only to one provider.”

The Association says it’s a similar situation in North Carolina, where a third of residents have no option for broadband, while almost all of the remaining two-thirds only have a single provider to choose from.

The brief notes the changes that have occurred when new broadband competition enters a market. When Google started selling Google Fiber in Austin, TX, AT&T and Time Warner Cable suddenly began offering faster and more affordable service in the area.

As Chattanooga’s EPB prepared to roll out service that is several times faster than Fiber and cheaper than slower Internet access from Comcast, Comcast decided that this mid-level market should get access to its new high-speed service.

Likewise, in the Wilson area, Time Warner Cable offered better service and faster speeds after the introduction of Greenlight.

And as we recently noted, AT&T charges significantly less for its high-speed service in markets where Google Fiber exists.

“Removing barriers to providing broadband access allows more competition in the broadband access ecosystem,” reads the brief. “Competition in turn increases consumer options, incentivizes existing providers to improve their offerings, and improves the inadequate state of broadband access.”

Oral arguments have not yet been scheduled for this matter, but if the FCC is successful in defending its decisions to strike down the Tennessee and North Carolina rules, it could have a huge impact on municipal broadband.

For example, remember the story of Seth in Washington state? He almost had to sell his new house after being lied to by both Comcast and CenturyLink that they could provide Internet service to his home office.

Seth’s county has a high-speed fiber network but Washington state law prohibits the county from selling service directly to consumers. So even though there was high-speed fiber running very near his property, he had to jump through all sorts of bureaucratic hoops to be able to connect to that network.

Public utility officials we talked to in Washington said they and others are waiting for the decision (and eventual appeals) of the FCC case before they decide whether or not to ask the Commission to overturn the rules that keep them from offering competitive services.

Opponents of muni broadband have tried to classify it as some sort of Soviet Bloc type mess that will cost consumers more. But the fact is that muni broadband would just be another option in a marketplace that is in dire need of competition.

If a city-owned network is too expensive or offers bad service, no one is obliged to take it. But for those Americans who currently live in markets where they only have one broadband provider to choose from, private cable companies are already getting away with charging too much for lackluster service.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Kentucky City Allowing Motorists To Pay Parking Tickets With Canned Food For A Month

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(tjean314)
Residents of Lexington, KY now have another option along with searching through their couch cushions to come up with payment for parking tickets: the city will allow motorists to pay for their citations with canned goods throughout the month of November.

The campaign is part of the city parking authority’s annual food drive, reports WKYT. LexPark tried the donation program last year for the first time, letting residents pay off parking meter tickets with food.

The “Food for Fines” program brought in more than 6,200 cans for more than 600 meter citations last year. This time around, the city is will also accept cans for other citations as well.

“We hope by opening the program up to all types of citations, we’ll see those numbers increase this season,” said Parking Authority Executive Director Gary Means.

From Nov. 16 through Dec. 18, motorists who donate 10 canned food items will get a $15 credit per citation. Past-due parking citations will also be eligible for the program.

LexPark suggests bringing large cans of vegetables and proteins, and won’t accept any out-of-date, damaged or open canned goods. All donations will be given to a local food bank.

LexPark launches annual food drive, allowing motorists to pay tickets with canned food [WKYT]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Feds Shut Down Phony Apple, Microsoft, Google Tech Support Scammers

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(Paul)
While consumers are much more tech-savvy today than we were during the days of Windows 3.1 and baud modems, there are still a lot of people whose tech-insecurity makes them potential prey for bogus tech support businesses that make money by convincing victims their computers are infected with viruses.

Today, the Federal Trade Commission — along with the attorneys general for Pennsylvania and Connecticut — announced it had shut down several tech support scammers that bilked consumers for more than $17 million.

According to the complaint [PDF] filed in a federal court in Philadelphia, a number of operations — all using the name Click4Support in some capacity — have been scamming victims since at least 2013.

The scammers would place ads on websites that appeared as popup warnings that a virus or malware had been detected on the computer. The popups instructed users to call the phone number listed to resolve the issue.

