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Friday, September 16, 2016

Cuban-American Flight Attendants Not Allowed To Stay Overnight In Country Where They Were Born

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While Cuba appears to be welcoming American airlines and tourists with open arms, the island nation is not so forgiving to those who fled the country in recent decades. We’ve already told about concerns that cruise ship operators had about coming into port with Cuban-born staff on board. Now American Airlines has had to pull some flight attendants from overnight flights to Cuba because they aren’t welcome to stay.

The Miami Herald reports that the carrier had to remove crew members born in Cuba from fights to the country because of the island’s strict travel rules.

Under Cuban law, anyone born in the country after 1970 is required to have a Cuban passport to return.

But some American Airlines employees don’t have that piece of identification, and so they weren’t allowed entry.

It was then that the carrier reportedly began asking questions that perhaps should have been answered before the first flight took off: What happens if there were an unforeseen delay or a long flight that requires a Cuban-American to spend the night in the country?

According to the Cuban government, they simply can’t stay, barring the most “extenuating circumstances.”

So that’s left the carrier with just one option, remove the crew members from the flights.

In fact, the Herald reports that American sent memos to managers that state: “Please remember that those who are Cuban-born should be removed with pay from Cuba flights until we can verify what requirements the Cuban government has for these crewmembers.”

As with the changes that eventually lead to Carnival continue with its plans to set sail to Cuba, the Herald points out that American — along with other airlines flying to the country — could try to negotiate with the Cuban government over flight restrictions.

Cuba won’t allow Cuban-American flight crews to stay overnight, so an airline grounded them [The Miami Herald]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

News Organizations Sue FBI To Find Out Who & How Much It Paid To Unlock Terrorist’s iPhone

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In the months following the tragic Dec. 2, 2015 terrorist attack in San Bernardino, the FBI and Apple engaged in a heated legal (and publicity) battle over whether or not the tech giant could be compelled to unlock an iPhone belonging to one of the attackers. Then in March 2016, the FBI paid an unidentified third party to provide a solution this particular problem. The identity and actual cost of this unlocking is still unknown, but two of the country’s biggest media companies have sued the FBI to learn more.

The Associated Press, USA Today (in the name of parent company Gannett), and Vice Media jointly filed a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit [PDF] against the FBI today, seeking to compel the agency to turn over records related to this third-party transaction that ultimately resulted in the FBI being able to circumvent the iPhone’s security measures.

The complaint alleges that by paying for this third-party “access tool” while allowing the provider of the tool to remain anonymous, the FBI is “effectively sanctioning that party to retain this potentially dangerous technology without any public assurance about what that vendor represents, whether the vendor has adequate security measures, whether the vendor is a proper recipient of government funds, or whether it will act only in the public interest.”

After all, argue the plaintiffs, the FBI is not a private company. The money it spends are public funds.

“Understanding the amount that the FBI deemed appropriate to spend on the tool, as well as the identity and reputation of the vendor it did business with, is essential for the public to provide effective oversight of government functions and help guard against potential improprieties,” explains the complaint, which contends that the public is entitled to know more about the vendors who provide these sort of tools to federal law enforcement, especially if the FBI “feels compelled to contract with groups of hackers with suspect reputations, because it will inform the public debate over whether the current legislative apparatus is sufficient to meet the Government’s need for such information.”

After the FBI successfully unlocked the iPhone in this case, FBI Director James Comey was initially coy about how much the Bureau spent on the process.

“A lot,” he told the media in April, only adding that the amount is “More than I will make in the remainder of this job, which is seven years and four months, for sure.”

Using his salary — a known figure — and that time frame, the best reporters could come up with a figure north of $1.2 million.

Comey subsequently admitted — and regretted — being “cute” about that estimate, but nonetheless maintained that it was “a lot of money,” but that “it was well worth it,” even though he acknowledged that the tool the Bureau had purchased was created to crack the security on an iPhone 5C (released in 2013) running the iOS 9 operating system.

Thus, the applicability of that tool to other, newer devices with later versions of iOS is unknown.

The FBI’s single-minded focus raises some questions, notes the complaint.

“[T]he goal in San Bernardino was to investigate the case and get into that phone,” explained Comey in May. “We bought what was necessary to get into that phone. We tried not to spend more money than we needed to spend, but we spent the money we needed to to get into that phone.”

There is something called the vulnerabilities equities process (VEP), a system by which the federal government decides whether or not to disclose a vulnerability it discovers in a piece of technology.

By purchasing only the tool to unlock the device, was the FBI trying to avoid having to learn how the tool works or about the hackable vulnerability in the iPhone 5C? Some reporters questioned if the FBI was trying to evade VEP considerations (and possibly having to disclose the vulnerability to Apple) by avoiding knowledge of how the tool functions.

In that same statement in May, Director Comey denied this idea, saying he “would be shocked if anybody even thought about the VEP or the VEP at the time this was going on.”

Since the FBI dropped its legal effort to compel Apple’s assistance, the plaintiffs have each unsuccessfully filed FOIA requests with the FBI for more information regarding this transaction.

In June, the FBI denied USA Today’s request, saying that even though it had the sought-after documents, these are “law enforcement records” involved in a “pending or prospective law enforcement proceeding relevant to these responsive records,” and therefore exempted under FOIA. The paper’s subsequent appeal was summarily denied on Sept. 2 by the Department of Justice.

The dates vary, but the story was the same for reporters from the AP and Vice, both whom found their requests and appeals denied.

The plaintiffs accuse the FBI of violating FOIA by failing to conduct a reasonable search, and failing to make documents available.

“There is no lawful basis under FOIA for the FBI’s denial of the three Requests that are the subject of this action,” reads the complaint. “Even if parts of the requested documents are properly subject to an exemption, the FBI has an obligation to redact non-exempt portions of the documents and release those portions that are non-exempt under FOIA.”

The news organizations are asking the court to compel the FBI to fulfill its obligation to do an adequate search for requested records and to make them available in a timely manner.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Colleges Give Up On Bookstores, Just Send Students To Amazon

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Amazon pickup points on college campuses, which have been sprouting up at schools across the country, have two purposes: they exist to alleviate the strain that college students with Prime memberships put on campus mail services, and to help kill college bookstores. Bookstores are responding: not with price-matching or anything wacky like that, but by dropping books from their merchandise assortment.

Barnes & Noble’s college bookstore division is actually profitable, and split off from the original company a few years ago. Yet it also did something interesting: the word “book” has been taken out of its name, since the stores don’t really sell books anymore.

The New York Times visited the State University of New York’s Stony Brook University on Long Island this back-to-school season, and found a Barnes & Noble-run bookstore with a selection of pleasure reading and adult coloring books. Their reporter also found some confused freshmen trying to go textbook shopping.

The school bookstore is still the best place to get branded t-shirts and serves as an on-campus convenience store, but Stony Brook and other schools have partnered with Amazon to be their official textbook provider.

This is beneficial to students, many of whom already knew that they can get the best prices from Amazon for their texts. Schools also cash in, getting back about 2% of student textbook spending back in cash in return for making Amazon their official bookstore.

Purdue University was the first campus to set up an Amazon pickup point, and an official there told the Chronicle of Higher Education that the college has received about $1 million back from Amazon on student purchases.

As Amazon Arrives, the Campus Bookstore Is a Books Store No More [New York Times]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Olive Garden Unlimited Pasta Passes Hit eBay With Prices Up To $4,500 Because Of Course

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Despite the fact that Olive Garden put 21,000 Never Ending Pasta Passes up for sale yesterday, 19,000 more than it offered last year, those passes sold out immediately. Demand remains, it seems, as there are already listings for the passes on eBay with asking prices up to $4,500.

A quick search on eBay results in a slew of Pasta Pass offers, including that $4,500 listing — which is pretty steep considering Pasta Pass holders used them to visit the chain an average of 28 times last year. Some people can eat more pasta than others, so who knows.

Whether anyone will attempt to buy those passes is anyone’s guess, but if you do decide to fork over your money for one on the black market, beware: in years past Olive Garden forbade the reselling of passes, which come marked with the original buyer’s name emblazoned on them to prevent reselling.

Some sellers have apparently thought ahead, with one listing noting:

“Name printed on card: ‘B’. (Will not change name, will be sent with name “B” on card).
Because this pass is for use only by the named passholder “B”, your attempt to use it is entirely at your risk. If you are unable to use the pass on one, more, or all attempts/occasions, you will not eligible to receive a refund. All sales are final.”

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Another seller seems to think buyers will have no problem with pesky identity issues, writing, “I’ve sold these the past 3 years with my name on it without issue, however if you encounter an issue using it, I will gladly refund your money and pay for shipping back to me.”

