Donnerstag, 27. Juli 2017

Shelf-Checking Robots To Roam The Aisles At Schnucks Supermarkets

Sure, big-box hardware store Lowe’s has a customer service robot that still won’t keep you from hating your partner, but supermarket chain Schnucks, based in St. Louis, is about to put robots to work in a different job. In three stores, it will send a robot down the aisles three times a day to check shelves and find out which products need to be restocked.

A robot that actually restocks the shelves would be an interesting use of technology, and maybe that’s next. For now, though, Schnucks will be deploying Tally, a robot that looks unnervingly like a tower fan and will scan store aisles for stock levels and maybe even pricing errors.

Want to see it in action? Here’s a video from the company that created the robots, Simbe Robotics.

The robots have been deployed in a few retailers, including a trial at Target. (There’s no word on whether they’re able to flag instances of Target Math, or items that cost more when you buy larger quantities.)

The chain will bring in students from Washington University to learn from the robot, too, holding a hackathon to find new uses for the data that the robot gathers from store shelves.

“We’re starting Tally’s pilot with a focus on in-stock position, but we’re hopeful that Tally may open up a world of other possibilities with the shelf data it collects,” the grocery chain’s VP of information technology for infrastructure said in a statement.

Information from the shelves could be shared with suppliers and vendors, or other uses that no one has thought of yet, since the idea of having an autonomous shelf-scanning robot patrolling a store is a relatively new one.

(via St. Louis Post-Dispatch)


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Comcast to Launch ‘Instant TV’ Streaming Service This Fall

American Airlines To Notify Customers If Bags Are Delayed

For the better part of a year, airlines have experimented with different programs aimed at easing travelers’ frustrations when it comes to their checked luggage; from Alaska’s electronic baggage tags to Delta’s checked bag map. Now, its American Airlines turn, as the carrier launched an app update allowing passengers to receive notification when their bags are delayed. 

American announced today that it was putting an end to the timeless tradition of waiting at the baggage carousel for bags that never show up.

The airline launched Customer Baggage Notification (CBN) system that notifies customers of the status their checked baggage if the bag is not on the same plane when they land at their destination.

The system provides three types of baggage notifications.

Early Baggage Arrival notices will be sent when a bag is delivered before the customer; Late Baggage Arrival – Go to the Baggage Service Office informs travelers that the bag hasn’t arrived and that they should see an agent; Late Baggage Arrival — Mobile Baggage Order notifies the customer to fill out a MBO, including the customer’s delivery details and a bag description to help expedite reuniting the customer with their items.

This isn’t the first time American has attempted to simplify the checked baggage process. Back in 2015, the airline launched real-time baggage tracking that allows customers to see just where their bag is — from the time it’s handed off at the check-in counter to its arrival on the carousel at the destination airport.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Is Obamacare “Skinny Repeal” Actually The Senate’s Plan, Or A Way To Bring Back The House Version Instead?

After a chaotic and tumultuous week, the Senate appears to be slowly, painfully congealing around a plan it can agree on to repeal parts of the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare). But that plan itself is still something that nobody, including the Senators who will probably vote on it, has seen the text for. And even if the Senate does vote to pass it, is that really the bill we’re going to get?

If you’re confused by all this, you’re not alone. The entire internet at this point is full of experienced healthcare experts and Congressional reporters who have no clue what’s going on behind closed doors on Capitol Hill. But as support for the “skinny repeal” seems to be solidifying, watchers are starting to ask if repeal is actually the plan — or if the end goal is to create a backdoor to pass the House version of repeal, that the Senate basically already rejected.

A busy couple of days

On July 25, the Senate voted 51-50 to open debate on a healthcare bill.

That bill was the House’s American Health Care Act, but it was used effectively as a placeholder text while the Senate crafted its own plan to repeal and/or replace the ACA.

The rules the Senate is moving to pass a repeal under grant 20 legislative hours of debate, so Tuesday’s vote set the clock ticking.

The first Senate alternative to come to a vote was basically the Better Care Reconciliation Act (BCRA) — the bill that was basically deemed too dead to vote on merely a week earlier. It did indeed fail, 57-43.

On Wednesday, the Senate then moved on to its next option, which was essentially the Obamacare Repeal Reconciliation Act (ORRA) — a straight “repeal” plan. That, too, failed to advance, only securing 45 of the necessary 51 votes.

However, that 20-hour clock is now, two days later, starting to run down. And so the Senate is moving to come up with something that can garner 51 votes before time runs out. Sources report that support is beginning to coalesce around a last-ditch option that’s being called the “skinny repeal.”

What’s in the “skinny repeal” option?

The proposal has been given the nickname “skinny repeal” because it’s not a full repeal of the entire ACA. Instead, it proposes to roll back a few key provisions that Republicans in Congress have objected to.

Most notable among these is the individual mandate. That’s the rule that requires everyone to have insurance or pay a penalty. Without it, the thinking goes, the individual insurance market would become overburdened with high-cost patients as more-or-less healthy individuals dropped out. That would cause premiums and policy costs to rise, which would in turn cause fewer people to be able to purchase insurance, so fewer insurers would sell policies, and the market would basically nosedive into a death spiral.

(As NPR reports, several states tried extremely similar legal maneuvers in the late 1990s and it did indeed drive insurers out of the market, leaving fewer and less-affordable plans for consumers.)

As Vox notes, although the Congressional Budget Office hasn’t given the proposal a formal score yet (as no actual bill text yet exists), it estimates that enacting it would still cause 15-16 million Americans to lose insurance they currently have, while also driving premiums up by 20%.

Other provisions, like letting states waive Essential Health Benefits, have come up as features of the skinny repeal. However, some of those don’t meet the standard for things that can be included in a budget resolution and would need 60 votes in order to pass. That means they won’t, so they’ll have to be dropped if McConnell wants the plan to advance.

Our colleagues down the hall at Consumers Union, the policy and mobilization arm of Consumer Reports, slammed the plan.