The scammers’ boiler room “tech support” staff would field those calls, misleading callers into believing they were employed by or affiliated with companies like Apple, Microsoft, Google, or Dell.

Callers were asked to give the tech support scammers remote access to their computers so they could investigate. Invariably, the telemarketer would then find all sorts of errors and failures that they said was evidence of a problem.

The FTC performed an undercover investigation, calling up this supposed tech support team and granting them remote access to a computer that the investigators knew was free of viruses and malware. But, lo and behold, the support scammer still found — and circled in bright red — all sorts of things that might look alarming to some:
techsupportscam1

techsupportscam3

But as the FTC notes in its complaint, nothing in the above images is any indication of a viral infection. Investigators explain that it is normal for a Windows system to collect “hundreds or thousands” of “error” messages in the course of normal operations. Likewise, even though seeing labels like “Untrusted” and “Fraudulent” might raise a red flag in your mind, the FTC says these labels are “designed to help protect consumers from giving their information to an untrusted web server and are incorporated into any properly configured, up-to-date Windows system.”

However, in an age where big data breaches are a daily occurrence, it’s inevitable that some consumers will be convinced that their devices are in peril and they need to pay to get them fixed.

Of course, since these computers likely weren’t infected to begin with, the tech support people went bout doing things that looked helpful but were not, like deleting innocuous files that had no impact on performance.

In some cases, the fake tech support folks actually did more damage to victims’ computers, like when they would remove existing antivirus and security software, or stopped web browsers from automatically updating their security protections, or disabled Windows’ built-in notification systems designed to send security and maintenance messages to users.

For all of their non-helpful work, the scammers charged upwards of thousands of dollars to victims.

The complaint alleges violations of the FTC Act, the Telemarketing Sales Rule, the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act, and the Pennsylvania Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law.

“We’re pleased the court shut down these scammers, who defrauded consumers out of millions of dollars by preying on their lack of technical expertise,” said Jessica Rich, director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Our goal is now to get money back for the victims in this case, and keep the defendants out of the scam tech support business.”


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Police: Woman Threw Punches At Denny’s Because All-You-Can-Eat Doesn’t Mean You Can Share With Friends

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(БРАТСТВО)
If you’ve never heard of an all-you-can-eat special before, it can sound pretty darn amazing — all the food you can shove into your gullet for one flat price. But there’s usually one major catch: the deal only applies to one person, otherwise restaurants would lose a lot of money on large groups all splitting “one” meal. One Denny’s customer apparently wasn’t familiar with the idea, and ended up in handcuffs after allegedly throwing a fit at the restaurant.

A Chicago woman is facing assault and property damage charges after police say she flew into a rage when a Denny’s server explained that the $4 all-you-can-eat pancake special applied on a per person basis, reports The Smoking Gun. Meaning she couldn’t just keep ordering hot cakes and doling them out to her friends for that low price, because again, restaurants would go out of business quickly with that model.

She seemed to be under the impression that the $4 could stretch for everyone at the table, and began cursing at the waitress. Police say she threw several punches at the waitress — though she didn’t connect with her target — and left Denny’s without paying the tab. On her way out, she repeatedly kicked a door, thus the property damage charges.

Police caught up with her after workers gave a description of the car in which she and her friends fled the scene, and she was taken into custody.

Woman Arrested For Denny’s Pancake Rage [The Smoking Gun]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Shrimp Shoplifter Stuffs Shellfish Down Pants, Up Shirt

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(Photos in the Sunset)
We always like to keep an eye on the latest incidents where shoplifters are caught in the act of stuffing meat down their pants. The usual choices of criminals against meat, steak and lobster make sense: they’re pricey, for people who want to resell the meats, and they’re tasty high-status foods, for those who would prefer to eat them. It’s been a while, though, since we’ve heard of anyone stuffing shrimp down their pants, which happened recently in Connecticut.

