Freitag, 15. September 2017

Metal USB 3.0 Flash Drive with LED Light – Kingston DT Elite G2


http://ift.tt/2x8cptq Kingston’s DataTraveler® Elite G2 is a stylish Flash drive with enough capacity to transfer movies, pictures, and work files wherever you go. This drive is compliant with the USB 3.1 Gen 1* (USB 3.0) specification and delivers incredible performance to save time when transferring videos, photos and other large files. The metal casing is shock and water resistant so you can be confident bringing your data with you. The sleek design of the DataTraveler Elite G2 complements any compatible device and is backwards compatible with USB 2.0 to allow users to migrate to USB 3.0 in the future. It is backed by a five-year warranty, free technical support and legendary Kingston® reliability. *USB 3.1 Gen 1 performance requires a host device with a USB 3.0 or 3.1 port. Subscribe to Kingston: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=KingstonTechMemory
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Orbi Pro Unboxing!! | Business


Learn more: http://ift.tt/2gp7ZoL Join Brittney and Willie as they open up a brand new Orbi Pro!
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Uber Also Used ‘Greyball’ Software To Evade City Transportation Officials

Uber has already been accused of using a software tool dubbed “Greyball” to avoid sidestep law enforcement officers in cities where the service wasn’t yet authorized to operate. A new investigation has concluded that Greyball was also being used in at least one city to evade detection by more than a dozen local government officials.

Reuters reports that a Portland (OR) Bureau of Transportation investigation found that when Uber began operations without permits in the city in Dec. 2014 it used Greyball to block 16 rider accounts that just happened to belong to government officials.

In all, the inquiry — which began in March — found that Uber had used the tool to block 17 rider accounts, denying 29 ride requests.

What Is Greyball?

Greyball was basically a way of identifying users who were suspected to be law enforcement or regulators.

Uber used geolocation, phone model, credit card information, user behavior (including social media profiles), and other pieces of data to create a shadow app.

When a profile fit the makeup of a law enforcement officer, Uber would send that profile to the shadow app. Here users would see “ghost” cars that couldn’t respond to requests for rides, and that obscured the locations of real cars.

Uber acknowledged the tool’s existence in March and promised to stop using the software.

Portland Case

“In using Greyball, Uber has sullied its own reputation,” the Portland Bureau of Transportation wrote in its report.

The service reportedly stopped using the tool in Portland around April 2015 when it received approval to operate in the city legally.

While the city has not imposed any fines or penalties against Uber related to the investigation or use of Greyball, officials have recommended an increase in enforcement of ride-sharing companies, Reuters reports.

By increasing enforcement, the city hopes to ensure that companies — including Uber — do not attempt to evade regulators or deny service to riders in the future.

Just The Latest

Portland’s probe into Greyball is just the latest inquiry into the ride-hailing company’s allegedly sneaky ways.

In May, sources revealed that the Justice Department had opened a criminal investigation against Uber over the use of Greyball. Regulators in California are also reportedly undertaking their own investigation into Greyball.

The company has also been accused of using several other types of software, including “God view” and “Hell” to track users and otherwise keep an eye on everyone who uses its apps.

Hell allegedly let Uber’s top executives and a handful of data scientists track the availability and location of Lyft drivers in a given area, as well as track which of its drivers also drove for Lyft.

This software reportedly worked by creating fake Lyft driver accounts, and staging them at various locations around the city. That positioning let Uber build up a grid view of the whole city and all the Lyft drivers within it.

Last week, it was revealed that the FBI had reportedly opened an investigation into Hell.

Back in June, reports surfaced that the Federal Trade Commission had opened an inquiry into Uber’s privacy practices, including its handling of customer data.

Although the sources didn’t specify what the FTC staff was looking into, Uber’s handling of customer data and its tracking of users has come under scrutiny in the past. For instance, in April, reports suggested that Uber tracked iPhones even after the app was deleted. The company has since allowed customers to opt-out of this practice. 

Last month, it was revealed that the U.S. Justice Department is in the first stages of investigating whether managers at the company ran afoul of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act that prohibits companies and their employees from bribing foreign officials in the course of doing business.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Apple Watch Series 3 + Apple Music — Roll — Apple


Feel the liberating power of 40 million songs on your Apple Watch Series 3. Get yours at http://ift.tt/2w5ywC1 Song: “Misbehaving” by Labrinth — http://ift.tt/2xFdo6a
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States Call On Equifax To Halt Marketing Of Its Paid Credit Monitoring Service

If you’re one of the 140 million or so people affected by Equifax’s failure to keep its data secure, the credit bureau is offering free access to its TrustedID credit monitoring service (though we don’t recommend you enroll in it). At the same time, the company is continuing to charge everyone else for access to TrustedID, and some consumers affected by the breach are inadvertently paying for a service they can get for free. That’s why dozens of state attorneys general are asking Equifax to stop trying to sell TrustedID for the time-being.

In a letter [PDF] sent today by Connecticut Attorney General George and more than 30 other attorneys general, the states argue that Equifax is causing a “great deal of confusion and concern” by simultaneously offering the free monitoring to victims of the breach, while continuing to market its paid subscription version of TrustedID.