“Senate leaders are using smoke and mirrors to make it seem as if this latest proposal is somehow different or better than the ones just voted down in the Senate,” Betsy Imholz, special projects director, said in a statement. “This so-called ‘skinny repeal’ would not only still leave millions uninsured, destabilize the insurance markets further, and trigger skyrocketing premiums, but is also an attempt to try to breathe new life into the harmful ideas in both the American Health Care Act and the Better Care Reconciliation Act — both hugely unpopular proposals that have been rejected by Senators repeatedly.”

Read More: Insurance companies, actuaries, and physicians warn against repeal of the individual mandate

Is the Senate actually going to vote for it? When?

This is where it starts to get complicated. Or just gets even more complicated, really.

The Senate is pretty close to running out its 20-hour debate clock. When it does, they will move on to something called the vote-a-rama. That’s a marathon session — most Hill-watchers expect it to start Thursday evening and stretch until the wee small dawn hours of Friday morning — in which Senators offer and vote on amendments rapid-fire.

At the end of that process, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (KY) is expected to basically ignore all of those and instead offer the final bill, the skinny repeal, for a vote. But how likely the Senate is to go for that depends on which source you ask, at this point.

Republican Senators have been divided all along on a repeal and replace plan. Basically, they’re in two rough camps: The “this goes too far” group and the “this doesn’t go far enough” one. As a result, the skinny repeal is as minimalist and bare-bones as McConnell feels is possible, in order to shepherd all the Republicans together.

Even so, a number of Senators have said that they aren’t terribly keen on the planned bill. Right now, Politico describes the situation as, “Senate Republicans hope their own Obamacare repeal won’t become law” — but that headline has changed a half-dozen times in recent hours, as many of them are likely to vote for it anyway, on the basis that it’s the only way to keep moving forward.

Who’s planning to vote which way isn’t exactly in line with the two camps we got used to from earlier stages of the process. The Republican Senators are, basically, all over the map, with some voicing full-throated support of just doing anything and others voicing indecision since there’s no actual bill.

But what process is McConnell trying to get them to move forward to, you may ask?

Conference

At this exact moment in time, the goal for McConnell is not to craft and pass a final bill. It’s to pass something — anything — to make the process survive to the next stage.

In this case, the next stage is “conference.”

Although this entire process has been a confusing, chaotic mess, entirely unlike the way Schoolhouse Rock taught us it would be, one old-school fact still holds: The House and Senate both have to agree on a final draft of something before the President can sign it.

That’s where the conference committee comes in. A group of Representatives and Senators come together and hammer out something they can agree on — a final, unified draft that can come before a final vote in both chambers.

But if the Senate votes this week on what is effectively a placeholder that nobody wants, that just kicks the can of fundamental disagreement down the road into conference, where the same cracks will surface yet again.

That brings us back to the House, which last voted on its own repeal plan back in May.

Politico reports that House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (CA) has just instructed Representatives not to leave town for their planned August recess, anticipating the need for the House to take action on a Senate bill of some kind.

Does the House want “skinny repeal” too?

It is, at this point, anyone’s guess what the House and Senate would do together in conference.

Washington Post reporter Mike DeBonis Tweeted earlier today that Republican members of the House said it’s a “definite possibility” that the skinny repeal could pass the House intact, as-is (whatever it is) if the House freedom caucus (i.e. the most conservative, “tea party” wing) rallies around it.

Sen. John Cornyn (TX) likewise told reporters recently that it’s entirely possible that the House could just take whatever the Senate passes and send it right on up to the White House without conference.

But again, not everyone agrees.

Sen. John McCain (AZ), who flew back from his home state days after brain surgery for a dramatic entrance to vote on Tuesday’s motion, told reporters that he was “very worried about it, and I would be worried about the product” of the House adopting the skinny repeal — if, indeed, that is even what the Senate votes to do tonight.

Alternatively, however, the situation could go the other way: the Senate could adopt the House’s version, instead of the House adopting the Senate’s.

That would likely go over well with the Representatives at the conference, because the House has already passed that bill. But that could be a harder sell in the Senate: The House bill’s language is nearly the same as the BCRA that failed to garner support or to advance in the Senate twice already.


by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Insurance Companies, Actuaries, Physicians Warn Against Repeal Of Obamacare’s ‘Individual Mandate’

The various “repeal and replace” factions have targeted different aspects of the Affordable Care Act: Some want to slash Medicaid; some want to cut federal funding to Planned Parenthood; some say they must repeal taxes on tanning salons. One goal they all have in common is to get rid of the law’s “individual mandate,” the requirement that most people must have some sort of health insurance or pay a penalty. Now the insurance industry, along with physicians, and risk-assessing actuaries, are warning the Senate that gutting this mandate could cause big problems down the road.

All versions of the GOP repeal legislation — including the mysterious, as yet unseen “skinny” repeal bill — nullify the individual mandate by reducing the penalty for non-compliance to $0. So technically, the mandate would still exist but there would be no repercussions to anyone who fails to obtain qualifying health insurance.

There would, however, be repercussions for the insurance industry and healthcare in general, at least according to letters sent this week to Senate leadership.

Industry trade group America’s Health Insurance Plans, which represents a large number of insurers, sent a letter [PDF] this morning to Senate leadership, acknowledging that “important improvements are needed to ensure the individual market
delivers lower costs and more choices,” but that getting rid of the individual mandate “will not solve the problems in the individual market, and in fact will result in higher premiums, fewer choices for consumers, and fewer people covered next year.”

“We would oppose an approach that eliminates the individual coverage requirement, does not offer continuous coverage solutions, and does not include measures to immediately stabilize the individual market,” writes AHIP, which also raises concerns about the future of federal subsidies to insurers.

The subsidies are provided by the government to insurers in an effort to keep rates from spiraling out of control. President Trump has repeatedly threatened to cut off these payments, totaling billions of dollars, and some insurers say they are pulling out of the individual marketplace because of this uncertainty. Without these cost-sharing payments, AHIP says premiums will increase by about 20%.