Last time, in 2011, the shrimp was part of an assortment of meats and seafood, along with pork and lobster. In this incident, the alleged seafood-swiper was after a bigger prize, stuffing five bags of shrimp down his pants and up his shirt.

Store employees flagged the man and called police, having noticed the man in the middle of what he surely thought was a stealthy and invisible act. Police arrested him, and discovered that there was another warrant out for his arrest. For the shrimp crime, he was charged with sixth degree larceny, since the shrimp was worth less than $500.

Bridgeport Police bags shrimp shoplifter [Bridgeport News]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

DraftKings, FanDuel Ask Court To Overturn New York State Ban

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draftkingsAs expected, fantasy sports businesses are fighting back against the New York state attorney general’s determination that DraftKings and FanDuel are actually illegal gambling sites and should not be allowed to operate in the state. This morning, both DraftKings and FanDuel asked the court to overturn that decision.

The two sites filed separate actions in a New York Supreme Court in Manhattan. In the DraftKings complaint [PDF], the website accuses New York attorney general Eric Schneiderman of “misreading New York’s gambling laws” and “attempting to bully DraftKings” into immediately shutting down its New York operations “before it even has a chance to defend itself.”

DraftKings says the AG overreached by only giving them a five-day window to cease operating in New York. What’s more, the site accuses Schneiderman of “threatening to take action” against DraftKings’ business partners and vendors “unless they immediately ceased performing services for DraftKings in New York.”

The site is seeking an emergency injunction “to bar the Attorney General from continuing to abuse his power and to prevent the irreparable harm that will result from it.”

In a statement e-mailed to Consumerist, DraftKings writes:

“Today, we have taken decisive legal action to prevent a unilateral, misinformed and legally misguided attempt by the New York Attorney General to act as ‘judge, jury and executioner’ for daily fantasy sports in New York. We are asking the New York Supreme Court to rule that the Attorney General’s cease-and-desist letter is unconstitutional, an abuse of discretion, and simply wrong. We are confident in our legal position and intend to continue to fight to preserve the right of the over 500,000 New York consumers to play the fantasy sports games they love.”

The NY Post reports that FanDuel — who has not yet replied to our request for comment — filed a similar petition with the same court on Friday.

That site contends that a shutdown of FanDuel in NY state would “deprive hundreds of thousands of subscribing New Yorkers of the opportunity to pit their skills against the skills of others in selecting a ‘fantasy’ team of athletes from different sports teams and competing in contests offering prizes to the players whose fantasy teams perform best.”

We’ve reached out to Schneiderman’s office for comment on these lawsuits, but have not yet heard back. We will update when we do.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Kia Recalling 256K Soul Compact SUVs Over Possible Steering Failure

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(Chris Rief)
Cars will take you wherever you want to go — that is, if you can point them in the right direction. That’s why steering is so important, and why Kia Motors is recalling more than 256,000 Soul compact SUVs in the United States, over concern that defective glue could make the steering system fall apart.

The car company is recalling certain model year 2014-2016 Kia Soul and Soul EV vehicles manufactured Jan. 18, 2014 through Sept. 30, 2015, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

The problem is centered on the adhesive used to secure the steering pinion gear to the steering gear assembly — it might have insufficient strength to hold everything together. As a result, the pinion gear could separate from the gear assembly, causing the whole steering system to fail. That could lead to a crash, as one might imagine it’s very difficult to make your car go where you want it to without steering.

There haven’t been any accidents or injuries due to the steering issue reported thus far; Kia says it became aware of the problem from dealer warranty reports.

Kia will notify owners, and dealers will inspect and, if necessary, replace the pinion plug that secures the pinion gear. Dealers will also install a set bolt for additional reinforcement, with all repairs free of charge. The recall is expected to start Dec. 22, 2015.

Owners with questions can call Kia customer service at 1-800-333-4542. Kia’s number for this recall is SC125.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Now You See It, Now You Don’t: Facebook Testing Self-Destructing Messages

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Turning the feature on; after the message disappears into the fiery chasm from whence it came.
Facebook is reportedly trying a totally new, completely novel, never-before-seen kind of message — oh, hang on a second, Snapchat has been doing self-destructing photos and videos for a while now. But anyway, Facebook apparently wants to do that kind of thing, too.