“Consumers who view Equifax’s homepage are offered both Equifax fee-based credit monitoring services, as well as its services offered at no cost,” explains the letter. The AGs acknowledge that Equifax did tweak its website to make the free service more prominent, but that this change hasn’t addressed all of their concerns.

The many millions of Americans who are now waiting to find out if their data was stolen and, if so, if it’s being misused, already have enough to worry about and to sort through, say the AGs, and continuing to market two versions of the same service is not helping to bring clarity to the situation.

There is also the larger concern of Equifax using its own incompetence as an excuse to market its paid monitoring service.

“Selling a fee-based product that competes with Equifax’s own free offer of credit monitoring services to victims of Equifax’s own data breach is unfair, particularly if consumers are not sure if their information was compromised,” reads the letter. “Equifax cannot reap benefits from confused consumers who are likely only visiting Equifax’s homepage because they are concerned about whether the breach affects them and their families.”

It’s unclear from the marketing descriptions on the Equifax site if the paid subscription to TrustedID provides any additional benefits beyond what breach victims are being offered through the free version. If there is a difference between the two, the AGs say that breach victims should be getting the full suite of protections made available by Equifax. If there is no difference between the two, “then we fail to understand why Equifax continues to offer its fee-based services to those affected by the breach if equivalent services are obtainable at no cost.”

The letter asks Equifax to stop marketing its paid monitoring service until after the company halts enrollment in the free version. Speaking of which, the current deadline for victims to sign up for the free service is Nov. 21, 2017. The AGs say this is too short of a window of time and should be extended to at least Jan. 31, 2018.

“Consumers are understandably angry and upset about this breach, and their feelings are entirely warranted given the extremely sensitive nature of the compromised information,” said CT Attorney General Jepsen. “This breach has also caused considerable confusion, which could lead breach victims, who are already vulnerable, to inadvertently sign up for a costly program instead of the free service. Additionally, consumers, who are at absolutely no fault in this situation, should not have to pay anyone to completely freeze their credit.”

Whether Equifax heeds the AGs’ requests remains to be seen. Earlier this week, the company responded to concerns from the public, lawmakers, attorneys general, and consumer advocates about a clause in the TrustedID terms of service that strips the customer of their right to sue the company in court. Equifax removed that clause, but only from the free version available to breach victims.


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

How to clean your headphones


Whether you have earbuds or headphones, give them a good clean because they've been in your ears! 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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Chipotle Customers Wanted Queso Dip, But Some Hate What They Got

For years, Chipotle fans have looked at their tortilla chips and thought about how much better they could be with a side of hot, gooey queso dip. The fast food company thought it was making that dream a reality… that is, until many customers tried the Chipotle queso and found it wanting.

While the long-anticipated queso joined Chipotle’s menu just five days ago, that’s apparently enough time for the public — and social media users — to decide maybe this wasn’t such a good idea after all.

The Queso

The fast-casual Mexican restaurant finally jumped into the cheese-y queso pool this summer after executives of the company long denied cheese-lovers their dips, noting that they just couldn’t find a version that was up to its standards.

“Although queso was the number one requested menu item, we never added it to our menu before now because we wouldn’t use the industrial additives used in most quesos,” Steve Ells, founder, chairman and CEO at Chipotle, said in a statement.

That changed, however, when the company began testing the dip at its NEXT kitchen in New York and then expanding it to 350 restaurants in Southern California and Colorado this summer.

Last week, Chipotle announced that queso would be added to all locations, cautioning customers that the dip would vary from restaurant to restaurant since the chain wouldn’t be using additives.

Maybe This Was A Bad Idea

Customers may have asked for queso, but it appears to be a request they regret, as many Chipotle customers have shared their disappointment in the new dip on social media.

From claiming the item is the “biggest disappointment of 2017,” to questioning how a chain with so much good food could make something so bad.

For its part, Chipotle has replied to several customers on Twitter, noting that it would continue working on the recipe.

Consumerist has reached out to Chipotle for reaction to the not-so-glowing reviews of the queso.

Damning With Faint Praise

Not everyone dislikes Chipotle’s queso; there are some customers and food bloggers who have found elements of the dish to enjoy.

GQ’s Drew Magary described the dip as a “sad little plastic cup of queso flecked with bits of red and green,” but he was a bit more forgiving than other customers.

Magary combined his cup of queso with an equally sad cup of chorizo. The resulting meal, he says, was a “perfectly fine queso.”

“It was expensive and delivered in awkward fashion, but I ate the whole thing,” he wrote.

It’s Not That Bad

That lukewarm review seems to be par for the course, as those who like the dip seem to do so unenthusiastically.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

La Premiere French Academy Insight Case Study | Business


Learn more: http://ift.tt/2f0mQ8K Veronique at La Premiere French Academy in Cupertino got some Insight products early! Here's what she has to say.
by NETGEAR via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

Insight Teaser with Veronique | Business


Learn more: http://ift.tt/2f0mQ8K Veronique at La Premiere French Academy in Cupertino got some Insight products early! Here's what she has to say about the App.
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Sen. Elizabeth Warren Introduces Bill That Would Make Credit Freezes Free

Why, exactly, should consumers pay the credit bureaus for credit freezes or monitoring services when it was one of them who lost our personal data? In the aftermath of the Equifax data breach, Senators Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Brian Schatz of Hawaii have introduced a bill that would ban credit reporting agencies from collecting fees for placing freezes on individuals’ credit files.