There’s no warning of any kind on the $4,500 listing so you better think long and hard about how much pasta you could by with less money than that before you decide to bid or buy.

We’ve reached out to Olive Garden to clarify the company’s stance on the reselling of Pasta Passes, and will update this post when we hear back.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

U.S. Bank CEO Warns Employees: Make Fun Of Wells Fargo And You’re Fired

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It’s been a (deservedly) bad month for Wells Fargo, what with the bank being ordered to pay $185 million in penalties because employees opened millions of bogus accounts, not to mention the ongoing Justice Department investigation. It would seem like a prime time for the competition to pile on the misery and steal away customers, but the CEO of U.S. Bank is demanding his staff not give into that temptation.

U.S. Bank employees were warned Thursday that under no circumstances are they to attempt to capitalize on Wells Fargo’s situation — at least publicly, The Star Tribune reports.

CEO Richard Davis told investors that the company won’t tolerate employees who publicly and overtly go after Wells Fargo customers, because that’s just not how the bank does business.

“So help me God, if I find a branch in one market with an orange flier that says ‘if you bank at Wells come to U.S. Bank,’ they’re going to be let go,” Davis said.

While he didn’t completely close the door on courting Wells Fargo customers looking for another place to bank, he says he just wants the influx of new accounts to come naturally.

“Because the fact of the matter is, the circumstance itself, whatever it becomes, is going to be ours to the benefit if the customers decide to move toward us,” he said. “It may be an opportunity for us but it’s not our job to go out there and call that out. It’d be inappropriate.”

Still, he expects customers to make the transition to the bank over the next few months or years.

If there’s one bank that you’d expect Davis to go after, it probably would have been Wells Fargo, which was accused last year or trying to undermine U.S. Bank’s naming rights to the new Minnesota Vikings facility by allegedly “photobombing” U.S. Bank stadium with a pair of large, illuminated rooftop Wells Fargo signs.

U.S. Bank CEO: Employees shouldn’t disparage Wells Fargo over scandal [Star Tribune]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Do You Remember What Happened This Week? Take The Consumerist Quiz To Find Out

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The first full week after the end of summer and we’re already packing away the cargo shorts, swimsuits, squirt guns, and our dreams of ever recapturing the joy of youth (Is that just me? Sorry). While we may not all be able to vividly recall a time when we were guileless babes, quietly pondering the future while looking up through the tall grasses, we should all be able to remember the things that have happened since Monday morning, right?

After some disappointing results in last week’s quiz (median score: 60%), we’re going easy on y’all this week, with at least one question that you can’t possibly (well, nothing’s impossible) get wrong.

Only one way to find out. Let’s quiz this place to the ground:


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Philadelphia Latest City To Try Using Pee-Repelling Paint In Transit System

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What’s a city transit agency to do when people won’t stop urinating all over the walls of its stations? There’s a pee-repelling paint for that, and Philadelphia is the latest to consider using the stuff in an effort to clean up public spaces.

A spokesman for the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority confirmed to news site BillyPenn that the agency has plans to test a brand of paint called Ultra-Ever Dry, the same liquid-repellant stuff officials used in San Francisco and the St. Pauli neighborhood of Hamburg, Germany. SEPTA says testing is slated to start in a few weeks.

“It’s imminent. It’s coming soon,” spokesman Andrew Busch said. As for where those trial spot will be, that’s “still being determined.”

Busch says waste complaints are among the most common the agency receives, and that SEPTA’s maintenance crews are always looking for new ways to right the mess.

“This is just one more thing that SEPTA will have to help keep the system clean,” he told NBC 10.

The paint’s “superhydrophobic” qualities cause liquid to splash back at its source, which could make for a very unpleasant experience if you’re relieving yourself against a wall or other surface.

SEPTA will test a pee-repellant this fall [BillyPenn]
SEPTA Tries Urine-Repelling Paint to Clean Up Stations [NBC 10]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Restaurant Customers Uninterested In Sit-Down Chains, Still Hungry

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When you go out to eat, where do you go? Restaurant-watchers are noticing that business at sit-down establishments is dropping, while convenience stores, restaurants that deliver, and even supermarkets with ready-to-eat food are all increasing their business.

The Associated Press notes that sales at popular chains are falling or are flat, noting the poor recent sales figures at popular chains Chili’s and Ruby Tuesday, and the sale of Red Lobster.

Americans’ eating habits are changing as our lifestyles change, explain experts, and that generally means that we’re not interested in sitting down and waiting around for our meals… at least, not chain restaurant fare.

“[Young adults are] looking for convenience, quality, portability and healthfulness,” the president of restaurant analytics company Technomic told the AP.

That generally explains the popularity of Chipotle: even as its business overall has dropped, younger customers are staying loyal, with one woman who sued after becoming critically ill during the company’s food-safety crisis taking her settlement in the form of free food. That’s loyalty.

Another way to look at this data is that business at large chain restaurants is down, but business at local, privately owned restaurants that Technomic doesn’t track is presumably up. Unless people have started cooking more all of a sudden.

McDonald’s is trying to market its food as fresh and wholesome, at least in comparison to what it used to be like, sometimes taking bashing its former practices a little too far, and


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

T-Mobile: Apple Has Fixed iOS 10 Connectivity Issues, So Go Ahead And Update

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T-Mobile customers using the iPhone 6, 6S, and SE can now go ahead and install to iOS 10, as the company says Apple has issued a fix to address connectivity issues some folks reported this week after updating their phones.

T-Mobile has updated its support page with the information and instructions on how to install the fix if you downloaded iOS 10 before today.

And if you haven’t downloaded it yet, “feel free to do so when you’re ready!” the company adds.

Executives for the wireless carrier also let customers know on Twitter that they’re cleared for takeoff early this morning, after confirming the issue just yesterday afternoon.

Before the fix, some iPhone users were finding they’d lose their signal, and the only way to restore it was to turn their phones off and back on again.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Some Retailers Say They Don’t Have Enough New Apple Watches To Fulfill Pre-Orders

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Yesterday, Apple warned that people who didn’t preorder the iPhone 7 Plus would probably not be able to find them at Apple stores when they went on sale this morning. Now comes news some retailers are unable to fill preorders for today’s other Apple debut: the Series 2 Apple Watch.

AppleInsider reports that retailers like Target and Best Buy began emailing some customers on Thursday, hours before the product’s launch, with the bad news that their deliveries would be delayed.

Best Buy informed customers that shipping of preorders for the Apple Watch 2 would begin Sept. 28, while orders of the Apple Watch Series 1 would ship sometime in mid-October.

Target, on the other hand, did not provide a date for potential shipment. Both retailers say they are offering customers a $50 in-store credit for the delays.

When reached by AppleInsider, only two of seven Target stores said they had received any floor stock of the Apple Watch Series 2. Still, that inventory only added up to three watches total.

Of eight Best Buy stores reached, only one had stock of the watch, with one device on hand.

Each of the stores noted that they had “a few” iPhone 7 models in stock. But those devices were only available in rose gold.

Target, Best Buy hamstrung by Apple Watch, iPhone 7 stock issues [AppleInsider]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Cheap, Easy-To-Buy USB Device Can Literally Fry Your Computer (Or Anything Else)

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It sounds like something out of a spy thriller or sci-fi novel, but as with many other once-futuristic technologies, fact and fiction have merged: There’s a tiny USB device out there that can flat-out fry almost any laptop it’s plugged into, and they’re cheap enough that basically anyone who wants to cause some trouble can buy one.

As Inc. reports, the USB Killer does exactly one thing: delivers a big fat electric jolt to the device it’s plugged in to, shorting out the insides. Permanently.

The “how” is fairly straightforward: You plug it into something. It rapidly draws a charge from that thing (same as your phone or mouse or anything else can do over USB). When it’s fully charged — which takes a second or less — it immediately discharges the power back out. That sends a harmful power surge into the device, likely frying lots of bits. And the USB Killer will keep repeating this cycle as long as it’s connected.

The device costs €49.95 — about $56, today — and is available to order online, which is about as low a barrier of entry as you can get for electronic tools of general destruction.

Via BoingBoing, there’s a proof-of-concept video showing the device at work:

There is, however, one category of safe devices, according to Inc: Mac hardware. Apple, the device makers claim, has already built in protection against this kind of surge to its products.

If you don’t have any particular enemies or work on megalomaniacal projects, odds of anyone getting one of these and coming after your personal laptop are probably pretty low. But since it works on any unprotected USB port — from airplanes to copy machines to televisions — there’s a pretty high potential for mayhem out there.