For all those missive you’d rather disappear instead of having them linger in your friend’s or loved one’s (or, honestly, your nemesis’) inbox, Facebook is trying out a feature that allows users to set their messages to self-destruct an hour after they’re sent, using the Messenger app.

Messenger users can turn on the disappearing option by tapping an hourglass icon included in the app. Tap it again, and the feature is disabled.

The option is only being tested in France for now, but could expand to other countries if it proves popular.

“We’re excited to announce the latest in an engaging line of optional product features geared towards making Messenger the best way to communicate with the people that matter most,” Facebook said in a statement (h/t Buzzfeed News). “Starting today, we’re conducting a small test in France of a feature that allows people to send messages that disappear an hour after they’re sent. Disappearing messages gives people another fun option to choose from when they communicate on Messenger. We look forward to hearing people’s feedback as they give it a try.”


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Google Self-Driving Car Pulled Over For Going Too Slow

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(Google)
You probably know the feeling: you’re driving along happily at the speed limit, on your way to work or school or that new mud-wrestling pit that just opened up, when suddenly, you’re forced to slow down to a veritable crawl, stuck puttering onward below the speed limit because one driver is moving at a snail’s pace. Who could be such a sadist? It could be a self-driving car, like the Google vehicle police pulled over yesterday.

One of Google’s self-driving prototypes was stopped by police in Mountain View, CA — the hometown of the technology giant — when an officer noticed traffic backing up behind the vehicle. It was traveling at 24 mph in a 35 mph, police said in a blog post.

Cops in that area are savvy to the tech world and recognized the car as a driverless Google model (with a human safety driver inside, of course), and the officer decided to pull it over “and made contact with the operators to learn more about how the car was choosing speeds along certain roadways and to educate the operators about impeding traffic.”

In a post on its Google+ page, the Google Self-Driving Car Project responded to the news by explaining that the prototype vehicles can only go up to 25 mph in any case, for “safety reasons.”

“We want them to feel friendly and approachable, rather than zooming scarily through neighborhood streets,” it said. “Like this officer, people sometimes flag us down when they want to know more about our project,” Google added. “After 1.2 million miles of autonomous driving (that’s the human equivalent of 90 years of driving experience), we’re proud to say we’ve never been ticketed!”

Just try not to get in my way when I’m heading to the cheese store, Google, or we’ll have to have some words.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

SpagettiOs Recalled Because Red Plastic Pieces Are Not A New Flavor

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spaghettiOAfter some customers complained, the Campbell Soup Company discovered that the red plastic lining of cans of Original flavor SpaghettiOs has peeled off, ending up in the tomato sauce and posing a choking hazard. The recall includes 355,000 cans, which seems like a massive amount, but is quite small compared to the total number of SpaghettiOs cans sold nationwide.

What should you look for in your pantry? Affected cans will have the date February 22, 2017 stamped on the bottom lid. Since canned pasta rings come in so many sizes and configurations, note that the affected product are 14.2 ounce cans of plain SpaghettiOs. The UPC number is 51000 22432.

If you find affected cans, return them to the store where they were purchased. If that isn’t possible, or if you have other questions or concerns, contact the company’s recall hotline at 1-866-535-3774.

If the affected cans are 14.2 ounces, that means they’re from a batch canned before the company shrank cans down to an even 14 ounces this year.

SPAGHETTIOS ORIGINAL 14.2OZ CANS RECALLED DUE TO POTENTIAL CHOKING HAZARD [Campbell Soup Company]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

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Here are twelve 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.

(Michael)
laughing_expo
(Joachim Rayos)
(Renee Rendler-Kaplan)
(Jason Cook)
(Bjarne Winkler)
(Steven Depolo)
(Clyde Stringer)
(J.G. Park)
(Freaktography)
(吉姆 Jim Hofman)
(吉姆 Jim Hofman)

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