In the grand tradition of government backronyms, the bill [PDF] is called the FREE Act, or Freedom from Equifax Exploitation Act. (Yes, that would actually be the FFEE Act. Maybe you’re supposed to squint a little.)

What the bill would do is simple. Fees for credit freezes already vary by state, and some states (Colorado, for example) don’t allow bureaus to charge consumers to place a freeze on their credit records to prevent identity theft.

The bill, if passed, would stop credit bureaus from charging consumers any money for credit freezes at all.

“Credit reporting agencies like Equifax make billions of dollars collecting and selling personal data about consumers without their consent, and then make consumers pay if they want to stop the sharing of their own data,” Sen. Warren said in a statement about the bill. “Our bill gives consumers more control over their own personal data and prohibits companies like Equifax from charging consumers for freezing and unfreezing access to their credit files. Passing this bill is a first step toward reforming the broken credit reporting industry.”

In addition to this new legislation, Warren also introduced a bill that would prevent prospective employers from looking up the credit records of most job applicants. Credit records don’t actually show who is likely to be a good employee, and help keep people out of better jobs after they’ve had financial struggles.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Verizon Wireless Cuts Off Thousands Of Rural Accounts For Roaming Too Much

If you live in rural America, the odds are you do quite a bit of roaming on your cellphone. Even if your home or business is in an area covered by a major national carrier, you likely have to regularly travel to, from, and through places where other providers pick up the slack. This means that rural customers who use their smartphones frequently can cost their carrier as they use gigabytes of data on other company’s networks. This cost has apparently become too much for Verizon, which is once again cutting off a block of rural customers, giving them only a few weeks’ notice to take their business elsewhere.

Multiple reports claim that Verizon recently notified 8,500 customers — representing a total of around 19,000 lines — that they have until Oct. 17 to find another wireless provider. Why? According to a letter posted by Stop the Cap, these customers are using “significant” amounts of roaming data.

The letters don’t give any approximation of what “significant” might translate into in terms of overall data use. They merely allege that the customers’ “primary place of use is outside the Verizon service area.”

If affected customers don’t meet the deadline given in the letter, they will be unable to transfer that number to another carrier, says Verizon.

On the plus side, Verizon is waiving any remaining balances these customers might have on devices purchased through the company. So folks could end up saving hundreds of dollars on iPhones they don’t need to finish paying off. That’s only good news if the customer is able to find another carrier who services their area.

In response to reports about the closed accounts, Verizon is attempting to downplay the impact, saying that only a small number of customers are being affected. While mathematically that is true — 19,000 is a negligible fraction of the company’s more than 100 million wireless subscribers — people in these communities are worried about the message it sends and the potential concerns for public safety.

In one Maine community, the local police chief is among those who received a tough-luck letter from Verizon.

“From a public safety standpoint, a lot of our 9-1-1 calls come in via mobile phone,” the chief explains to WLBZ-TV. “And when you have less towers or less service to ping off from, then your area of location instead of getting more specific in the location, is gonna get wider.”

Verizon confirmed to WLBZ that the decision to cut off these customers is purely a matter of red ink, saying that the “roaming costs generated by these lines exceed what these consumers pay us each month.”

This is actually the second wave of recent rural line cancelations by Verizon. Earlier this summer, Ars Technica reported that thousands of the company’s customers had been given similar notices, claiming they were roaming too much and therefore must be living outside the Verizon coverage area.

In 2010, Verizon launched a rural LTE program that partners with various smaller, regional providers to make sure that there was a blanket of wireless coverage for their customers.

At the time, Verizon was in the process of ending its initial unlimited data offerings and shifting toward a system that used strict monthly data limits with hefty overage fees. But in the last couple of years, Verizon and the other major national providers have once again drifted back to offering “unlimited” data plans.

As the Bangor Daily News recently noted, the consequence of this was that rural Verizon customers on unlimited plans were able to gobble up large amounts of roaming data, driving up costs for the nation’s largest provider.

Technically, the Verizon “unlimited” plan is much like the other “unlimited” wireless plans: It doesn’t have a monthly data cap, but Verizon can throttle users’ data after they reach 22 GB of data in any month. However, this throttling threshold isn’t automatic. Rather, Verizon only slows down affected users’ data when they are connected to congested cell towers. Since that’s a rare event in many rural communities, some Verizon customers were — gasp, horror — able to actually get the unlimited data they were paying for each month.

Verizon is effectively firing a warning shot to its rural customers: Dare to use your service as we advertise it, and we may just cut you off.

[h/t Ars Technica]


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Cassini crashes into Saturn ending its 20 year mission


NASA's Cassini spacecraft took its final plunge into the atmosphere of Saturn this morning. The spacecraft sent its last signal back to Earth at approximately 5:00 a.m. PT, marking the end of a 20-year journey, logging over a billion miles. 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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iPhone X's hidden security trick


Craig Federighi, Apple's senior vice president of software, tells a developer how the iPhone X could prevent others from using Face ID. 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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Would You Take A DNA Test At An NFL Game? The Baltimore Ravens Want You To

Fans attending the Baltimore Ravens’ home opener on Sunday will be leaving more than empty cups, nacho tins, and possibly their team spirit when they exit M&T Bank Stadium: Guests can leave their DNA to be tested if they take part in the team’s latest promotion.