This New USB Stick That Anyone Can Buy Destroys Almost Anything It Is Plugged Into [Inc.]


by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Aeropostale Increases Number Of Stores That Will Stay Open To 400

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Earlier this week, a bankruptcy judge approved a $243 million bid from a group of mall landlords, liquidators, and a licensing company that would save 229 of Aeropostale’s 720 stores from closing their doors forever. Things are looking even better than expected now for the teen retailer, as its new owners say they’ll be able to keep open 171 more stores than originally planned.

A total of 400 of the store’s former 720 locations will now remain open, saving an extra 5,300 jobs on top of the 7,000 the retailer previously announced would survive, the New York Post reports. Late on Thursday, an undisclosed number of mall operators agreed to cut the rents at those 171 stores.

Authentic Brands Chief Executive Jamie Salter told the Post the increase happened after other landlords “cooperated with our business plan.”

“There is nothing wrong with Aeropostale, but you have to get the rents and the overhead under control,” Salter said. “This is a new way of thinking about retail.”

He adds that he had a similar deal in the works with Simon Properties last year with another bankrupt chain, but it didn’t come together. That provided a template for this situation, he says, so he simply approached Simon again. General Growth Partners, another mall landlord, was also part of the group that bid for Aeropostale.

“The entity is financially secure and well capitalized, and we are very pleased that thousands of jobs will be preserved,” said General Growth Partners CEO Sandeep Mathrani.

Aeropostale snags rent deal and saves 171 stores [New York Post]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Fiat Chrysler Recalls 1.9M Cars Over Airbag Issues Linked To Three Deaths

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Following the deaths of three people and injuries to at least five others, Fiat Chrysler has recalled 1.9 million vehicles over an alleged airbag defect.

Fiat Chrysler said on Thursday that the recalled vehicles — of which approximately 1.4 million are in the U.S. — may contain flawed computer software that could cause airbags and seatbelt restraints to fail in certain crashes, Reuters reports.

The issue, the carmaker says, is found in the occupant restraint control module and front-impact sensor wiring. If an affected vehicle is in a frontal collision, the airbags and seatbelt pretensioners may fail, meaning the airbags will not deploy and the seatbelt may not tighten, increasing the risk of injury.

The recall covers the following models and years:
• Chrysler Sebring (2010)
• Chrysler 200 (2011-2014)
• Dodge Avenger (2010-2014)
• Dodge Caliber (2010-2012)
• Jeep Patriot (2010-2014)
• Jeep Compass (2010-2014)

The carmaker, which no longer uses the occupant restoration controller or wiring in question, first uncovered the issue after analyzing crashes and collecting data from vehicles.

It is unclear when Fiat Chrysler will begin repairs, as a spokesperson tells Reuters that the company is finalizing those plans.

Fiat Chrysler’s recall comes just a week after General Motors issued the recall of 3.4 million vehicles for similar issues linked to one death and at least three injuries.

According to GM, the sensing and diagnostic module, which controls the airbag and deployment, in some vehicles contains a software defect that “may prevent the deployment of frontal airbags and pretensioners in certain rare circumstances when a crash is preceded by a specific event impacting vehicle dynamics.”

Fiat Chrysler recalling 1.9 million cars for new air bag defect [Reuters]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Man Behind $31 Million Mortgage Telemarketing Scam Sentenced To 16 Years In Prison

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A California man has been sentenced to 16 years in federal prison for his part in what prosecutors believe is the largest mortgage modification scam in history, defrauding victims out of $31 million.

Dionysius “D” Fiumaro and his co-conspirators in the scam were in indicted [PDF] in Aug. 2014 on wire fraud charges.

According to prosecutors, the scammers would purchase lists of potential victims: homeowners at risk of foreclosure because they had fallen behind on mortgage payments. They would then email their targets, falsely claiming that the homeowner’s mortgage was currently under review and that the mortgage lender had already considered and approved a modified rate for the loan.

One example email cited in the indictment attempted to mislead the recipient into believing their mortgage would be modified with an interest rate as low as 2%, and directed the homeowner to call the scammers within 10 days or the offer expired.

The telemarketing firm operated by Fiumano received these calls and also used “sales staff” to call potential victims, falsely representing that by signing up with the scheme, the homeowners were retaining lawyers who would aggressively negotiate the modification on their behalf.

The telemarketers also lied to victims of the scam about the costs involved, telling them there would be no up-front fees and that all fees would be paid by the lender.

In actuality, say prosecutors, the scammers collected fees, did not turn them over to the banks, and did not provide legal representation. At best, the scammers did nothing more than fill in an application for a mortgage modification through the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP), a process that any homeowner can do on their own for free. In some cases, not even that minimal effort was exerted.

The scam ran for nearly three years before finally being shut down in 2014. Fiumano was the only one of the indictees who chose to go to trial. In May, a federal jury found him guilty of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud. In addition to his 16-year sentence [PDF], which he must begin serving by Oct. 17, Fiumano has been ordered to pay nearly $12 million in restitution.

Fiumano’s co-conspirators have all entered guilty pleas to charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and wire fraud. They are slated to be sentenced on Nov. 21.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Spare Electronics Battery Catches Fire Aboard Delta Air Lines Flight

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Crew aboard a Delta Air Lines flight from Norfolk, VA to Atlanta this morning extinguished a spare electronics battery that caught fire in the rear of the aircraft. But no, Samsung says it probably wasn’t a Galaxy Note 7.

About 15 minutes into the flight, a passenger called out that there was a fire in row 34, according to a reporter for The Virginian-Pilot who was on the flight.

Another passenger said she was two rows behind the smoking battery, and had settled in for a nap when she smelled smoke. Her seat mate opened the lavatory door, revealing a plume of smoke.

“It wasn’t a big flaming fire, it was more smoldering smoke,” the first passenger said, noting that passengers and crew members worked well together to figure to where the fire was coming from. The Pilot reporter adds that the attendants were right on top of the situation.

“The flight attendants responded quickly and knew what to do,” she said, and they extinguished the flames.

No one was injured and the flight continued on and landed safely in Atlanta.

It’s unclear who owned the battery, but Samsung spokesperson told The Wall Street Journal that it has “received no information to indicate that this is related to a Samsung device. The Note 7 doesn’t have a removable battery, either, while the battery that started smoking on the Delta flight was a “spare battery not affixed to a device,” the airline said.

Delta says its crew members “acted quickly to immediately dissipate the smoke,” and that it will work with aviation safety officials to investigate the source and type of the battery.

Last week, the Federal Aviation Administration asked owners of the Note 7 to not use or charge the devices on planes after reports that their batteries could catch fire and explode. Just last night, Samsung finally issued an official recall of the devices, two weeks after halting all sales of the devices. The company’s U.S. president releasing a video apology to customers this morning.

It’s important to note that while Samsung has been grabbing headlines for its battery debacle lately, it’s not the first company to deal with exploding lithium ion batteries — and it won’t be the last.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Ramen Makers Do The Unthinkable: Package Noodles With Less Salt

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Cup noodles have traditionally been a cheap, filling way to suddenly get a huge amount of salt in your system. Right? Do they actually do anything else? As Americans look for snack foods that are at least nominally healthier and that have fewer additives, even the makers of cup noodles are cutting back on sodium and artificial flavors.

Of course, this means that a styrofoam container of Nissin’s Cup Noodles only has 45% of the sodium that the average adult needs in an entire day, not 60% of the daily recommended intake like it did a few years ago.

This continues the trend of foods that aren’t anywhere near healthy trying to clean up their ingredient list, if not the nutritional value o the food. No one is pretending that Froot Loops with natural coloring or chicken nuggets made from chickens that haven’t received antibiotics are health foods — at least we hope that no one thinks that — but consumers are demanding fewer additives and colors in their food.

Nissin Foods USA, maker of those cup noodles that you stocked up on in your early twenties, told the Wall Street Journal that it was answering customers’ demands when it removed artificial flavors in favor of additives like paprika and lime. Cutting back (a little bit) on sodium was also a customer demand.

Cup Noodles Dials Down the Salt [Wall Street Journal]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Verizon Wireless Decides Not To Make Florida Woman Pay For $8,535 In Data Overages

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The Florida woman who was shocked to receive a $9,100 bill from Verizon Wireless for data she says she couldn’t possibly have used is off the hook, as the company has decided not to make her pay up.

To recap: A Tampa woman who never goes over her monthly 4 GB data allotment was suddenly hit with a bill for $8,535 because Verizon said she used 569 GB. Tack on the $600 fee she’d have to pay to leave the company for T-Mobile, and her total bill was $9,135.

She told The Plain Dealer that a company representative called her late on Wednesday afternoon, the same day the Cleveland newspaper and The Tampa Bay Times published stories about her situation.