Insurers who plan to sell individual plans through the public health exchanges must set their rates for 2018 in the coming weeks, and some companies say they will have no choice but to raise their premiums or drop out of the exchanges if there isn’t any concrete news on these subsidies.

“If we aren’t able to gain certainty on some of these items quickly, we do expect that we will need to revise our rate filings to further narrow our level of participation,” said Joseph Swedish, CEO of Anthem, one of the nation’s largest providers, earlier this week.

The AHIP letter comes on the heels of a similar message [PDF] from the Health Practice Council of the American Academy of Actuaries, which told senators that eliminating the individual mandate “would likely have significant implications for health insurance coverage and costs both to consumers and the federal government.”

The purpose of the individual mandate is to make sure that as many people as possible are paying into the risk pool. If the mandate goes away, it’s largely believed that healthier people, particularly young adults, will elect to not be covered. Those who retain their coverage would be more likely to need coverage, meaning higher payouts with fewer premiums coming in from people who don’t have costly medical bills.

“Eliminating the mandate would likely result in lower coverage rates in the individual market and a deterioration of the risk pool,” writes the Academy. “Premiums would increase as a result.”

To keep younger, healthier people from dumping their insurance after repeal, the GOP has proposed allowing insurance companies to charge higher premiums to people who have gone without coverage. The idea is that people wouldn’t only be able to hop back onto an insurance plan when they suddenly find out they have a kidney stone, or are having a child.

The actuaries argue that this continuous coverage requirement would likely be inadequate for keeping low-cost policy holders in the risk pool.

There is also the suggestion of mandating a waiting period for people without continuous coverage. During that time period, a new policy holder couldn’t make insurance claims. The Academy concludes that while this might work to keep claim costs down, since you wouldn’t have people buying policies on Monday and showing up at the hospital for a liver transplant on Wednesday — it probably won’t help to bolster insurance enrollment numbers.

Finally, the American Medical Association, which has already come out against repeal of the Affordable Care Act, specifically spoke out against reports that the “skinny” repeal will include elimination of the individual mandate.

“Eliminating the mandate to obtain coverage only exacerbates the affordability problem that critics say they want to address,” says AMA President David O. Barbe, MD. “Instead, it leads to adverse selection that would increase premiums and destabilize the individual market.”

Last night, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office also chimed in once again with revised projections based on reports of what is included in the “skinny” repeal. As before, the CBO concluded [PDF] that eliminating the individual mandate would result in an additional 16 million Americans going without insurance, with nearly all of that happening in the first year of repeal.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Blowing Out Birthday Candles Means Blasting Cakes With Spit

When celebrating birthdays, blowing out a cake full of candles and singing a public domain song is a time-honored tradition. Yet has it ever occurred to you that this ritual means that the birthday celebrant is just blasting spit over the candles and the top layer of the cake? Well, now it has.

The Journal of Food Research in Canada recently published a study, which we learned about from The Atlantic, that will make every celebration that you’re part of seem just a little more gross. Logically, some saliva must end up on cakes when you blow out candles, but the daughter of Paul Dawson, a professor at Clemson University, wondered how much more.

The answer: It can be a lot, and varies from person to person, but cake germs are not going to kill you. Probably. Maybe skip the cake if someone looks sick?

The study

To find out, students at Clemson spread foil on a Styrofoam base, then spread frosting on the foil. To make sure everyone’s saliva was going and to simulate a party environment, the test subjects ate pizza before proceeding to the fake cakes.

For each of the eleven test subjects, they lit the candles and blew them out, then took samples from the frosted area and grew them in agar.

Wide variation in spit germ levels

On average, blowing out candles on a sample meant fifteen times more bacteria (1,500%) was present. There was a lot of variation from person to person in the amount of saliva they emitted, the bacteria hanging out in their mouths, or both. The biggest difference compared to the control cake was between three times greater (300%) and 140 times greater (14,000%).

Here’s the thing, though: Unless the person celebrating his or her birthday is obviously sick, these mouth bacteria are the same ones that we come in contact with every day. Do you kiss people? Have you stood near a person who coughed or sneezed? Do you venture out in public at all?

If so, you’ve come in contact with the same spit bacteria that people emit when blowing out candles. It’s just that now we all know that they’re there. On the cake.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Victims Of Mortgage Modification Scam Lost More Than Their Homes

GOP Proposes, Then Immediately Rejects Plan For Single-Payer Health Insurance

Since the Affordable Care Act passed in 2010, Republican lawmakers have repeatedly decried it as “socialized” or “government-run” healthcare while calling for its repeal. But it was a GOP senator who today introduced legislation that, if passed, would have provided single-payer, government-run Medicare for everyone.

In fact, the amendment proposed by Sen. Steve Daines of Montana was entitled the Expanded & Improved Medicare For All Act, and would have made all American citizens and residents eligible for government-sponsored Medicare.

Yet, neither Daines nor any of his fellow Republicans in the Senate voted in favor of the amendment, which was ultimately defeated on a 57-0 vote. No Democrats supported the amendment, even though the concept of single-payer care is becoming increasingly popular among Democratic voters. Some voted “no” while others voted “present,” indicating that they may support the underlying idea of the bill but can’t vote for it.

So why did this GOP Senator who has repeatedly voted in favor of repealing the Affordable Care Act put forth this amendment only to vote against it?

On Twitter yesterday, Daines noted that this amendment was all about getting senators on the record about whether or not they support single-payer health insurance:

Presumably, the target of Daines’ amendment are Democratic senators in states that went for President Trump in 206. That could include Daines’ fellow Montanan Sen. Jon Tester, a Democrat who will come up for reelection in 2020. Tester is one of the few Democrats — along with Joe Manchin (WV), Joe Donnelly (IN), Heidi Heitkamp (ND), and Bill Nelson (FL) — who actively voted “no” on the amendment.

Conversely, if progressive Democrats vote against the bill they could have to answer to their constituents for why they failed to voice their support for single-payer when they had the chance.

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, generally seen as one of the more progressive members in the Senate, said this morning that Daines’ amendment is a “sham” and that he wouldn’t vote for it unless Daines himself did.