In a new spin on game-day promotions, the Ravens will gift 55,000 attendees at Sunday’s game against the Cleveland Browns with a free DNA test from Orig3n Inc.

While the promotion, dubbed Ravens DNA Day, could give fans a brief look into their genetic makeup, it also poses several privacy questions and concerns about misleading results.

How Does The Promotion Work?

Fans entering M&T Bank Stadium will receive a Raven’s-themed Orig3n DNA kit, complete with materials that exclaim “purple and black are in your genes — now find out what else is.”

The Baltimore Sun reports that the kits will offer “insight into your mind, body and health.” Specifically, they will test four genes, including those that determine if a person has enhanced performance in power and spirit activities, as well as a gene that can predict an increased risk of low levels of Vitamin D.

Those taking part in the test, simply swab the inside of their cheek with the provided materials, and drop the sample into bins located in the stadium.

Participants must register with the company online in order to receive their results.

“They’re trying to enhance the fan experience at our home games. It’s a tool for consumers to have better access to information about their bodies,” Kevin Rochlitz, the Ravens’ senior vice president of corporate sales and business development, tells The Sun.

But Where’s My Data?

Dumping your DNA in a bin located in a very public place likely seems a bit disconcerting. Could someone take these vials? Is your personal information plastered all over the sample?

Orig3n claims to use “stringent security standards” to ensure all information is protected. According to Orig3n, once the company receives a participant’s DNA, scientists analysis the sample and then about four weeks later a report will be available on the company’s LifeProfile app.

“All DNA test results are encrypted and sent via a smartphone app,” the company says on its website. DNA samples are attached to a barcode in the DNA Test Kit so that it is clear who the results belong to.

Related: Medical Data Privacy Laws Don’t Actually Cover Apps, Wearables, And Other Consumer Stuff

Orig3n notes that it collects users’ names, addresses, email addresses, phone numbers, and credit card information. It may then use that information to improve customers service; respond to customer service requests; personalize user experience; and send periodic emails.

Is It Worth It?

While the Ravens’ choice to provide DNA kits to fans is a far cry from the foam fingers and other promotional items NFL attendees are used to, does it really serve much of a purpose?

The validity and value of DNA kit results is a debated topic. For instance, the genes Orig3n is testing doesn’t necessarily give users insight into their overall health or family history.

In fact, Orig3n states in its FAQ that its report and assessment is “not intended for use as an indication of any medical condition or used as a diagnostic tool.”

“The results of the LifeProfile analyses are designed for informational purposes,” the company says. “With the information you receive in your report, you’ll feel empowered to make the right lifestyle choices to feel, look, and perform your very best.”

However, some critics contend that the consumers may take too much stock into the results, coming to the conclusion that they are more healthy than they all are.

Whether or not fans will get much use out of their test results remains to be seen, but having a captive audience of more than 55,000 people Sunday is likely to be a great advertising opportunity for Orig3n.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Senate Republicans Making One Last Effort To Take Down Obamacare

Yes, again: After spending the spring and summer trying and failing to repeal the Affordable Care Act, Republicans in the Senate have come up with one last Hail-Mary bill to take down the ACA and revamp American healthcare.

So what is it this time?

Senators Lindsey Graham (SC) and Bill Cassidy (LA), joined by Dean Heller (NV) and Ron Johnson (WI) on Wednesday released a new, last-ditch ACA repeal bill.

Graham and Cassidy actually first pulled together their proposal in July, while the Senate was foundering on the McConnell bill that eventually failed.

Most folks call this attempt the Graham-Cassidy bill, although the Senators’ offices are trying to make “GCHJ” happen. (It won’t.)

What does it do?

Although this bill [141-page PDF] takes a slightly different approach to repeal than the failed July bill, Graham-Cassidy still aims for several similar outcomes, including:

  • Repealing the individual mandate
  • Repealing the employer mandate
  • Permitting states to opt out of requiring insurers in their borders cover essential health benefits
  • Ends the Medicaid expansion
  • Replaces some Medicaid funding with block grants that states can use for whatever

An analysis from the non-partisan Center for Budget and Policy Priorities concludes that Graham-Cassidy would result in large cuts to federal funding for healthcare overall, without replacement. The bill would also hurt anyone with pre-existing conditions on the individual market, because of the way in which states would be able to opt out of benefits and coverage requirements.

Graham-Cassidy would “cause many millions of people to lose coverage, radically restructure and deeply cut medicaid, and increase out-of-pocket costs for individual market consumers, the CBPP concludes.

Our colleagues down the hall at Consumers Union agree. “Just like its predecessors, this plan would leave tens of millions uninsured, threaten key consumer protections and coverage requirements, and fundamentally alter Medicaid by drastically cutting funding and shifting billions of dollars of healthcare costs onto states and consumers,” CU’s Betsy Imholz said in a statement.

In short: it’s basically a new skin on the same set of policy proposals we all saw circulating earlier this year.

Is it actually going to happen?