She says the representative didn’t offer an apology, but instead just said: “We’re going to resolve all of the data overages,” without explaining why her bill spiked so dramatically, or why the company had a change of heart.

Verizon didn’t respond to the Plain Dealer’s requests for comments, but did tell The Times, “We’ve talked with the customer who reported a $9,000 monthly wireless bill and resolved it to her satisfaction.”

Verizon did want the woman to pay the $600 cancellation fee, and she’s agreed to do so. But the $20 she paid when Verizon said she needed more data? She’s not paying for that. The company agreed, and asked if she was ready to pay off the rest of the bill right then.

“I said, ‘No. I want to see something in writing,'” she told the Plain Dealer. “I want to make sure everything is taken off before I pay anything.”

Verizon agrees to drop Florida mother’s $9,100 cellphone bill [The Plain Dealer]
This is the story of the Wesley Chapel woman whose Verizon cellphone bill shot from $118 to $9,153 [Tampa Bay Times]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Tesla Fires Back At Mobileye’s Claim It Broke Up With Carmaker Over Autopilot Safety

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Yesterday, automotive tech company Mobileye claimed that it stopped providing parts for Tesla’s Autopilot assisted-driving system over concerns the carmaker was “pushing the envelope in terms of safety.” Now Tesla is firing back, saying the breakup occurred because Mobileye was unhappy to learn that Tesla planned to take over manufacturing of some Autopilot components.

A Tesla spokeswoman tells Reuters that after Mobileye found out that an upcoming version of Autopilot would use a Tesla-built vision system, Mobileye became defensive and ultimately broke ties with the company.

Tesla claims that Mobileye tried to get the carmaker to discontinue its own development, pay the supplier more, and use only its products for future hardware.

The carmaker allegedly declined, and the two companies went their separate ways.

“When Tesla refused to cancel its own vision development activities and plans for deployment, Mobileye discontinued hardware support for future platforms and released public statements implying that this discontinuance was motivated by safety concerns,” the Tesla spokeswoman said.

Tesla’s take on the breakup stands in stark contrast to Mobileye executives’ explanation given on Thursday.

The company said it had parted ways with Tesla because the electric car company was sending mixed messages that Autopilot was something that it wasn’t: an autonomous driving product.

For example, Mobileye says Tesla boasted about Autopilot’s autonomous capabilities, while also telling drivers they must keep their hands on the wheel at all times.

Autopilot — which steers the vehicle more actively than other automated safety systems like automatic braking, steering assist, or adaptive cruise control — has come under heavy scrutiny following a fatal May 2016 crash during which the system was in use.

“It is not designed to cover all possible crash situations in a safe manner,” Amnon Shashua, chairman for Mobileye, tells Reuters. “No matter how you spin it, (Autopilot) is not designed for that. It is a driver assistance system and not a driverless system.”

A spokesperson for Tesla tells Reuters that Mobileye’s statements are “inaccurate.”

“Since the release of Autopilot, we’ve continuously educated customers on the use of the features, reminding them that they’re responsible to keep their hands on the wheel and remain alert and present when using Autopilot,” the spokeswoman said. “Drivers must be prepared to take control at all times.”

After the potential Autopilot connection to the fatal crash was revealed in June, Tesla announced it was taking steps to ensure the safety of drivers who use Autopilot.

In July, Musk said the company wouldn’t disable the function, but would instead increase efforts to educate owners on how the system works and what to expect when using it.

Tesla says Mobileye balked after learning carmaker to make own cameras [Reuters]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Free Krispy Kreme Donuts On Monday For Customers Who Are Vaguely Pirate-Like

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We probably don’t need to tell you that Monday, Sept. 19 is National Talk Like a Pirate Day, the day when that one annoying person in your office tries for about 15 minutes to get people to say “shiver me timbers” or some other nonsense before getting so much side-eye that they finally give up and take off the eye patch. The one good thing about this not-at-all-a-holiday, at least for fans of sugary donuts, is free stuff from Krispy Kreme.

Once again, Krispy Kreme will give away a free glazed donut to any customer who “talks like a pirate,” a phrase that is open to a lot of interpretation. Do you have to say sailor-y things like “avast,” “matey,” or “fleet week”?

We definitely advise against taking a more approach by reenacting the capture of the MV Maersk Alabama by Somali pirates, as dramatized in the 2013 Tom Hanks movie Captain Phillips. That would be a bit much, and probably end up with the police involved.

However, if you’re willing to actually dress up like a pirate (“must include three pirate items, such as an eye patch or bandana,” so don’t just put on your Andrew McCutchen jersey) you can score a dozen free donuts.

Of course, not everyone has a pirate costume sitting around, and the cost of acquiring one might negate the benefit of free donuts, so Krispy Kreme is adding a digital cheat this year.

The donut chain will let customers use a custom (Kustom?) Snapchat filter that will digitally turn them into pirates.

“Any guest who shows his or her Snapchat image to a team member at a participating Krispy Kreme shop will qualify for a dozen Original Glazed doughnuts,” says Krispy Kreme in a statement.

This all comes with the HUGE caveat of the promotion only being available at “participating” locations, meaning there might be some Krispy Kreme stores where employees will just stare blankly as you pointlessly do your best Jack Sparrow impersonation (it’s not that good).

Yaaarrr, or something.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Artist Claims Lane Bryant Ripped Off Her Work For T-Shirt Design

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Here we go again: another retailer accused of ripping off yet another independent artist without permission, and without offering any kind of payment. This time, a T-shirt sold by Lane Bryant is at the center of the brouhaha.

New York artist Shantell Martin aired her accusations against the brand on Wednesday, writing in a post on Facebook that white T-shirts from Lane Bryant reading “You Are You” on a background of hand drawn stick figures, faces, mountains, and trees looked awfully similar to work she’s done in the past.

Lane Bryant posted an image of a model wearing the shirt earlier this week:

lanebryant2

“The stick figures and the face and stuff … they’ve actually taken a drawing [of] mine, and cut that up and used that as the background,'” she told AdWeek’s AdFreak.

There’s also the issue of the wording on the T-shirt: Martin says she’s used variations on the question “Who Are You?” including answering it with, “You Are You” in her work for years. Her solo museum debut in 2014 was also titled, “Are You You.”

But she’s not claiming she owns that phrase, simply that the way it’s written on background images that resemble hers is not okay with her.

At first Lane Bryant’s only response to sympathizers calling out the brand for the alleged ripoff on social media was: “Thank you to everyone for bringing this to our attention. The information has been shared with our legal team for review.”

However, AdFreak says that on Thursday a representative for Lane Bryant had called Martin and the two were in contact. The T-shirt has also been removed from the Lane Bryant site and the brand’s Instagram page.

We also reached out to Ascena Retail Group, Lane Bryant’s parent company, and asked for comment. We’ll update this post when we hear back.

Martin is far from alone in having contentious dealings with big name brands: in July, an independent artist accused Zara of ripping off designs from her online store ; the designer who was shocked to find her pendant reborn as a Forever 21 necklace; the time Anthropologie apologized for swiping an artist’s design for a cell phone case; and wholesaler Cody Foster Co., which was accused of ripping off indie crafters.

Did Lane Bryant Just Make the Most Brazen Theft of an Artist’s Work Yet? [AdFreak]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

FDA Warns Dozens Of Retailers Caught Selling E-Cigs, Liquid Nicotine To Minors

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The Food and Drug Administration recently finalized rules making it clear that e-cigarettes and liquid nicotine are, just like traditional cigarettes, not to be sold to people under the age of 18. Now the FDA is putting dozens of retailers on notice that they were caught allegedly selling these products to minors.

The FDA announced yesterday that it sent warning letters to 55 tobacco retailers — including custom vape shops, pharmacies like Walgreens, convenience stores like 7-Eleven and others — who were caught selling newly regulated tobacco products to minors.

“It’s clear from these initial compliance checks that there’s a need for strong federal enforcement of these important youth access restrictions,” Mitch Zeller, director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products, said in a statement.

Under the new rules, which were announced in May, manufacturers and retailers will not be allowed to sell these products to people under 18 years of age; will be required to verify age by photo ID; will not be allowed to sell these products in vending machines; and can not distribute free samples.

The warning letters (here’s an example sent to a Washington 7-Eleven) were sent after the FDA completed compliance checks on major national retail chains, tobacco specialty stores and online retailers in August.

During the checks, the FDA says minors were routinely able to purchase some of these tobacco products in a variety of youth-appealing flavors, including bubble gum, cotton candy, and gummy bear.