“If he is prepared to vote for this legislation and if he can get maybe five or six more Republicans… we can finally join the rest of the industrialized world,” with single-payer insurance, said Sanders. “But if Senator Daines is just playing political tricks and does not intend” to support his own amendment, “I would suggest that every member vote ‘present’ on this amendment.”

New Mexico’s Sen. Tom Udall pointed out that there are state legislatures where lawmakers are not allowed to introduce legislation they have no intention of supporting.

Daines did not write the bill he proposed. In fact, it is actually a cut-and-paste of the language from HR 676, a bill introduced in the House by Rep. John Conyers (MI) in January. More than 100 members of the House, all Democrats, have co-sponsored the bill.

“Who on the Senate side supports this bill?” asked Daines before today’s vote. “Let me be clear, I believe socialized medicine would be a disaster for the American people. Last November, American people voted to ‘make America great again,’ not ‘make America England again.'”

A recent study by the nonpartisan Pew Research Center found that support for single-payer is growing in the U.S., with 33% of the country now in favor of this approach. That’s up from 28% just since the beginning of the year, and a significant increase on the 21% support measured by the same survey in 2014.

Even among Republican respondents, the notion of single-payer is not universally despised. Among people who identified as moderate Republicans, 20% now support universal, government-provided insurance.

A majority of Republicans also support continuing the existing Medicaid and Medicare programs, with 64% of self-identified conservative Americans favoring these programs — even though the GOP bills to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act would make significant, long-lasting cuts to Medicaid.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Period Underwear Company Thinx Has A New CEO Months After Sexual Harassment Claims

Period underwear company Thinx has a new “She-EO,” a title the company’s former leader bestowed upon herself: The startup named a new CEO today, months after the previous leader and co-founder left amid reports of sexual harassment and employee dissatisfaction. 

Bloomberg reports that beginning next week Maria Molland Selby will become the new CEO of Thinx, but she won’t continue with the She-E-O title created by her predecessor.

Selby replaces former CEO Miki Agrawal, who referred her self as a She-E-O and stepped down from the helm in March.

Agrawal’s exit came after the company came under scrutiny following reports that the CEO was hostile toward employees and that the startup’s corporate policies were too weak. In fact, one former employee filed a complaint against the company, accusing Agrawal of touching her breasts without consent and making harassing comments, Bloomberg reports, adding that the complaint was eventually withdrawn and the matter settled privately.

Prior to those issues, the company attracted the ire of customers in May 2016 when it disabled its previously generous referral program after it claimed customers began gaming the system. 

Since Agrawal’s departure, Selby says the company has worked to turnaround its image, crafting an employee handbook, expanding free healthcare, and extending parental leave to 12 weeks.

Selby tells Bloomberg that she plans to introduce a new ad campaign this summer and expand its offerings.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Amazon Reportedly Has A Secret Team Working On Virtual Doctor Visits, Other Medical Services

Two months after Amazon was rumored to be thinking of getting into the pharmacy business by offering customers the option of ordering their prescription drugs through the e-commerce giant’s supplier channel, the company is taking its desire to be doctor a step further, reported developing a team focused on virtual medicine. 

CNBC, citing sources close to the matter, reports that Amazon has a secret lab, dubbed 1492, that is focused on exploring, among other things, a platform for electronic medical records, health apps for devices like Echo, and telemedicine opportunities.

It’s unclear just what Amazon’s health services sector could look like in the future, but sources say the company could take on a number of roles.

Currently, the sources note that Amazon is exploring its options related to electronic medical record systems, and how it could make this information easily accessible to customers and doctors.

Another option is the creation of a platform for virtual doctor visits, called telemedicine.

Virtual doctor’s visits, aren’t a new phenomenon. Nearly three years ago, Google was reportedly running a trial of a similar system that allowed users the opportunity to discuss medical issues with doctors though online video chats.

Finally, Amazon’s stealth team is also looking at ways to make the company’s devices, including the Echo speaker, more accessible and useful to doctors.

The reported interest in the health sector comes after Amazon was rumored to be exploring an expansion into the pharmacy business.

Jumping into the medical field could prove to be a boon for Amazon, as the sector is reportedly worth $3 billion.

Amazon declined to provide comment for CNBC’s story. Consumerist has reached out to the company, and will update this post if we hear back.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Congratulations To Jeff Bezos, The New Richest Person In The World

For the first time since 2013, the world has a new richest person. Thanks to a rise in the value of Amazon stock, the company’s founder and CEO, Jeff Bezos, has taken the top spot on Bloomberg’s Billionaires Index from Microsoft founder Bill Gates.

(We wanted to know, too: Michael Bloomberg, soda-hating former mayor of New York City and founder of his eponymous company, is not on its Billionaires Index.)

Gates, of course, has been busy giving away his fortune through the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. What put Bezos over the top today, though, was a sudden boost in Amazon’s stock value in advance of the company’s quarterly earnings report later today.

How ubiquitous is Amazon becoming? The company’s Prime service, which eliminates shipping fees for most of the items it sells and photo storage, among other services, is on its way to becoming a more popular service than basic cable.

Deciding to subscribe to Prime changes a household’s buying decisions permanently.

“Anyone who joins Prime shops in retail stores 10% less, and that number will keep accelerating as Amazon adds more inventory,” an analyst at Wedbush Securities told Bloomberg News.

More inventory? Yes, there are a few things you can’t yet buy on Amazon, but the company is now expanding into furniture and major appliances, including installation.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Trump Administration Tells Court: Civil Rights Law Doesn’t Ban Discrimination Against LGBT Workers

The landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits employers from discriminating on the basis of “race, color, religion, sex, or national origin,” but does the ban on sex-related discrimination extend to sexual orientation? Not according to the Trump administration, which recently told a federal appeals court that this protection only applies to equal treatment of male and female workers.

The administration made its position clear in an amicus brief [PDF] filed yesterday with the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in the case of Zarda v. Altitude Express.