Hill-watchers and Washington media largely consider Graham-Cassidy an unlikely long shot at best — but if watching Congress in 2017 has taught us anything, it’s: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

The math in the Senate is the same now as it was in July: Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell needs 50 members to vote in favor of something in order to get it to pass. (Vice President Mike Pence can cast a tie-breaking 51st vote as needed.)

That’s leading Republicans in favor of the bill to crow that they’re almost there, boasting that at least 47-49 members are already in line to vote for it.

But as we saw this summer with Sen. John McCain’s (AZ) dramatic late-night thumbs down, it’s that 50th vote that you can’t get by without.

There are 52 Republicans in the Senate, meaning that if three choose not to support the bill, it’s dead in the water. Sen. Rand Paul (KY) has already gone on the record as a “no.”

Sens. Susan Collins (ME) and Lisa Murkowski (AK) were the other holdouts over the Senate’s July bill. At the time, both cited objections to cuts in coverage and in Medicaid funding. Consdiering Graham-Cassidy promises equally dire cuts, it seems unlikely that either would suddenly be swayed — but unlikely is not the same as impossible.

That said, anything that did manage to get through the Senate would still have to get through the House before becoming law… and the clock is ticking. Because the procedural tactic Congress has been using to try and rewrite healthcare, budget reconciliation, has a deadline. Congress has to be completely done with any bill before the clock strikes midnight on Sept. 30.


by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Aerosoles Files For Bankruptcy Protection, Plans To Close Most Of Its Stores

Aerosoles, maker of comfy women’s shoes, has the same troubles as other mall retailers: more physical stores than it needs, and not enough customers spending money in those stores. And so the company is joining 2017’s most unfortunate corporate club, and filing for bankruptcy.

The current plan is to shed most of its stores, keeping at least four in New York and New Jersey near its Edison, NJ, headquarters. The company hopes to find a buyer, if the reorganization isn’t enough to keep it going.

The chain’s other 74 U.S. stores and a few hundred international locations are all potentially on the chopping block, as the company plans to follow customers’ shopping habits online, and continue mainly as an online retailer and wholesaler of its products to other stores.

“This restructuring will enable Aerosoles to become a stronger, more vibrant brand, and position the Company for future growth,” interim CEO Denise Incandela said in a statement.

2017 remains a record-smashing year for retail bankruptcies, and Aerosoles’ mall neighbors that have either closed stores or negotiated new post-bankruptcy rent deals include Payless ShoeSource, Rue 21, and RadioShack.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Mac Tips - MacOS High Sierra Tips and Tricks for Macbook Pro - DIY in 5 Ep 69


Here’s how to get the most out of your new MacBook Pro with macOS High Sierra (available starting September 25th). Now that Siri is integrated with High Sierra, talking to your MacBook Pro can make interactions much easier and faster. You can get quick access to change system settings like Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, and check weather and even find files without clicking through folders. To activate Siri, go to System Preferences, click Siri, then check Enable Siri. Once you’ve woken up Skynet, I mean Siri, you can access her by holding down Command & Space or using the Siri icon on the top right of your screen. You can customize the Touch Bar on the higher end Macbook. If you wanted to add or remove Touch Bar items go to System Preferences, click on Keyboard, then Customize Control Strip and drag icons directly to or from strip to the screen. Once you are finished click done. You can now rename groups of files all at once. First, highlight all of the files, either by dragging a box over all of them or hitting Command + A. Once highlighted, right click on one of the file names and click Rename items. This allows you to set a standard name structure for the group. No more nonsense file names! Recently, Apple introduced a Split Screen feature in Mac OS, which is great for multitasking. To start it up, left click and hold on the green maximize button at the top left of any window. A shaded split will appear, allowing you to drag it to be positioned on the left or right side of your screen. Click a second window and the two will snap side by side. With Screen Sharing you can the tech support for friends and family remotely over the internet. It is compatible with El Captain and newer (Sierra, High Sierra) macOSes. Just hit Command & Space and type in Screen Sharing. Enter the Apple ID of the person you want to contact. They’ll need to make sure their Screen Sharing is enabled under System Preferences in the Sharing pane. They will be asked to grant permission to view their screen, and they can also grant the ability to remotely control their mouse and keyboard. This will make helping friends or parents so much easier when you can’t be physically present with them and their Mac. Subscribe to Kingston: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=KingstonTechMemory
by Kingston Technology via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

My Book Duo | Offizielle Produktübersicht


My Book Duo | Offizielle Produktübersicht Die Festplatte My Book™ Duo ist mit ihrer enormen Kapazität ideal für die Speicherung Ihrer Fotos, Videos, Dokumente und Musik. WD YouTube-Kanal abonnieren: https://www.youtube.com/westerndigital WD auf Twitter folgen: https://twitter.com/WDCreators WD auf Facebook liken: http://ift.tt/1U5v6TD WD auf Instagram folgen: http://ift.tt/2vJ38Zv Die Festplatte My Book Duo besitzt eine enorme Kapazität, ideal zum Speichern von Fotos, Videos, Dokumenten und Musik. Die eingebauten, extrem schnellen WD Red Festplatten beschleunigen sequentielle Lesevorgänge über den USB-Type-C-Anschluss auf bis zu 360 MB/s1. 1Bei sequentiellen Lesevorgängen: Megabyte pro Sekunde (MB/s) = eine Million Byte pro Sekunde. My Book Duo | Offizielle Produktübersicht
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Anatomy of an IoT Attack