The warning letters remind retailers of their obligations under the rule, and notify them that failure to correct the violations could result in civil penalties, no-tobacco-sale orders, or other action from the FDA.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Ruptured Gas Pipeline In Alabama May Mean East Coast Fuel Shortages

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A spill of gasoline from the Colonial Pipeline in Alabama could mean higher gas prices and even shortages on the East Coast, since the line brings fuel north from refineries in Houston, TX all the way up to New York Harbor. The governors of Alabama and Georgia have declared states of emergency as the pipeline’s repair was delayed, and it may not be back online until next week.

According to Colonial Pipeline, the company behind the eponymous pipeline, the line supplies 100 million gallons of fuel to the East Coast every day, an amount that is difficult to wrap one’s brain around.

Colonial Pipeline

The break in the pipeline disrupted the delivery of gasoline, though the company has been using a smaller parallel pipeline that’s used for other products, like jet fuel to deliver some gasoline, but that may not be enough to meet the demand over the coming week.

The spill is estimated at 250,000 gallons, which is sitting in a holding pond in Alabama, which you should not visit with a siphon to fill your car’s tank.

What could that mean? If you have a car, you should probably go fill up the tank at some point today, but don’t panic about it. An analyst at pricing data site Gasbuddy estimated that prices could go up by about fifteen cents across the board, which isn’t a huge price hike. However, any shortages resulting from the broken pipe and spill could be disastrous.

Colonial Pipeline Issues Likely to Disrupt Gas Supply on East Coast [Wall Street Journal]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Samsung U.S. President: Sorry About That Whole Exploding Note 7 Battery Thing; New Phones Coming 9/21

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Yesterday, two weeks after halting all sales of the Galaxy Note 7 following reports of exploding and overheating batteries, Samsung and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission finally made the recall official yesterday afternoon. Now, the head of Samsung’s U.S. division is standing outside your window with a boombox over his head, playing an apology tune in the hope that you won’t go running into the arms of Apple.

In a video statement released by the company, Samsung U.S. President Tim Baxter (no, not Ted Baxter) did his best “my bad” to the million or so Note 7 owners who now have potentially dangerous paperweights until the non-exploding replacements come in.

“With battery cell defects in some of our Note 7 phones [NOTE: “Some” = 97% of Note 7 devices sold in the U.S.], we did not meet the standard of excellence that you expect and deserve,” says Baxter. “For that, we apologize, especially to those of you who were personally affected by this.”

This wouldn’t be a corporate apology if it didn’t include a line about how seriously the company takes this issue.

“We take seriously our responsibility to address your concerns about safety,” continues the Baxter, “and we will work every day to earn back your trust through a number of unprecedented actions and with the extraordinary support of our carrier partners, suppliers, and the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission.”

Samsung took some heat before the recall for gong out on its own and effectively declaring a recall without having gone through official channels in the countries where the Note 7 was sold, and without having shown that its replacement phones would not, you know, blow up in the hand of a 6-year-old watching videos.

Baxter says Samsung did notify the CPSC of the defect in the Note 7 battery before it issued a “global directive” to stop sales immediately. Even though the exchange program wasn’t the official recall remedy until last night, he claims that 130,000 Note 7s have already been turned in.

“To be clear, the Note 7 with the new battery is safe,” explains Baxter. “The battery cell issue is resolved,” a claim he says has been confirmed by an independent expert on lithium-ion batteries.

Samsung is restating its previous request that Note 7 users power down their phones and and return them to the retailer or carrier where they purchased them.

As for when the new phones are coming, Baxter claims that “new Note 7 phones will be available for exchange no later than next Wednesday, Sept. 21.”


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Unilever Looking To Buy Jessica Alba’s Honest Co. For Around $1 Billion

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Unilever  — the company behind everything from Ben & Jerry’s to Vaseline, and who recently spent a billion dollars to buy the Dollar Shave Club — has reportedly gone shopping for yet another high-profile independent brand. This time its Honest Co., the line of household and personal care products co-founded by actress Jessica Alba.

Honest Co. built a $1.7 billion reputation on the fact that its products are created using natural, nontoxic elements, but sources tell The Wall Street Journal, that Unilever isn’t looking to spend quite that much on the company.

Instead, the potential deal is valued at just above $1 billion, but a specific amount wasn’t yet available.

Sources say that the talks are still in the early stages, and it’s possible Honest Co. could take a different path and go for an initial public offering instead of an acquisition.

By acquiring Honest Co., Unilever would have a more unobstructed path to the increasingly popular “natural” and “green” household and personal care product sector.

The WSJ reports that while Unilever counts many well-known household, prepackaged food, and personal care brands among its portfolio, it doesn’t actually compete with Honest Co. in the U.S.

For example, Unilever sold its North American laundry detergent business in 2008. Honest Co. sells a variety of laundry and cleaning products — some of which have come under scrutiny for their ingredient lists.

Earlier this year, the WSJ commissioned tests of Honest detergent from two independent labs, and both tests confirmed the presence of sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) — an organic chemical derived from coconut oil.

While SLS is commonly found in everything from laundry detergent to toothpaste, Honest Co. pledged to avoid using the chemicals in its products.

Honest Co. denied that it used SLS. Instead, saying it used sodium coco sulfate (SCS), which it claims is less potentially irritating than SLS.

The company, which sells online and at retailers like Target and Whole Foods, also came under scrutiny last year when it faced a class-action lawsuit from customers who claimed its products were deceptively labeled and contained unnatural ingredients.

Unilever Is in Talks to Acquire Jessica Alba’s Honest Co. [The Wall Street Journal]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Police: Burger King Worker Who Reported Robbery Had The Missing Cash At Home

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While some criminal investigations are undoubtedly tricky for law enforcement, a recent robbery at a Burger King in California led police right back to where they started: the worker who called in the theft in the first place.

Police in Atascadero, CA responded to the restaurant at around 1 a.m. on Wednesday, KSBY reports, after an employee called in to report a robbery involving an unknown male who took a large amount of cash from him. He was the only one working that night, and was supposed to be closing the restaurant, police said.

Law enforcement searched the area with a K-9 unit but didn’t find anyone suspicious. During a follow-up investigation, detectives served a search warrant at the worker’s home. During a search, “a large amount of cash: and two Burger King bank deposits were found. Now that’s suspicious.

The 21-year-old worker confessed to the crime, police say, and he was booked into San Luis Obisbo County Jail on charges of embezzlement and making a false report.

This is not the first time we’ve seen an employee allegedly turn on their fast food employer: there was the McDonald’s manager who was accused of robbing his own restaurant at gunpoint; and of course, the worker who robbed his place of employment — again, McDonald’s — not once, but twice, and yet, kept showing up for work.

Atascadero Burger King employee accused of filing false robbery report [KSBY.com]


by Mary Beth Quirk 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.

Photocapy
Joel Zimmer
Dave Hunt
Eric BEAUME
pjpink
Joel Zimmer
Skip Nyegard

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 15, 2016

Bored Hanjin Ship Crew Spends Third Week Off Coast Of Singapore

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The good news for the crew of a Hanjin ship left stranded by the company’s abriupt bankruptcy is that it has plenty of food and water, something that their union worried about. Crew members even have local prepaid cell phone cards so they can stay in touch with their families. They would prefer to be at home with their families, and to know whether they’ll still have jobs or be able to find jobs once they’re finally allowed off the ship.

Their ship, if you’re wondering, is full of a variety of cargo, including frozen meat. The Wall Street Journal explains that they’ve been stuck in place since the shipping company Hanjin filed for bankruptcy, as local ports don’t want to unload ships that could be seized and that belong to a bankrupt owner that may not be able to pay.

On the ship now, their lives sound a little bit like prison with Internet access. They watch movies, they work out, they play games (card games, not video games) and they miss their families a lot.

A company based in Hamburg, Germany has started proceedings to seize the ship, which is why it can’t unload or leave. The crew members aren’t allowed to leave the ship, but they can get supplies. There are security guards posted to the ship to make sure it doesn’t take off while courts around the world sort out whether it’s been seized or not.

The crew consists of 13 Indonesians and 11 South Koreans, including the captain. It’s a holiday in South Korea this week, the same harvest festival that made exchanges of the defective Galaxy 7 Note extra urgent in Samsung’s home country.

The captain told the Wall Street Journal that he hopes the situation is resolved before the fuel runs out, sometime in November.

Stuck on Ship, One Gloomy Hanjin Crew Waits to Learn Its Fate [Wall Street Journal]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Samsung Galaxy Note 7 Recall Is Finally Official

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In late August, Samsung began delaying shipments of new Galaxy Note 7 phones amid reports of exploding and overheating devices. Then right before Labor Day it informally declared a sort-of recall without going through official channels or offering a proven remedy for the flaw. Now, two weeks later, the company has finally made the high-profile recall official.