In that lawsuit, a New York skydiving company was accused of violating the rights of Donald Zarda, a former instructor with the company who was fired after disclosing to a tandem dive customer that he was gay.

The federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) has previously come out in support of Zarda, filing its own amicus brief [PDF], arguing that “sexual orientation discrimination is sex discrimination, and sex discrimination violates Title VII” of the Civil Rights Act.

However, in its brief, the Justice Department explicitly states that the EEOC ” is not speaking for the United States” in this matter.

The DOJ maintains that both legal precedent and Congressional action — or rather, lack of action — back up its contention that sexual orientation is not included under the law’s definition of “sex.”

The brief notes that Congress has twice amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act — in 1978, then again in 1991 — but in both cases did nothing to expand or clarify what is covered under the prohibition against sex discrimination.

“In fact, every Congress from 1974 to the present has declined to enact proposed legislation that would prohibit discrimination in employment based on sexual orientation,” writes the DOJ, which maintains that, “Any efforts to amend Title VII’s scope should be directed to Congress rather than the courts.”

This failure to include sexual orientation in Title VII is not an oversight, claims the DOJ, noting that Congress has included prohibitions against this sort of discrimination in other laws, including the federal hate crimes statute and the Violence Against Women Act. In both cases, sexual orientation is listed separately from “gender” or “sex.”

The DOJ’s brief runs counter to arguments previously provided by civil rights advocates and a number of large employers.

In June, a coalition of 50 large companies — including Google, Viacom, Microsoft, Lyft, Ben & Jerry’s, CBS, Spotify, Kickstarter, and Levi Strauss — collectively filed a brief [PDF], claiming that excluding sexual orientation from Title VII protections “has wide-ranging, negative consequences for businesses, their employees, and the U.S. economy.”

“Our nation’s employers and employees would be far better off with a lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender workforce that need not experience or fear discrimination for simply doing their jobs,” wrote the companies.

Similarly, groups like Lambda Legal and the American Civil Liberties Union have filed briefs arguing against the DOJ’s position.

“Employers who take sexual orientation into account necessarily take sex into account,” argues the ACLU [PDF], “because sexual orientation turns on one’s sex in relation to the sex of the individuals to whom one is attracted. And bias against lesbian, gay, and bisexual people turns on the sex-role expectation that women should be attracted to only men (and not women) and vice versa. There is no principled reason to create an exception from Title VII for sex discrimination that involves sexual orientation.”


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Here’s A Gas Pump Skimmer That Texts Victims’ Card Data To Crooks

For the crooks operating skimmers on gas pumps, ATMs, or retail credit card terminals, an important part of their business model is getting the data from the devices. One way around this problem is to integrate a SIM card and have the device send text messages with the freshest payment card numbers. For the first time, such a device was found inside a gas pump.

While skimmers that can text isn’t a new thing, having an invisible one lurking inside a gas pump is new in the United States. A law enforcement source showed it to the ever-vigilant Krebs on Security, saying that similar devices were found at three different stations in New York state. Police are still checking them out, but they do know that the devices have T-Mobile SIM cards, and the skimmers plug right into the pump’s power sources.

Sending text messages solves a practical problem for crooks, since it delivers the numbers directly to them without having to visit the gas station again. They either have to go back and get the physical skimmer, or extract the data using Bluetooth, which means getting physically close to the skimmer, and risking detection when anyone with a smartphone can detect the Bluetooth device.

How do they gain access to the innards of the pump? Some crooks bribe station attendants, and others test out old universal keys that may still get them access inside the pump mechanism.

Gas pumps can keep on using magnetic stripe readers until 2020, instead of October 2017 as planned, thanks to an extension from Visa and MasterCard. That means gas pumps will remain a juicy target for skimmer gangs after retail points of sale and ATMs have had their own liability shifts.

How can you protect yourself? For 100% security, pay using cash inside the store. If that seems like too much, remember to use a credit card, not a debit card, at gas stations if you prefer to pay at the pump. You will have no liability for fraudulent transactions, and those transactions won’t drain your bank account and lead you to bounce checks or rack up overdraft fees if the crooks successfully clone your card and buy stuff with it.

Covering your hand while typing in your PIN will not protect you here, since it’s simply your card number that the skimmer slurps up from the payment system. Check for seals along the seams on the pump, and report any broken seals or things that don’t look right.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Dept. Of Education Hasn’t Approved A Loan Forgiveness Claim In Six Months

When Education Secretary Betsy DeVos hit “reset” on revamped Borrower Defense rules that aim to ensure students at troubled schools weren’t left with nothing but debt if their college collapsed, she noted that students who had already submitted claims for loan forgiveness wouldn’t be affected. But that doesn’t appear to be the case, as the Dept. hasn’t approved a single application in nearly six months. 

In a letter [PDF] to Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin, acting undersecretary of education James Manning details the current status of the borrower defense application review and approval process, admitting that no applications have been approved since Jan. 20.

Under the borrower defense program, a student’s federal education loans can be forgiven if they can prove their college used deceptive practices to convince them to enroll.

Just Waiting

The letter, which was sent in response to Durbin and other lawmakers’ request for information sent in May, revealed that more than 65,100 borrower defense applications — 14,949 of which were submitted since Jan. 20 — are currently pending.

Of these applications, 45,092 are associated with students who attended defunct Corinthian College schools and 7,186 belong to those who attended the also-closed ITT Technical schools.

The next three largest sources of borrower defense claims were associated with Education Management Corporation (EDMC) schools with 2,175 claims; DeVry University, with 1,872 claims; and University of Phoenix operator Apollo Group, with 1,306 claims.

These claims represent approximately $143.2 million in student loans, including unpaid interest, Manning notes.

Facing Repayment

While many of the borrowers who have applied for borrower defense discharges aren’t currently paying on their loans, as they were put into forbearance, that won’t last forever.

Under forbearance, a borrower can postpone their payments and keep their loan from going into default. While this can be extended, those extensions aren’t indefinite.