Connected devices are increasingly being used for cyber attacks. They often lack critical device protections and organizations fail to segment their networks in order to reduce the attack surface. Visit http://cs.co/60528Fb8k today to learn how to detect, block, and respond to IoT threats.
by Cisco via Endless Supplies .De - Brands

Apple preorders open today, Google teases future Pixels


The biggest stories in tech include the iPhone 8 becoming available to order. Meanwhile, Google vies for attention by heavily hinting its next phone is coming very soon. 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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TSA Approves Faster Airport Baggage Scanners

No matter how well you prepare for airport security — wearing belt-less pants and slip-on shoes, knowing exactly how to stand when it’s your turn — you may still end up waiting because your carry-on hasn’t finished its trip through the baggage scanner. That may soon improve, now that the Transportation Security Administration has approved new, faster scanners for use at airport checkpoints.

Massachusetts-based Analogic Corp. revealed this week that its ConneCT scanner had received a stamp of approval from the TSA by meeting the agency’s Advanced Technology (AT) detection standards.

Like the speedier machine currently being tested by American Airlines at Phoenix’s Sky Harbor Airport, the Analogic scanner users computed tomography (CT) to generate a fuller, three-dimensional image of bags and their content. As the L.A. Times points out, the TSA approval of ConneCT means that additional airports will be able to test this next generation of scanners, hopefully expediting their deployment in the long run.

The Technology

The newly approved ConneCT scanners, manufactured by Analogic Corp, uses the same imaging technology one would find in a hospital CT machine. But instead of looking at your insides, the scanners will generate a 3D image of carry-on baggage.

The image is then analyzed by security officers, who can manipulate the image, spinning 360 degrees to show the contents from several angles.

Additionally, the machines use an algorithm to automatically identify weapons, Analogic says in a statement.

If an item in the bag appears suspicious, a security worker will check the bag.

“With record-breaking air travel numbers and new threats to the public, it is ever more important to deploy cutting-edge technology that can evolve with the security landscape,” Jim Ryan, senior vice president and general manager of security detection and power technologies at Analogic, said in a statement.

Moving Faster

TSA has previously noted that CT screening technology could decrease time spend in security screening by about 30%.

Travelers would be able to speed through the lines, as the technology would allow them to keep liquids and personal electronics in their bags.

The L.A. Times reports that Analogic estimates the number of passengers going through security in one hour would increase from 180 to 500 if its scanners were in use.

While its unclear just where the scanners will turn up, Analogic already has one customers: American Airlines. The carrier announced in June that it would purchase several ConneCT scanners for use in the future.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Motel 6 Admits Some Locations Were Sharing Lists Of Guests With Immigration Officers On Daily Basis

When you check into a hotel and provide a photo ID, your expectation is that the hotel will be holding this info for its records in case you mess up the room or try to skip out on your bill. What you don’t expect is that the hotel management is taking its daily guest logs and turning them over to federal immigration officials.

Earlier this week, an article in the Phoenix New Times pointed to a recent pattern of frequent arrests by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers at two Motel 6 locations in the Phoenix area.

Records showed that ICE was showing up at these two Motel 6 addresses at a rate of about once every two weeks, while New Times reporters couldn’t find any evidence of ICE making arrests at any other area hotels during the same time period.

Warrants granted for these arrests only stated that the officers were “following a lead,” though these were leads with incredibly specific information about the allegedly illegal aliens staying at the hotel. It appeared to those concerned that someone at the hotels was the source of the information being provided to ICE.

In fact, Motel 6 staff confirmed to the New Times that they weren’t just calling ICE when they suspected that a guest was in the country illegally. They were giving daily reports of all guests to the officers.

“We send a report every morning to ICE — all the names of everybody that comes in,” a front-desk clerk admitted to the New Times. “Every morning at about 5 o’clock, we do the audit and we push a button and it sends it to ICE.”

Unlike some Motel 6 locations that are owned by franchisees, the two Phoenix hotels involved in this story are corporate-owned, but in a statement released after the story broke, the company still contends that the decision to voluntarily turn over all guest records to ICE was made at the local level and without knowledge of Motel 6 HQ.

“When we became aware of it, it was discontinued,” says the hotel chain, which is promising to make sure that all 1,400 of its locations now understand that “they are prohibited from voluntarily providing daily guest lists to ICE.”


by Chris Morran via Consumerist

Making The Impossible Possible in VR | How She Works


Presented By Coors Light // Kate Wurzbacher finds ways to put unimaginable landscapes, animals, and action into your living room by exploring creative solutions for VR. Mashable’s series ‘How She Works’ highlights amazing women in diverse occupations. Watch more: http://on.mash.to/HowSheWorks 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/2lyOwmZ Twitter: http://on.mash.to/1Udp1kz Instagram: http://on.mash.to/1U6D40z Mashable is for superfans. We're not for the casually curious. Obsess with us.
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Playing laser tag to get fit


LazRfit is transforming what we know about laser tag into a fast-paced sport to make exercising more fun and exciting. 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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Good News: Chrome And Safari Will Soon Mute Auto-Play Videos

“We’ve all been there: You’re in a quiet classroom or office, innocently click a link to open a new tab of news on your laptop, and boom! The audio from a tangentially-related auto-playing video is suddenly blaring from your speakers. Sure, you lunge to turn it off as soon as you can, but the damage is done, and everyone is glaring at you. But there’s hope: Developers know how much auto-play stinks, and so two major browsers will start muting all that junk for you.

