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Saturday, December 28th, 2013
| Time |
Event |
| 12:25a |
| | 3:17a |
| | 5:50a |
| | 8:37a |
| | 11:20a |
| | 1:20p |
Wisconsin Begins Using Cheese To De-Ice Roads http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/ULnH8iLvHyQ/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/3547d314/sc/10/l/0Ltech0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C280C0A0A382430Cwisconsin0Ebegins0Eusing0Echeese0Eto0Ede0Eice0Eroads0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "The NYT reports that Milwaukee has begun a pilot program to use cheese brine to keep city roads from freezing, mixing the dairy waste with traditional rock salt as a way to trim costs and ease pollution. 'You want to use provolone or mozzarella,' says Jeffrey A. Tews, the fleet operations manager for the public works department, which has spread the cheesy substance in Bay View, a neighborhood on Milwaukee's south side. 'Those have the best salt content. You have to do practically nothing to it.' Local governments across the country have been experimenting with cheaper and environmentally friendly ways of thawing icy thoroughfares, trying everything from sugar beet juice to discarded brewery grain in an attempt to limit the use of road salt, which can spread too thin, wash away and pollute waterways. 'If you put dry salt on a roadway, you typically lose 30 percent to bounce and traffic,' says Emil Norby, who works for Polk County and was the first in Wisconsin to come up with the cheese brine idea to help the salt stick. In a state where lawmakers once honored the bacterium in Monterey Jack as the state's official microbe, residents of Bay View say they have noticed little difference, good or bad, in the smell of their streets, and city officials say they have received no complaints. The mayor of Bay View says it's an experiment, but one that makes sense. The brine will come from the Dresser Farm in Polk County, where it is already being used on the roads. The only cost will be for transportation and distribution. 'We thought, 'Well, let's give it a shot.' The investment in this project is $1,474.'" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 2:18p |
| | 3:15p |
| | 4:14p |
| | 5:09p |
Website Checkout Glitches: Two Very Different Corporate Responses http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/MQKs4JRoowk/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/35493099/sc/4/l/0Lit0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C280C16172510Cwebsite0Echeckout0Eglitches0Etwo0Every0Edifferent0Ecorporate0Eresponses0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Freshly Exhumed writes "On the morning of December 26th, 2013, an error on the website of Delta Air Lines' produced impossibly low fare discounts of as much as 90% for about 2 hours before the problem was corrected. Delta, to their PR benefit, have swallowed the losses, and the lucky customers have shared their delight via social media. Unfortunately for many buyers of goods from The Brick furniture retailer, no such consumer warmth is forthcoming. The Brick's website checkout had awarded them an additional 50% off, over and above all other costs, but the official corporate response has been to demand the money be returned. Affected customers are now lashing The Brick with social media opprobrium and drawing direct comparisons with Delta's response. So, given that these are not small, mom-and-pop companies, have we reached a point at which online retailers are expected to just swallow such costs for PR purposes, as part of doing web business?" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 6:07p |
| | 7:04p |
NSA's Legal Win Introduces a Lot of Online Insecurity http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/EtT4CAGVdlQ/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/3549b810/sc/1/l/0Lyro0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C280C17412110Cnsas0Elegal0Ewin0Eintroduces0Ea0Elot0Eof0Eonline0Einsecurity0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm Nerval's Lobster writes "The decision of a New York judge that the wholesale collection of cell-phone metadata by the National Security Agency is constitutional ties the score between pro- and anti-NSA forces at one victory apiece. The contradictory decisions use similar reasoning and criteria to come to opposite conclusions, leaving both individuals and corporations uncertain of whether their phone calls, online activity or even data stored in the cloud will ultimately be shielded by U.S. laws protecting property, privacy or search and seizure by law-enforcement agencies. On Dec. 27, Judge William H. Pauley threw out a lawsuit filed by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) that sought to stop the NSA PRISM cell-phone metadata-collection program on the grounds it violated Fourth Amendment provisions protecting individual privacy and limits on search and seizure of personal property by the federal government. Pauley threw out the lawsuit largely due to his conclusion that Fourth Amendment protections do not apply to records held by third parties. That eliminates the criteria for most legal challenges, but throws into question the privacy of any data held by phone companies, cloud providers or external hosting companies – all of which could qualify as unprotected third parties." Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 8:01p |
How the Dark Lord of the Internet Made His Fortunes http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/qosK3RWIvgE/story01.htm http://slashdot.feedsportal.com/c/35028/f/647410/s/3549d215/sc/21/l/0Lyro0Bslashdot0Borg0Cstory0C130C120C280C18462590Chow0Ethe0Edark0Elord0Eof0Ethe0Einternet0Emade0Ehis0Efortunes0Dutm0Isource0Frss10B0Amainlinkanon0Gutm0Imedium0Ffeed/story01.htm theodp writes "Over at The Atlantic, Taylor Clark's epic Jesse Willms, the Dark Lord of the Internet tells the tale of how one of the most notorious alleged hustlers in the history of e-commerce made a fortune on the Web. 'Accusing Willms of being a scammer,' Clark writes, 'does him a disservice; what he accomplished elicits something close to awe, even among his critics.' The classic themes Willms' company employed in 'sponsored' links for products that included colon cleansers, teeth whiteners, and acai supplements, Clark reports, included dubious scientific claims and fake articles ('farticles'); implied endorsements from celebrities and TV networks; incredible 'testimonials"; manipulative plays on insecurities ('You wouldn't have to worry about being the 'fat bridesmaid' at your sister's wedding!'); and 'iron-clad' guarantees that 'free trials' of the products were absolutely 'risk free.' But beneath his promises of a 'free trial,' the FTC alleged, Willms buried an assortment of charges in the fine print of his terms and conditions. After the 14-day trial period for each product, customers automatically became enrolled in monthly subscription plans, for up to $80 a month. 'The product was never the point,' explained an FTC attorney. 'The point was to get as many hits on each credit card as you could.' Despite a publicized $359 million settlement with the FTC, Jesse Willms is doing just fine financially-and he has a new yellow Lamborghini to prove it. After settling his tax debts, Willms surrendered his assets of just $991,000 to get the financial judgment suspended. Willms has left diet products behind and pivoted into information services. 'As of November,' Clark notes, 'if you searched vehicle history on Google, Yahoo, or Bing, ads for Willms's sites were among the first things you would see.'" Read more of this story at Slashdot.       | | 9:00p |
| | 9:58p |
| | 11:03p |
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