In fact, Manning notes that about 31,000 borrowers who are awaiting discharge approval could enter repayment on their loans if forbearance isn’t extended.

So far, 50 borrowers have had forbearance expire while waiting for approval.

Approved But No Help

As lawmakers and state Attorneys General have pointed out in the past, many students who submitted claims for borrower defense have actually been approved. Despite this, their loans have yet to been discharged.

Back in May, lawmakers claimed that while the 23,000 students were notified in January that their Borrower Defense claims had been approved and they would receive discharges and refunds within 60 days and 120 days.

Despite this, the senators contended that they had received reports that many previously approved students had not obtained the relief they were promised within 120 days.

As a result, the senators claimed that these borrowers are being billed for unnecessary principal, interest, and even collection fees that they wouldn’t owe had the Dept. provided their discharge.

According to Manning’s update, the outstanding interest for borrower whose claims are approved but not yet discharged totals to about $6.8 million.

Have you submitted a borrower defense claim with the Dept. of Education? We want to hear about your experience: what was the process like? are you still waiting on a refund? Share you story by emailing Consumerist at tips@consumerist.com with the subject “Borrower Defense.”


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

State Fair Ride Breaks In Pieces, Killing One Person And Injuring Seven More

Thrill-seekers flocked to the Ohio State Fair for its opening on Wednesday night. Unfortunately, the evening turned tragic as one “aggressive thrill” ride broke to pieces with passengers still on it, killing one rider and critically injuring several others.

The ride in question was the Fire Ball. The local Record-Courier reports that a gondola broke off while the Fire Ball was in motion, flinging several passengers into the air, just before 7:20 p.m.

One rider, an 18-year-old man, was flung more than 50 feet and died on impact, the Columbus Dispatch reports. Seven others were taken to area hospitals. As of early this morning at least two were in critical condition.

A Twitter user apparently captured (graphic and disturbing!) video of the event.

Amusements of America, the fairground vendor, describes the Fire Ball as a “spectacular,” “aggressive thrill” ride that swings riders more than 40 feet into the air and spins them at 13 revolutions per minute.

You can see the Fire Ball in action in this 2013 YouTube video taken by a visitor to the California State Fair:

According to Cleveland.com, the ride had been inspected at least three times both by state officials and a third party and was cleared for operation when the fair was set up on Monday and Tuesday in advance of its Wednesday night opening.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich said in a statement that he has “ordered a full investigation into this incident” and has also ordered all fair rides to be shut down until they pass a new round of safety inspections.

Across the country, local officials in California immediately shut down the Fire Ball ride at the California State Fair upon hearing of the news from Ohio, local NBC affiliate KCRA reports.

An inspector who works at the California fair told KCRA that the ride will stay closed until the Ohio investigation is complete. “As far as I’m concerned, unless the factory calls us and says it can run, it’s down,” he said.


by Kate Cox via Consumerist

United Airlines Sued Over In-Flight Death Of Simon The Giant Rabbit

Simon, the giant rabbit who recently died during transport from London to Missouri, was destined to be shown off at the Iowa State Fair. Now, the three investors who had purchased Simon to raise money for the fair are taking United to court, accusing the airline of negligence.

The lawsuit [PDF], filed in a Polk County, IA, court earlier this week, explains that the plaintiffs — the “Simon Group” –had intended to display Simon as the “world’s largest rabbit” during the 10-day annual fair in Des Moines, all while selling related merchandise, including hats, shirts, miniature versions of Simon, and books. The group also planned to make Simon the star attraction at subsequent events.

In April, the investors purchased Simon from his previous owners in the U.K., and had the young rabbit checked by a veterinarian before a third-party animal transportation company put him on the United flight from London to Kansas City, via Chicago. The plaintiffs claim that Simon received a clean bill of health from the vet before the trip.

When Simon’s flight arrived in Chicago, the rabbit was reportedly placed in a United-operated kennel while waiting for the connecting flight to Kansas City. At some point before that second leg of the trip, airline staff noted that Simon had passed away.

The plaintiffs say that United did not contact them promptly about Simon’s death, meaning the new owners didn’t have the opportunity to request a necropsy. Instead, according to the lawsuit, United cremated Simon’s body without first getting permission from the ownership group.

The lawsuit claims that United “has not provided an explanation to the Simon Group as to the cause of his death,” though there are numerous theories about what could have happened.

Additionally, they allege that United failed to comply with federal reporting rules, by not filing a narrative description of the Simon incident within the required window of time.

“The failure of Defendant UA to file the required incident report regarding Simon’s death, in conjunction with the cremation of Simon’s body without the consent of the Simon Group, is shameful, outrageous, and unlawful,” alleges the complaint. “It is evidence of the willful, wanton, and reckless disregard for the rights of the Simon Group.”

In the complaint, the plaintiffs point out that Simon is not the only pet to die while in United’s care, noting that the airline has acknowledged the deaths of 53 transported animals from Jan. 2012 through Feb. 2017. They also cite statements attributed to former United pet handlers who have been critical of the airline’s PetSafe program.

“Simply put, the facts show a pattern of wrongful treatment of pets by United Airlines and cover-up by United regarding the death of Simon,” claims plaintiffs’ attorney Guy Cook in an email to Consumerist.

A statement from United says that the airline was “saddened by Simon’s death in April,” and that United is reviewing the complaint.

The lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, alleges that United was negligent in its handling of Simon, and that the airline attempted to cover up its negligence by rushing to cremate the rabbit’s body.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Google drops Instant Search, Waze heads to Android Auto


The biggest stories in tech include Google dropping Instant Search results, a Cochlear implant that works with iOS and Waze heading to Android Auto. Subscribe to CNET: http://cnet.co/2heRhep Check out our playlists: http://cnet.co/2g8kcf4 Like us on Facebook: http://ift.tt/1930vfU Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/cnet Follow us on Instagram: http://bit.ly/2icCYYm Add us on Snapchat: http://cnet.co/2h4uoK3
by CNET via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

Introducing AMD Ryzenâ„¢ 3 Processors


AMD Ryzen™ 3 Processors deliver true quad-core performance for your gaming, streaming, and productivity needs. For more information, visit www.amd.com/ryzen *** Subscribe: http://bit.ly/Subscribe_to_AMD Like us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_Facebook Follow us on Twitter: http://bit.ly/AMD_On_Twitter Follow us on Twitch: http://Twitch.tv/AMD Follow us on G+: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_GooglePlus Follow us on Linkedin: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_Linkedin Follow us on Instagram: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_Instagram ©2017 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. AMD, the AMD Arrow Logo, and combinations thereof are trademarks of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Other names are for informational purposes only and may be trademarks of their respective owners.
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AMD Ryzenâ„¢ Threadripperâ„¢ Processors


Conquer design and gaming with Ryzen™ Threadripper™. The new ultimate desktop platform. Follow the Threads. For more information, visit http://ift.tt/2uB9rN5 *** Subscribe: http://bit.ly/Subscribe_to_AMD Like us on Facebook: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_Facebook Follow us on Twitter: http://bit.ly/AMD_On_Twitter Follow us on Twitch: http://Twitch.tv/AMD Follow us on G+: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_GooglePlus Follow us on Linkedin: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_Linkedin Follow us on Instagram: http://bit.ly/AMD_on_Instagram ©2017 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. AMD, the AMD Arrow Logo, and combinations thereof are trademarks of Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Other names are for informational purposes only and may be trademarks of their respective owners.
by AMD via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

Canon EOS C700 Before The Prep: Data Management for XF-AVC


This video gives a thorough walkthrough of the process of offloading XF-AVC footage from the EOS C700.
by CanonUSA via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

Diese kleine Schweizer Bank beherrscht den Goldmarkt

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by Frank Stocker via Endless Supplies .De - News

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by via Endless Supplies .De - News

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by Daniel Wetzel via Endless Supplies .De - News

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by Cornelia Karin Hendrich via Endless Supplies .De - News

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by Michael Fabricius via Endless Supplies .De - News

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by via Endless Supplies .De - News

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by via Endless Supplies .De - News

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Er habe Sympathien für die Krawalle bei G 20 – aber doch lieber in den reichen Elbvororten, nicht im eigenen Viertel. Mit dieser Aussage sorgte der Flora-Anwalt für Empörung. Nun steht er im Visier der Justiz.
by via Endless Supplies .De - News

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by Ansgar Graw via Endless Supplies .De - News

Toter und Verletzte bei Unfall mit Riesenschaukel

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by via Endless Supplies .De - News

Mit Sandsäcken und Pumpen gegen die Wassermassen

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by via Endless Supplies .De - News

In diesem Netzwerk sind die kleinen Parteien ganz groß

Bei jungen Wählern verdrängt der Fotodienst Instagram allmählich Facebook als Lieblingsmedium. Das haben auch Politiker und Parteien verstanden. Doch lassen sich darüber wirklich Inhalte vermitteln?
by Alina Leimbach via Endless Supplies .De - News

Warum man die Flossen vom Steinbutt unbedingt mitessen sollte

Hierzulande wird er als Filet serviert. Im Restaurant „Elkano“ im baskischen Getaria kommt der Steinbutt im Ganzen auf den Grill. Damit der Gast erlebt, welches Potential in dem edlen Fisch steckt.
by Alexander Rabl via Endless Supplies .De - News

Wie häufiges Autofahren mit deinem IQ zuammenhängt

TV gucken, am Computer arbeiten, Autofahren - wir verbringen viel Zeit im Sitzen. Forscher haben untersucht, wie diese Tätigkeiten mit unseren kognitiven Fähigkeiten zusammenhängen.
by Philipp Nagels via Endless Supplies .De - News

Vier Wege, die dich zum Fleischverzicht führen

Wer sich entschließt, auf etwas zu verzichten, das er oder sie sehr mag, dem fällt der Verzicht oft unglaublich schwer. Die Psychologie hat dafür glücklicherweise aber ein paar Tipps parat, wie wir es tatsächlich durchziehen können.
by Gunda Windmüller via Endless Supplies .De - News

Statt Beton mehr Kultur – Rimini erfindet sich neu

Rimini weckte einst die Italien-Sehnsucht der Deutschen. Heute gilt der Badeort an der Adria als abschreckendes Beispiel für Massentourismus. Nun will man an die glorreiche Vergangenheit anknüpfen.
by Ute Müller via Endless Supplies .De - News

Auf die Größe kommt es an, wenn du schnell sein willst

Eine Katze rennt schneller als eine Maus, ein Pferd schneller als eine Katze. Aber rennt ein Elefant schneller als ein Pferd? Nein! Größer ist nicht immer gleich schneller. Forscher wissen nun, warum das so ist.
by Viola Ulrich via Endless Supplies .De - News

Wenn der Wildhüter nachts mit den Wölfen heult

Unsere Autorin hat sich mitten in der Nacht in Kanadas Wälder gewagt – an der Seite eines Forstwirts, der ihr Wölfe zeigen will. Scheint zunächst ein fast langweiliger Trip zu werden, bis dann doch etwas passiert.
by Inna Hemme via Endless Supplies .De - News

Unterschätzt das Sperrholz nicht!

Es ist überall, aber man sieht es kaum: Sperrholz ist das Mauerblümchen unter den Materialien. Nun wird es im Londoner Victoria & Albert gebührend gewürdigt. Und siehe, es ist schön!
by Elmar Krekeler via Endless Supplies .De - News

Ford Recalls 117,000 Vehicles Over Possible Seatbelt Defect

Seatbelts can prove to be a literal lifesaver in the event of a crash, but they have to work properly for that to happen. For this reason, Ford is recalling nearly 117,000 trucks and SUVs.

Ford announced Wednesday the recall of 116,796 model year 2015 F-150 trucks and E-series, model year 2014 to 2015 Escape SUVs, and 2015 Lincoln MKC vehicles that may contain defective setback, seatbelt or seatbelt buckles.