<a href="http://ift.tt/2h6iv4g; target="_blank"We learned about these updates from CNET, which naturally shared the news on a page that includes an auto-play video that blares music. Even so, we’re delighted to share the news, which will make the internet a more pleasant place to click around. Users will be able to set their autoplay preferences for each Google account.

In Google’s Chrome browser, the change will happen with version 64, coming in January. If you prefer to have videos play automatically, you an tell Chrome so. If you don’t have a compelling reason to, leave auto-play off, and enjoy the lovely quiet.

Apple plans to introduce a similar feature to its Safari browser, which will be available as part of the newest version of MacOS, High Sierra, available for download later this month.

Ad industry groups are upset that the new version of Apple’s browser will be installed on users’ computers when they upgrade their operating systems, whether they request the new browser or not.

Why are advertisers upset? This new version limits advertisers’ ability to track users using cookies, or tiny files that identify a customer that reside on that customer’s computer.

Naturally, the page where you can read an article about that change on AdAge also has an autoplay video.


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Disgraced College Accreditor Asks Betsy DeVos For Second Chance

Last year, the Department of Education revoked federal recognition for the accrediting body that ignored red flags at failed for-profit educator Corinthian Colleges and allowed billions in federal aid dollars to schools under investigation. Now, Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools is back, asking new Education Secretary Betsy DeVos for another chance.

ACICS this week revealed its intention to apply for recognition by the Department, noting in a statement that its has taken steps to right its wrongs and overhaul its organization structure.

What Is Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools?

ACICS was the accrediting body for a number of the country’s for-profit colleges.

Over its history, ACICS has accredited 725 different institutions, and accredited 243 institutions at the time its recognition was revoked in 2016, according to a report from the Center for American Progress (CAP). Most of these schools are for-profit colleges.

Without this accreditation from organizations like ACICS, schools cannot receive federal student grants and loans.

ACICS came under increased scrutiny after the collapse of Corinthian Colleges in 2015, with regulators asking how the accreditor missed apparently obvious red flags. If ACICS had pulled CCI’s accreditation, it could have stopped billions in federal aid money going to those schools.

A subsequent report [PDF] from CAP found that 17 institutions, campuses, or corporate entities under investigation by the federal or state government received accreditation from ACICS, taking in more than $5.7 billion in federal funds over the past three years.

When compared to campuses receiving accreditation from the top five national companies, ACICS’s institutions had the worst graduation rates, the lowest rate of students repaying their student loans, and the second-worst student loan default rates.

How Did We Get Here?

The issues for ACICS came to a head in early 2016 when lawmakers began raising concerns about the accreditor.

In June, California Attorney General Kamala Harris sent a letter to the Dept. urging it to revoke federal approval from ACICS.

With the letter, Harris expressed support for 13 other state Attorneys General who previously voiced their concerns over the renewal of ACICS as an accreditation agency.

Next, Sen. Elizabeth Warren published a report related to the Dept.’s accreditation practices and the failures of ACICS. The lawmaker urged the Dept. to take “strong, aggressive” action against the accreditor, pointing to ACICS’s “dismal record of failure.”

Also in June 2016, Education Dept. staff and an advisory panel each voted in favor of revoking ACICS’s accreditation.

The Dept. of Education’s staff report found numerous issues on ACICS’ part, including failure to address how well graduates of its accredited institutions succeed on licensing exams, failure to provide documentation of schools’ relationship with licensing related entities, and failure to clarify and document its entire process for the recruitment, selection, and verification of the qualifications and experience possessed by those selected to serve on the agency’s evaluation teams and decision-making bodies.

ACICS attempted to show it had changed its way in Aug. 2016, when it revoked the accreditation for troubled for-profit operator ITT Technical Institutes. As a result, the Dept. ITT was banned from enrolling new students using federal financial aid. Two weeks later, the college had shut down, leaving nearly 4,000 students scrambling to finish their education or receive federal student loan discharges.

The effort was to no avail, however. The following month, Sept. 2016, a Dept. of Education senior designated official finalized the staff and advisory panel decisions to revoke recognition. The official said the decision was made based on findings that the organization failed to properly monitor and discipline the colleges it oversees.

In a letter [PDF] to ACICS, the Dept. of Education official said she considered ACICS’s petition to keep recognition, as well as reports and transcripts of meetings between the Dept. of Education and the accreditor during its review.

By revoking ACICS’ recognition, the 243 schools that have received accreditation had 18 months to find a new accreditor and remain eligible for federal student aid programs, the Dept. said in a FAQ at the time.

In the case that a school could not find another accreditor, students would no longer be able to use their federal aid at those schools.

A Friendlier Administration

Fast forward nearly a year and a lot has changed: There’s a new administration in charge, and Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos has repeatedly shown that her agency is likely to use a lighter touch when it comes to for-profit colleges, and by extension the organizations that accredit them.