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission says that the recall covers 97% of Galaxy Note 7 devices sold in the U.S. since its launch in mid-August.

The recall announcement from the CPSC says that Samsung has received 92 reports of overheating batteries, including 26 reports of burns and 55 reports of property damage, including fires in cars and a garage.

To determine if your phone has been recalled, locate the IMEI number on the back of the phone or the packaging, and call Samsung toll-free at 844-365-6197. They should be able to confirm whether or not your phone is part of the recall (it likely is).

If you have a recalled Note 7, contact the carrier or retailer where you got your phone to receive new Galaxy Note 7 with a different battery, a refund, or a new replacement device.

Here is information for the major carriers and Best Buy:

AT&T:
1-800-331-0500
http://ift.tt/2cAoX2R

Best Buy:
1-888-237-7289
http://ift.tt/2d1xIkX

Sprint:
1-888-211-4727
http://ift.tt/1hQpeea

T-Mobile:
1-844-275-9309
http://t-mo.co/Note7_Exchange

U.S. Cellular:
1-888-944-9400
http://ift.tt/2d1ytdR

Verizon:
1-800-922-0204
http://ift.tt/1xPH5vD

As Consumerist was first to report, the CPSC was not pleased with being caught unaware by Samsung’s Sept. 2 not-really-a-recall announcement.

“Companies should not be putting out unilateral recall announcements,” one official told us at the time. “It doesn’t matter if it’s a global product or a solely U.S.-based company… It does not serve consumers well to simply say a product will be recalled without coordination regarding the scope and remedies.”

Today, the CPSC reiterated that sentiment.

“It’s not a recipe for a successful recipe for a company to go out on their own,” said CPSC Chair Elliot Kaye.

An official recall has more implications than just the CPSC’s stamp of approval. Now that the Note 7 recall is official, it is illegal to sell or resell the device. Similarly, any Note 7 carrying a recalled battery is now barred from being carried on to planes in the U.S. Previously, the FAA and airlines could only ask Note 7 owners to not use or charge their phones during flights.

While the recall was still pending, both the CPSC and Samsung advised Note 7 owners to power down and stop using their devices.

However, the tech giant also sent out confusing signals by releasing a software update that it believed would reduce the likelihood of the battery overheating.

Samsung also independently announced a replacement program before it had demonstrated to regulators that the new devices would not contain the same defect.

The timing of the recall is not great for Samsung, coming on the same day that Apple releases the iPhone 7, and at a time when the bankruptcy of Korea’s biggest shipping company has put some holiday deliveries at risk for delay.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Olive Garden Already Sold All 21,000 Unlimited Pasta Passes

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You read that headline right. Even though Olive Garden is often desperate for customers, and despite enduring boardroom brawls over breadsticks, people still have to get their hands on that unlimited Pasta Pass.

As of Thursday afternoon, Olive Garden’s website says the chain has sold out of all 21,000 Never Ending Pasta Passes it put up for sale earlier in the day, instead of the 2,000 passes it sold last year (which were gone within literally one second). We’ve reached out to Olive Garden to get the numbers on this year’s sale, and will update this post when we hear back.

If you’re about to start crying marinara-flavored tears over missing out, Olive Garden has a few options to keep you from the black market: the chain is auctioning off 21 passes through Sept. 18 to benefit Feeding America; or you can follow Olive Garden on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook for announcements about more passes.

Were you able to score a Pasta Pass? If so, we want your stories and photos of your pasta-eating experiences — even if you don’t eat as many meals as this guy did back in 2014. Send an email to tips@consumerist.com with the subject line, PASTA PASS.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

T-Mobile To Its iPhone 6, 6 Plus, SE Customers: Don’t Install iOS 10 Just Yet

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We’ve got good news and bad news for people using an iPhone 6, 6 Plus, or SE on the T-Mobile network. The good news is, if you haven’t already installed iOS 10, you can avoid some major connectivity issues hitting other customers. The bad news is, if you have already upgraded to the latest operating system, well, you may be experiencing some major connectivity issues.

Several iOS users on T-Mobile have reported having a hard time connecting to the T-Mobile network after they updated to iOS 10, TmoNews notes, with some saying they’re losing the signal and can only find it again by restarting their phones. The Verge staff also noted connectivity issues among its ranks in the last two days.

T-Mobile confirmed the problems via Twitter today, with CEO John Legere saying that Apple is working on a fix:

T-Mobile VP Neville Ray chimed in noting that the fix is expected within 48 hours. He points out the only known temporary fix: the ol “turn it off and turn it back on again” method that users have already been forced to employ:


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Twitter Now Lets Businesses Show When They Monitor Customer Service Tweets

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The Twitter feeds of most big companies are littered with gripes from customers trying to get someone to resolve their problem. Thing is, some companies either don’t monitor their Twitter feeds for customer service complaints, or only only respond to these Tweets during certain times. A new Twitter feature is intended to let businesses be more transparent about if and when they handle customer service on the social media platform.

Businesses can indicate through a new Twitter Customer Service setting page if they offer support through Twitter and what times the account is monitored, TechCrunch reports.

Once a company enables the option on the Twitter Dashboard website, its profile will display “Provides Support.” This notification will also be shown when a customer searches for @companyname or when beginning a private message to the business.

Businesses also have the option to add to their profile the time during which the account is monitored by customer service staff.

Additionally, by indicating that it provides customer service via Twitter, the company will automatically begin receiving Direct Messages from anyone. This, TechCrunch reports, eliminates the need for the company to ask customers to follow them in order to send a private message.

To ensure that customers see that a company offers support via Twitter, their profiles will be revamped to feature a more prominent Direct Message button.

TechCrunch reports that by enlarging the Direct Message button, some companies may be hoping that customers share their negative complaints privately instead of for the whole Twitter-verse to see.

Twitter isn’t the first social media network to assist connecting businesses and customers. Last August, Facebook launched a feature that allowed users and businesses to message each other.

Twitter rolls out new features for businesses running customer service accounts [TechCrunch]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Trilogy Of Set-Top Terror: Cable Box Horror Stories From Consumerist Readers

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Earlier this week, we asked readers to send in their tales of set-top woe when dealing with their cable and satellite providers. We’ve already received a number of emails and we’re just beginning to sort through them, but here are a couple that caught our eye.

1. The Box That Nuked The TV

After Chad and his family moved to Alabama, they had no other option but to go with Mediacom, a little-known (and even less-loved) cable and internet provider.

They came home after a lightning storm to find that not only was the cable box not working, but neither was anything connected to it. Nothing else in the house was affected.

Turns out lightning hadn’t hit the house, but the jolt of power had come through the cable line and fried the box, affecting everything connected to its HDMI ports.

Chad says he had to “raise hell,” but Mediacom eventually promised to send out a tech a few days later. Meanwhile, they’re still being charged for service and for a box that was more functional as a footstool than a TV receiver.

The tech came out and claimed that everything had been installed properly, and Mediacom replaced the cable box and modem — while still charging Chad for the month of service that he’d lost.

Jump ahead a year and — you probably figured this out — Chad says it happened all over again. A surge came through the coax cable, frying the cable box and destroying the TV.

“I called Mediacom to get someone to come out,” writes Chad. “They then told me it was going to be three months before someone could be sent!”

He then played the escalation game, going through the various levels of customer service before ultimately deciding to cancel his Mediacom service.

Thankfully, AT&T U-Verse was now an option for Chad and his family, and they soon sent out a tech to set up his service.

“On the day of install, I asked their tech to check the previous install. We both went out to the box to discover the grounding cable was not installed properly,” Chad tells Consumerist. “The insulation was never stripped back so my house was never grounded at the coaxial line.”

In case there was any doubt who ran these line, Chad says they were stickered and dated by Mediacom, which wasn’t done trying to screw him over.

Even though he’d returned the equipment after canceling his service, the company nevertheless sent Chad a $1,000 bill for cable box, modem, power adapters, remote, and an external hard drive.

He had his return slip showing that he’d taken all of this equipment back weeks earlier, but when he went to the local Mediacom office, they were closed.

“I went to the regional office with my slip,” says Chad. “The office rep and I argued back and forth for the better part of an hour. My return slip was not for the equipment that was missing even though the dates matched. Eventually, they tracked down the actual serial number of the box to find that I did return it like they said I didn’t.”

But wait — it’s not over yet. Now Mediacom wanted to charge Chad for damaging the equipment, as if he’s a mythical lord of lightning.

“The woman who ran the regional office came out to speak with me. I showed her the names and times of the CSRs that I spoke to on all the occasions we talked on the phone,” writes Chad, who says reading Consumerist prepared him for these sorts of situations. “She also saw the return slip, photographs of the botched install, chat transcripts from the previous year, and the phone number on my phone.”