According to Ford, improperly tempered bolts used to attach the seatback, seatbelt, or seatbelt buckle could fracture. If this happens, the structural integrity of the seat or the seatbelt system could be compromised, and performance may be weakened in a sudden stop or crash, increasing the risk of injury.

Ford says it is unaware of any accidents or injuries related to the issue.

Dealers will examine the affected vehicles and replace the affected bolts at no cost to the customer.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

„Das Wasser steigt und steigt und man kann nichts machen“

Sachsen-Anhalt und Niedersachsen kämpfen nach starken Regenfälle weiterhin mit gewaltigen Wassermassen. Während in Goslar der Katastrophenalarm aufgehoben werden konnte, steigen in Hildesheim die Pegel wieder an.
by via Endless Supplies .De - News

Wie Muslime unter Trump leiden

Seit Amtsantritt von Präsident Trump nimmt die Diskriminierung der Muslime in den USA zu. Das ist das Ergebnis einer repräsentativen Umfrage. Parallel zur Islamophobie wächst aber auch die Unterstützung aus der Bevölkerung.
by Clemens Wergin via Endless Supplies .De - News

Stimmt’s oder stimmt’s nicht? : Liest mein Anbieter eigentlich die Mails mit?

Der Laptop steht aufgeklappt auf dem Schreibtisch. Während man sich im Zimmer umzieht, wird man vielleicht über die Webcam von einem Hacker beobachtet. Ein Horrorszenario – und für viele Nutzer ein Grund, die Webcam am Laptop vorsorglich abzukleben. Doch wird man auch im Inneren des Computers überwacht – etwa vom Mail-Anbieter? TECHBOOK klärt auf.


by Von TECHBOOK via Endless Supplies .De - News

US-Senat stimmt gegen Abschaffung von Obamacare

Der US-Senat lehnt die Abschaffung von Obamacare ab. Damit kann Donald Trump eines seiner zentralen Wahlversprechen nicht umsetzen. Bei der Abstimmung fielen dem US-Präsidenten Senatoren aus seiner Partei in den Rücken.
by via Endless Supplies .De - News

Here's how to clean your grill safely


Clean your grill safely with these handy tips Subscribe to CNET: http://cnet.co/2heRhep Check out our playlists: http://cnet.co/2g8kcf4 Like us on Facebook: http://ift.tt/1930vfU Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/cnet Follow us on Instagram: http://bit.ly/2icCYYm Add us on Snapchat: http://cnet.co/2h4uoK3
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How You Can Make Glowing Beer Using CRISPR - Sharp Science


CRISPR-Cas9 is a gene-editing technique that uses bacterial protein to replace segments of DNA. Although CRISPR has clinical applications that could potentially help many, it can also be used to do fun experiments like brewing glowing beer by editing the DNA of yeast. MASHABLE ON YOUTUBE Subscribe to Mashable: http://on.mash.to/subscribe Best of playlist: https://on.mash.to/BestOf MASHABLE ACROSS THE WEB Mashable.com: http://on.mash.to/1hCcRpl Facebook: http://on.mash.to/1KkCTIP Twitter: http://on.mash.to/1Udp1kz Tumblr: http://on.mash.to/1NBBijY Instagram: http://on.mash.to/1U6D40z Google+: http://on.mash.to/1i27L5R Mashable is a leading global media company that informs, inspires and entertains the digital generation.
by Mashable via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

QNAP iSCSI LUN 有兩種 快照應用好好用


「Jeffrey聊存儲」 本次主題:QNAP iSCSI LUN 有兩種 快照應用好好用 特邀請QNAP企業儲存事業部資深產品經理 Tony Lu跟大家一起現場來聊聊iSCSI的快照備份。 QNAP NAS的iSCSI LUN有Block Level與File Level兩種,兩種都可以透過QTS的磁碟快照來完成快照備份,還能將快照備份到遠端的另一台QNAP NAS,保障企業數據安全。 查看直播節目表及更多影片:https://goo.gl/22J5Xg
by QNAP Systems, Inc. via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

Die rätselhafte Gesundung von Heckler & Koch

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by Gerhard Hegmann via Endless Supplies .De - News

Die Krankheit, über die keiner sprechen will

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by Christina Brause via Endless Supplies .De - News

Sennheiser PRO TALK | Kenta Yonesaka - Part 1 of 5


Welcome to a new series of Sennheiser PRO TALK! This time we have Kenta Yonesaka to talk about his work as a recording engineer at Germanos Studios. Find out how Yonesaka went from growing up in the punk rock scene of Sapporo, Japan, to working with Hip Hop heavyweights Pharrell Williams and Kendrick Lamar. Stay tuned to the Sennheiser YouTube channel for the next episodes of PRO TALK! For more information, visit http://sennheiser.com/ Subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/sennheiserofficial Or follow Sennheiser on Facebook & Instagram: http://ift.tt/1B5w9WJ http://ift.tt/2oripuN Discover the future of audio and see more Sennheiser videos here: What's Your MOMENTUM? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bccuqpNWBWM&list=PLPv-clLIf8-rQwLmuLcAluy7QFQt8ze9W The Future of Audio https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OU5ROEBitZ4&list=PLPv-clLIf8-qIP51Vy139MJ4GmMynLLDr Headphones & Sound Equipment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gcHE3wnepXA&list=PLPv-clLIf8-puk6ZhZkWTVGTVPJSyEjXY Microphones & Recording https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tci999960qc&list=PLPv-clLIf8-ozunBDKSmhdqzyjbE1oMnB Sennheiser – The future of audio! Sennheiser’s mission is to develop era-defining audio solutions. Be it headphones, microphones or integrated sound systems – with German engineering, decades of experience, and innovative science Sennheiser creates unsurpassed audio experiences that push the boundaries of today's technologies. Follow Sennheiser’s vision and discover audio solutions that challenge the status quo whilst offering profound new ways of experiencing integrated sound systems as well as pioneering headphones, microphones or headsets!
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Naht der Tag des Bitcoin-Untergangs?

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