Since taking over the helm at the Dept., DeVos has “reset” rules put in place to hold for-profit colleges more accountable and prevent students at those schools from being left with nothing but debt if their college collapses.

DeVos announced this summer the intention to allow colleges to continue enrolling students in programs that run afoul of federal regulations. The Dept. of Education said it would “reduce the burden on institutions” by revamping the appeals process for colleges when their programs fail to meet the gainful employment standards for employment after graduation.

Just last month, the agency appointed former for-profit college executive Julian Schmoke to run the Department’s enforcement division. While Schmoke currently works as a high-ranking director at a community college in Georgia, he spent several years working for DeVry University, a college that has been repeatedly accused of fraud by both federal and state authorities.

Give Us Another Shot

Amid the seemingly more for-profit friendly administration, ACICS is attempting to get back into the accreditation business, applying for recognition by the department.

Michelle Edwards, president and CEO for ACICS, contends that over the past 14 months, the organization has taken steps to reform its practices.

For instance, she claims that ACICS has adopted new accreditation criteria to improve the accreditation process with an eye on student outcomes; established robust standards overhauling the collecting and verification of data; and strengthened its monitoring approaches to identifying and reporting problems with compliance.

“The ACICS leadership takes our oversight responsibilities to accredited institutions and your students seriously,” Edwards said in a statement.

The organization also appears to be downplaying its past trouble with the Dept. of Education, noting that it made the decision in June 2016 to stop accepting new applications for initial accreditation in order to focus on strengthening is standards.

Edwards also notes that ACICS is still recognized by the the Council on Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA).

ACICS plans to submit a formal petition for recognition as a national accreditor to the Department by Oct. 1, Edwards says, pointing out the the organization has already been in talks with the Dept. of Education.

Consumerist has reached out to the Dept. of Education for comment on its discussions with ACICS and its potential for future recognition. We’ll update this post when we hear back.


by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

Canon Explorers Of Light - Joyce Tenneson


Joyce Tenneson discusses her career and passion for photography in our series of videos introducing our Explorers of Light. For more information on Joyce, please visit: http://Canon.us/7glll
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Watch as NASA's Cassini spacecraft sends its last signal to Earth


NASA engineers and scientists crashed the Cassini spacecraft into Saturn on Friday, ending the 20-year-old explorer's mission. See how it unfolded live on NASA TV. 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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LG 34U89C's a nice monitor when speed and color matter most


This 34-inch curved IPS display looks good, but it's low res 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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Verizon Gives Up, Decides It Doesn’t Want To Buy Comcast Or Charter After All

Ever since an openly business-friendly administration stepped into the White House, analysts and investors have been pushing for Verizon to merge with a cable/internet giant like Comcast or Charter. And the telecom titan’s CEO has even indicated his interest in a corporate marriage of convenience with a massive cable or media company. But now the company says it has no immediate plans to wed.

Verizon has “moved on” from trying to acquire or be acquired by one of the big cable companies, CEO Lowell McAdam told a crowd of investors and money-men at a confernece this week, Bloomberg reports.

Despite already being the largest wireless carrier in the U.S., and having a massive, sprawling, critical copper and fiber network over giant swaths of the country, Verizon has been desperately flinging itself at cable suitors all year long.

In April, McAdam made it clear that he wanted to talk merger, and he wasn’t picky, saying that he’d be happy to discuss terms with Comcast, Charter, or even a media-side company like Disney.

A couple of months later, news dribbled out that Verizon had actually tried to make a play for Charter, but Charter said no. It wasn’t that Charter’s wholly uninterested — it, too, has been considering more mergers this year — but rather that Verizon’s $100 billion offer reportedly wasn’t nearly enough.

Bloomberg also notes that merging with a cable company right now might be kind of pointless for a company as well-positioned in the wireless world as Verizon is. Comcast and Charter are both slowly trying to pivot away from strict pay-TV, and even home wired broadband, and instead are heading into the mobile space.

Streaming TV is up, 5G is on the horizon — and while consumers, by and large, think their mobile carriers are okay, they still really hate their cable companies. So perhaps giving up on cable dreams is indeed the smarter thing for Verizon to do.


by Kate Cox via Consumerist

Tanoshi Android Computer: Fun + Educational Computer for Kids Ages 6-12


Video provided by Tanoshi: http://ift.tt/2fmZXgb The 2-in-1 comes pre-loaded with some great educational apps that can be used at home or in the classroom, including apps to help with math, coding, research, reading and writing.
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Inside Facebook's augmented reality art project


The social network works with San Francisco-based artist Heather Day to bring the walls on its campus to life. 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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Consumerist Friday Flickr Finds

Here are seven of the best photos that readers added to the Consumerist Flickr Pool in the last two weeks (Consumerist was traveling), picked for usability in a Consumerist post or for just plain neatness.

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


by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

Dell 55 and 86 4K Interactive Touch Monitors


55" and 86" 4K interactive touch conference room monitors from the world's #1 monitor brand, built for presentations and collaboration. Learn more: http://dell.to/2h1ljQa & http://dell.to/2vTkzTJ
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How to afford the new iPhone X


Three ways to help you finance Apple's new thousand-dollar iPhone. 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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