Though he says he was ready to take Mediacom to court over this nonsense, Chad says the company finally relented. Of course, if they had grounded the cable properly to begin with — or fixed it after the first lightning strike — this horror story would never have happened and they would still have a subscriber.

2. A Happy-ish Ending

TiVo has long sold DVRs that will work as cable or satellite receivers for certain providers. Consumerist reader David has been using his TiVo instead of renting a box from Comcast for several years.

What he didn’t realize until recently was that Comcast has also been charging him — veiled as a $10/month “HD Technology Fee” — for the cable card that authorizes David’s TiVo to access Comcast feeds.

READ MORE: CONSUMERIST’S LINE-BY-LINE BREAKDOWN OF A TYPICAL COMCAST BILL

David didn’t find out about this fee until after calling Comcast to see if he could get a better deal on his existing service (FYI: We predict a 67% success rate at Comcast).

“We talked about the bill in detail and they told me I should not have paid that fee,” writes David. “I was paying it for three years so I asked ‘What can you do for a good customer? What kind of credit can I get?'”

Rather than offer him a free month of Starz or a couple months of faster internet, David got what he called “the shock of a lifetime — a $400 credit on my bill.”

So now David is currently enjoying his Comcast service without having to worry about making a payment until Halloween.

While this is indeed a good end to David’s story, it would also have been nice if Comcast hadn’t erroneously collected the $400 to begin with.

3. The Box in the Closet

Time Warner Cable customer (not a good sign) Terry also thought he could go the TiVo route to save a few bucks on all the fees associated with leasing a box from TWC.

Just as in the previous tale, Terry needed a cable card from TWC in order to get the TiVo to work properly. Of course, this being Time Warner Cable, the first couple of cards they sent were worthless.

To get the monthly lease charges off his bill, Terry needed to return the old TWC box. However, when he got to the local TWC office and turned over the leased box, Terry says he was told his bill would jump up by $50/month.

The customer service rep “tried a few things but couldn’t get it to come off without raising the rates,” writes Terry, who says the rep told him she’d need to call the corporate office and get back to him. With nothing to do but wait for that promised call, he took the box back home with him.

“A week went by and I didn’t hear anything,” says Terry, who decided to call up TWC customer support directly. “They too said the same thing, they couldn’t remove my box/guide service without my monthly rate increasing substantially. I finally escalated enough to get to a rep that was as helpful as possible and explained to me that the current promotion I was in required the cable box rental fee.”

When Terry asked to be switched to a plan that doesn’t require a rented cable box, he says he was told that they all have this requirement.

“Basically if I wanted to turn in my cable box I would be paying the standard rates for my service, no discount at all,” he explains to Consumerist. “There was no way to keep current services (or even close to my current services) and save money.”

So where is that precious, expensive device now?

“Currently I have the TWC box sitting in a closet,” says Terry. “It’s cheaper to keep than return. So lesson learned here: Even if cable boxes go away, the cable companies will find a way to get that lost money back.”

Have a cable box horror story to share? Send it to tips@consumerist.com with “Cable Box Misery” in the subject line.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Sporting Goods Store Apocalypse Continues With Demise Of Golfsmith

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You might not recognize the name Golfsmith, but it’s the biggest golf-only store in North America, with 109 stores here and 55 in Canada. Golf, however, isn’t as hot as it was in the years after Tiger Woods went pro, and the sport’s popularity is waning. That means there’s less need for all-golf stores.

We’ve reviewed why sporting goods stores in general aren’t doing so well right now, but what took down Golfsmith was a decrease in people playing golf as well as the e-commerce trends hurting retail and sporting goods in particular.

Many of the chain’s suppliers are the same ones hurt in the short term by the bankruptcy and shutdown of Sports Authority. Under Armour sells clothing there, and Nike supplies golf shoes. Callaway and brands owned by Adidas supply clubs to the chain.

“[The] stores are too big and they are too close to each other,” an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence explained to Bloomberg News.

The chain first looked for a buyer, and was unsuccessful, which is why experts predict that any post-bankruptcy version of the chain that survives will be much smaller.

Just like Sports Authority, if the chain goes out of business or wins, leading sporting goods chain Dick’s will be the winner here. It sells golf gear at its own stores, and also owns the similar but smaller Golf Galaxy chain. Buying some stores (or even some store leases) might be a smart move.

Golfsmith Bankruptcy Brings Fresh Woes to Under Armour and Nike [Bloomberg News]


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Salon Offering Free Shampoos To Residents In Drought-Stricken Town

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The community is pulling together in a drought-stricken town where many residents have wells that are drying up: a salon is offering free shampoos, and the local fire department has a new open-spigot policy for anyone in need.

A severe drought in parts of New Hampshire has hit residents of Kingston hard, reports WMUR.com, with some locals reporting that their wells have been dry for weeks.

“It’s hard showering, cleaning, doing laundry, all the stuff you take for granted when you turn the faucet on,” one resident told the station.

Creature comforts are important in tough times, however, so a local salon letting anyone with a dry well to come in and get their hair washed.

“It’s just something to make everybody feel better,” said the owner of Elation Salon. “We’ll stop for a minute and give you a nice shampoo. It’s really tough when you have no water.”

The fire department is also allowing anyone who needs water to use their spigots.

“We set up the ability for people to come here and get water at the fire station,” said a Kingston selectman, who said the board heard at a meeting this week about folks with dry wells. “It’s a public service, so we hope people take advantage of it, and it’s something we’re pleased to do for the Kingston residents.”

Kingston helping drought-impacted residents get clean water [WMUR.com]


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

Tesla Supplier Says It Broke With Carmaker Over Autopilot Safety Concerns

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In July, automotive tech company Mobileye, which had provided parts for Tesla’s Autopilot assisted-driving system, announced that it was ending its relationship with the carmaker. Now Mobileye says it parted ways with Tesla because Autopilot was “pushing the envelope in terms of safety.” 

Autopilot — which steers the vehicle more actively than other automated safety systems like automatic braking, steering assist, or adaptive cruise control — has come under heavy scrutiny following a fatal May 2016 crash during which the system was in use.

Despite attempts by Tesla and its CEO Elon Musk to assure owners, regulators, and safety experts that the feature is safe, Mobileye now tells Reuters that the company was sending mixed messages that Autopilot was something that it wasn’t: an autonomous driving product.

For example, Mobileye says Tesla boasted about Autopilot’s autonomous capabilities, while also telling drivers they must keep their hands on the wheel at all times.

Drivers in China recently claimed that Tesla sales people were openly marketing the car there as self-driving, resulting in at least one crash involving a Tesla owner who says he took his hands off the wheel while driving because he believed Autopilot would control the car. Following that incident, Tesla cleared up the language on its Chinese site to remove references that might imply Autopilot is the same as autonomous driving.

“It is not designed to cover all possible crash situations in a safe manner,” Amnon Shashua, chairman for Mobileye, tells Reuters. “No matter how you spin it, (Autopilot) is not designed for that. It is a driver assistance system and not a driverless system.”

In response to Mobileye’s belief that the company is pushing the safety limits with the feature, a rep for Tesla tells Reuters that the company has never described Autopilot as an autonomous technology or self-driving car.

“Since the release of Autopilot, we’ve continuously educated customers on the use of the features, reminding them that they’re responsible to keep their hands on the wheel and remain alert and present when using Autopilot,” the spokeswoman said. “Drivers must be prepared to take control at all times.”

After the potential Autopilot connection to the fatal crash was revealed in June, Tesla announced it was taking steps to ensure the safety of drivers who use Autopilot.

In July, Musk said the company wouldn’t disable the function, but would instead increase efforts to educate owners on how the system works and what to expect when using it.

“A lot of people don’t understand what it is and how you turn it on,” Musk said, noting that the carmaker would publish a blog explaining the function soon. The feature is set to off by default until a driver activates it.

Musk stressed at the time that the feature, which launched last fall, was simply a beta feature.

“It says beta specifically so people do not become complacent,” Musk said, adding that disclaimers provided to drivers are “written in super plain language.”

Just this week, the company said it would issue an update to Autopilot making changes to the way in which drivers must keep their hands on the wheel and improvements to the onboard radar system’s ability to detect surroundings through rain, fog, or dust.

Still, the Associated Press reports that the carmaker is facing renewed scrutiny in China after a news report suggested a man killed in a January crash had been using the Autopilot feature.

