Current Events in February 2008

Browse Current Events by year

2008

Browse Current Events by month

Get trending consumer news and recalls

    By entering your email, you agree to sign up for consumer news, tips and giveaways from ConsumerAffairs. Unsubscribe at any time.

    Thanks for subscribing.

    You have successfully subscribed to our newsletter! Enjoy reading our tips and recommendations.

    New York Tops Animal Cruelty List

    Report ranks labs that inflict pain on research animals

    An animal rights group ranks New York, Iowa and Maryland as the states whose research labs inflict the most pain on animals.

    Stop Animal Expolitation Now (SAEN) said its list is incomplete because labs routinely lie to regulators about what goes on behind closed doors.

    "Supposedly reputable facilities are simply lying to both the federal government and the American people," said Michael A. Budkie, A.H.T., Executive Director of SAEN. "Experiments which subject animals to extreme confinement, electric shocks or severe hunger and thirst are often not counted as causing pain or distress."

    Based on USDA information for unrelieved pain in experimental animals, here is the ranking and the number of animals who were caused pain in labs:

    • 1. NY - 13,174
    • 2. IA - 12,088
    • 3. MD - 7,282
    • 4. MI - 6,065
    • 5. GA - 5,441
    • 6. TX - 3,482
    • 7. UT - 2,988
    • 8. MO - 3,211
    • 9. NJ - 2,857
    • 10. MA - 2,510

    These statistics are based on the recently-posted USDA Animal Welfare Enforcement Report (AWER), the watchdog group said. They reflect the quantity of animals within the state which were used in painful experiments without pain relievers of any kind.

    Tops in other categories:

    • Dogs experiencing pain, NJ - 344;
    • Cats experiencing pain, IA - 190;
    • Monkeys, MD - 228.

    However, according to SAEN, statistics on animals used in painful experimentation are seriously flawed. Research labs that routinely deprive animals of basic necessities of food and/or water, or apply electric shock or severe confinement typically do not consider these projects to cause pain.

    It's all part of a growing trend of deceptive reporting, said SAEN.

    Violations of the Animal Welfare Act (AWA) which regulates how labs conduct and report experiments) by laboratories increased by 18.4 percent in one year, and a whopping 90 percent in the last five years - even though AWER documents that overall animal experimentation decreased by 14 percent in 2006.

    Deceptive laboratories include nationally-known facilities like Harvard, University of California, Stanford, Salk Institute, Stanford, Emory, University of Wisconsin, University of Washington, Vanderbilt, and Johns Hopkins, SAEN said.

    In some instances projects which actually list symptoms like: fever, weight loss, diarrhea, rash, and pain are not considered by researchers to actually cause pain.

    To learn more about the report, visit www.all-creatures.org/saen/.



    "Experiments which subject animals to extreme confinement, electric shocks or severe hunger and thirst are often not counted as causing pain or distress."...

    1 Million Evenflo Infant Car Seats Recalled

    Seats pose 'serious risk' of death or injury


    Evenflo is recalling 1 million car safety seats because of a serious risk of injury or death in a collision, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety administration (NHTSA).

    The models covered by the recall are the 390, 391, 534, and 552 Discovery car seat and travel system manufactured from April 2005 through January 2008.

    Recent tests by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) and Evenflo indicate the car seat could break apart and separate from the base during high impact side collisions.

    Evenflo plans to notify registered owners of the seats and provide a free supplemental dual-hook fastener to ensure that the car seat remains attached to its base in a high impact collision.

    The recall is scheduled to begin in February. Owners should call Evenflo at 1-800-356-2229.

    Consumers can also contact NHTSA at 1-888-327-4236 (TTY 1-800-424-9153) or go to www.safecar.gov.

    1 Million Evenflo Infant Car Seats Recalled...

    Get trending consumer news and recalls

      By entering your email, you agree to sign up for consumer news, tips and giveaways from ConsumerAffairs. Unsubscribe at any time.

      Thanks for subscribing.

      You have successfully subscribed to our newsletter! Enjoy reading our tips and recommendations.

      Judge Extends Microsoft Anti-Trust Oversight

      Judge rules as CEO Ballmer pursues Yahoo! takeover

      Microsoft is expressing confidence its proposed acquisition of Yahoo! Inc. won't run into anti-trust problems. But a federal judge has granted New York States request to continue overseeing Microsofts conduct to ensure fair competition.

      U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly ordered the oversight extension until November 12, 2009 despite the opposition of Microsoft Corp. and the United States Department of Justices Antitrust Division, both of whom opposed further oversight.

      Microsoft, the world's biggest software maker, made an surprise, unsolicited $44.6 billion offer for Yahoo!, raising the stakes in its drive to challenge Google Inc.'s dominance in Internet search services and advertising.

      Microsoft has so far failed to compete with Google in a market that may almost double to $80 billion by 2010. Google has grown faster than Microsoft in every quarter since Google's 2004 initial public offering as its search engine won more users and its contextual advertisements have grown at an unprecedented pace..

      Perhaps even more frightening to Microsoft, Google has been rapidly deploying its Google Apps packages, which include slimmed-down online versions of Microsoft's popular word processing, spreadsheet and presentation programs.

      Google Apps are offered free to consumers and at a nominal $50-per-user charge to businesses, far less than Microsoft's Office desktop programs, which cost several hundred dollars.

      Reaction from Wall Street was guarded. Thomas Radinger, a fund manager at Pioneer Investments in Munich, told Bloomberg News it was "a huge gamble" and said it would take years for Microsoft to recoup its investment.

      "We have been losing money. Our plan here would be to not lose money in the future," Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer said on a conference call with analysts.

      It would be the biggest acquisition ever in the technology sector and, Ballmer's assurances notwithstanding, would be certain to draw the attention of anti-trust regulators in the U.S. and abroad.

      Anti-trust decree

      Indeed, Judge Kollar-Kotelly was extending her oversight of Microsoft even as Ballmer's team was preparing to announce its surprise bid for Yahoo.

      In granting the request by New York, California and nine other states for continued oversight, Kollar-Kotelly emphasized that Microsofts inability to meet its obligations and provide industry players with technology that Microsoft promised in 2001 prevented the courts decree from accomplishing its intended result -- stimulating competition in the market for personal computer operating systems.

      The antitrust consent decree went into effect in November 2001, and significant terms of the five-year decree were set to expire in November 2007. New York and California led the request to extend court oversight, which arises from the 2001 findings that Microsoft committed antitrust violations.

      We are very pleased that the Court recognized how important it is to keep the antitrust decree against Microsoft in place to protect consumers and promote fair competition, said New York Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo. The oversight extension will help ensure that Microsoft fully complies with the requirements of the consent decree and helps stimulate competition in the personal computers marketplace.

      Microsoft recently opposed Google's acquisition of DoubleClick, an online ad firm, claiming it will give Google too much control over the online ad market. The deal is still under review by European regulators.

      Judge Extends Microsoft Anti-Trust Oversight...