Mobileye says Tesla was ‘pushing the envelope in terms of safety’ [Reuters]
Tesla’s Autopilot system under scrutiny in fatal China crash [The Associated Press]


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

You Can Now Order Domino’s Pizza Through A Facebook Messenger Bot

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After successfully launching a Facebook messenger chatbot in the UK and Ireland that takes customers’ pizza orders, Domino’s is now making the feature available stateside.

Starting today, Domino’s says customers with a “Pizza Profile” on the chain’s website can place their orders via Messenger by communicating with a bot. Because at least pizza is a comfort when you think about how artificial intelligence will one day vanquish the human race, right?

Customers can place and track their orders by clicking the message button on Domino’s Facebook page or by searching for Domion’s within the Messenger app. If you don’t feel like using your words, you can also just send a pizza emoji to get the ball rolling.

“We know that customers spend a great deal of time messaging, so we knew the next place we needed to add ordering was via Messenger,” said Dennis Maloney, Domino’s vice president and chief digital officer, in a statement. “Messenger allows customers to order conversationally with the help of Domino’s bot. We hope this new option will continue to make ordering as simple and as convenient as possible.”

Domino’s customers aready have the ability to order with a Tweeted pizza emoji, by asking Alexa, and via a zero-click ordering app.

Domino’s isn’t alone in pizza bot land, however: earlier this summer Pizza Hut announced it had hired its own chatbot to take orders on Facebook Messenger as well as Twitter. A company spokesman confirmed to Consumerist that the bot had rolled out to “select locations” already and will go nationwide Oct. 3.


by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

FCC Explains Cable Set-Top Box Proposal, Everything Else It Does To Senate (Again)

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Election years beget a compressed Congressional schedule. The House and Senate just got back to work in D.C. after a six-week break, and will be taking another six-week break as soon as we hit October 1 (picking up again after the election), so everything the committees want to do has to get done now. Like bringing in all five FCC commissioners for another episode of everyone’s favorite series, The FCC Explains And Defends Literally Everything It’s Doing.

The last two episodes, in March and July, featured the House of Representatives. Today, however, we got a change of scenery as the Commission took in the lovely wood paneling of a Senate room, instead.

Congress, of course, operates by committee. And so today’s hearing, like many past outings, took place before the Senate Commerce Committee. All five FCC commissioners — Mignon Clyburn, Jessica Rosenworcel, Ajit Pai, Michael O’Rielly, and chairman Tom Wheeler — were present to testify and answer questions about all the commission’s current major initiatives. And while it was occasionally testy, with long stretches at front and back devoted entirely to discussions of partisanship in Washington, for the most part it was less fiery than other recent FCC oversight events.

Discussion included 9-1-1 upgrades, privacy rules, Lifeline and universal service, broadband deployment, business data services, 5G development, and more — but at the top of the list, as you might guess, is the FCC’s new proposal for a cable set-top box alternative. Wherever a wealthy industry and a potential new regulation intersect, you find passionate politics and heated rhetoric, and this is no exception.

A common refrain when industry argues against an FCC proposal, as we saw in net neutrality and see again now, is that the FCC doesn’t have the authority to do the thing it’s doing. And so in his first remarks, Wheeler repeatedly brought the focus back to the mandate the FCC explicitly has from Congress, in the Telecommunications Act, to act.

Later this month, Wheeler said, “the Commission will vote on whether to fulfill a mandate Congress gave us 20 years ago. … The Commission shall” ensure competitive viability in the market, and right now, we don’t really have that.

“Why are you doing this if the market is working?” he asked rhetorically. “It isn’t. 99% of consumers have no choice, despite the statutory mandate that they shall have choice.”

He also then dug in on the industry opponents to the plan: “The cable industry has been playing rope-a-dope with that statutory mandate for 20 years,” Wheeler said. “First they created a licensing body but failed to license that technology in a meaningful manner. Then, in 2008, Comcast” — which is really very ticked off about the new proposal — “announced ‘the age of the closed proprietary set-top box is behind us, the era of open cable is here.’ Eight years ago.”

That came after the launch of the CableCARD in 2007, which is now widely considered to have been a total failure scuttled into irrelevancy from before it began. That is the outcome Wheeler hopes to avoid for the next attempt.

Wheeler noted that since 2008, “Consumers have seen nothing happen. Then in 2010,” — the next time the FCC tried to get an alternative going — “The NCTA filed, ‘consumers should have the option to purchase video devices at retail that can access [their pay TV] without a set-top box supplied by that provider.’ Six years ago,” Wheeler said.

Since then, even more nothing, while the cost goes up and up. “And Congress mandated that [consumers] should have an alternative to paying.”

Commissioners Pai and O’Rielly, when prompted by committee chairman Sen. John Thune (SD), repeated their usual objections to the entire way the FCC proposes, votes on, and adopts rules, calling for procedural reform. (Commissioners Rosenworcel and Clyburn devoted their opening testimony to other topics.)

The biggest sticking point across the board for the set-top box proposal — from Commissioners, Senators, and industry representatives — appears to be the licensing requirement.

The current FCC plan requires pay-TV operators and content companies to come together to create a bey that will create a standard license meant to connect these new cable-company apps to the manufacturers that make the devices. That plan, though, is contentious at best.

Pai, in response to questions about it, stated that he had concerns about the FCC inserting itself into private business arrangements. “The media bureau can second-guess any consensus” participants come up with, he said, and if they don’t reach one, “the FCC itself will write the standard licensing agreement.”

To a regulator with strong pro-business or free market inclinations, that is of course unconscionable. However, in a bit of a strange-bedfellows moment, commissioner Rosenworcel agreed with him.

“Set-top boxes are clunky and costly. customers don’t like them and they don’t like paying for them, and that’s not just my professional opinion, it’s my personal opinion too,” she said in response to a later question. But, “I have some problems with licensing and the FCC getting a little too involved with the licensing” issue, she continued, stating that in her opinion, section 629 of the Communications Act does not give the FCC authority to intervene in licensing.

However, she stressed, change “would be a good thing for consumers, my household included.”

Sen. Ed Markey (MA), who often enjoys shaking up otherwise-sleepy sessions, came prepared with props. He brought out a cable box wrapped dramatically in chains, to laughter. Calling it “a relic,” he pointed out that it may well be in your house today, since 99% of subscribers rent one from their provider, to the tune of $89 per year per item, to the average household fee of $232 annually.

Markey then held up an Amazon Fire TV stick, naming it and pointing out, “This costs $40.” But the 100 million households that get paid TV all have to rent the box, because the content cannot be run on third party devices like the Fire TV stick.

“So that’s what the FCC is considering right now. How do we transition to this modern technology, and not this archaic technology?” We did it 30 years ago with the black rotary phone, he pointed out, so why not change the law and make it happen again?

Thune pointed out in response to his colleague, however, that Amazon has filed comments in opposition to the FCC proposal. “The process to create an oversight body … will delay competition,” Thune read off from Amazon’s filing.

That led to another senator questioning the commissioners about complexity, starting with Rosenworcel.

“It’s time to inject competition into our set-top box market. Nobody has ever written to me saying they love set-top boxes,” she replied. “If I have one concern, it’s that the licensing scheme gets the FCC into the business of trying to figure out model licenses, and I don’t see how that fits into the statute we have.” That’s “the complexity I see,” she said.

Pai said that the cable industry’s app proposal was much simpler, and therefore better. “I would hope that we embrace more of the original app proposal as it was presented to us,” and that the FCC’s layers of complexity make things worse.

Sen. Richard Blumenthal (CT), said during his questioning time, “These set-top boxes are dollar devourers; they suck money out of consumers’ pockets,” and asked Wheeler to speak to the actual savings and benefits for consumers.

Wheeler spoke first to the way that fees are hidden: “The surprise is, ‘oh my goodness, I’ve got this additional charge'” that doesn’t show up in the ads, he said. “You’re being held hostage! And as commissioner Rosenworcel has said repeatedly, it’s time to do something about this.”

“We respect enormously the various corporations and trade associations that come to us, and we try to work with them,” Wheeler continued, before repeating, “But the Congress gave us a mandate and a responsibility to consumers, and we try to fulfill that mandate.”

When it comes to billing and boxes, Sen. Claire McCaskill (MO) also beat her own personal favorite drum for a moment, confirming with Wheeler that while the FCC can enforce customer service and truth-in-billing guidelines for cable, it cannot do so for satellite TV.

McCaskill referred back to her recorded call in which she tried to get a monthly insurance-style charge removed from her satellite bill. “They tried to tell me they were going to charge me to quit charging me. this is the kind of stuff that’s been going on, and I just hope that we deal with the fact that you do not have the authority with satellite to clean up some of these practices, and people are outraged at the bait and switch in the business model that [her report] uncovers, that is not customer-friendly.”


by Kate Cox via Consumerist