Friday, 4 April 2014

Germany investigates large-scale password theft


German authorities are investigating the suspected theft of passwords for some 18 million email addresses.


Interior Ministry spokesman Harald Neymanns said Friday an analysis by Germany's Internet security agency determined that about 3 million of the affected addresses were German. It's not clear where the others were from.


The agency analyzed the hacking at the request of prosecutors in the northern town of Verden, but officials gave no details on who owned the accounts, citing data protection laws, or how they learned of the password theft. The agency says it's working with email providers to determine how to inform people who may be affected.


In a separate case, German authorities said in January that an analysis of hijacked computer networks has turned up about 16 million compromised online accounts.



Gasoline terminal reopens after bad batch problem


ExxonMobil has reopened the racks at its Baton Rouge gasoline terminal after it shut the facility down because of problems involving more than 5 million gallons of unleaded regular fuel.


Two batches of bad fuel produced at ExxonMobil in mid-March caused some Baton Rouge area drivers to experience problems with their intake and valve systems. The terminal re-opened Thursday, eight days after it was closed.


The Advocate reports (http://bit.ly/QKV2XS ) that ExxonMobil investigated and blamed the problems on an "atypical variation" in the fuel, though all of the gasoline produced met regulatory specifications.


The company said it has dispatched claims representatives to Baton Rouge to work with consumers who purchased tainted fuel. Exxon said it has begun reimbursing people with valid claims.



NY out-of-network insurance coverage mandated


Starting next year, patients in New York will be protected from the surprise out-of-network medical bills that have pushed some toward personal bankruptcy.


The measure signed into law this week is scheduled to take effect April 1, 2015. It was proposed by the Cuomo administration, approved by the Legislature with some revisions and backed by consumer groups. It will require doctors and hospitals to more clearly notify patients about who is in their insurance networks and who is not.


"For older patients, the unexpected bills can break their delicate kitchen table economies," said Beth Finkel, AARP New York state director. "This legislation is much needed in New York."


Meanwhile, state insurance officials will write regulations on coverage and disclosures to patients and establish an arbitration process intended to settle related billing disputes between doctors and insurers, leaving patients out of them.


Financial Services Superintendent Ben Lawsky said his department now receives thousands of complaints annually from insured patients stuck with huge bills.


In emergencies, patients will be able to get treated by providers outside their insurer's network and pay only their usual fees. They also will be protected from having to pay big out-of-network bills from doctors they weren't told about.


"Because the bill is going to create a new set of disclosures for people to know if there's going to be an out-of-network provider involved in their treatment and how much that will cost them, our hope is there'll be far fewer of these kinds of disputes to begin with," Lawsky said.


With a dispute resolution similar to Major League Baseball, where the arbitrator will consider a series of factors and choose between one side's proposal or the other, it is an incentive to both doctors and insurers to be reasonable and not propose outlandish numbers, he said.


The law is intended to protect patients who try to stay in networks and won't protect those who, for example, simply choose to visit an expensive doctor outside their network, Lawsky said.


It covers specialists when appropriate doctors aren't available within a network, which he called "a nice incentive" for insurance companies to ensure their networks are adequate. Another provision requires insurers to let patients file claims online and not require traditional mail.


"My hope is it won't be a huge burden on the insurance companies and you won't see premiums rising all that much to cover it," Lawsky said. "We'll see how it all plays out."


Dr. Sam Unterricht, president of the Medical Society of the State of New York, said the final negotiated law is comprehensive, balanced and addresses the myriad issues "relating to out-of-network care and inadequate insurer networks." He said the society will work with the Department of Financial Services to ensure physicians' offices statewide are aware of the law, new disclosure requirements and dispute resolution.


Jeffrey Gold, head of managed care for the Healthcare Association of New York State, said that on balance, it's a big step forward.


"It finds a way to insulate consumers from balance bill liability. It takes hospitals, we hope, out of middle of the crossfire. And it finds, we hope, a reasonable and appropriate method of compensation for highly skilled physicians that's fair," Gold said. "It remains to be seen whether the disclosure methodologies are going to work as well as we hope and if the dispute resolution process really does in fact resolve payment in a fair way."



Larry the Cable Guy cancels New Mexico, Utah shows


Larry the Cable Guy has canceled a couple of upcoming performances in New Mexico and Utah due to an injury on a movie set.


The Hobbs News-Sun reports (http://goo.gl/vPohPP) the blue-collar comedy actor was hurt in a fall Wednesday night while on set filming in Vancouver, British Columbia. He won't be traveling to Hobbs, N.M., for a scheduled show.


Lea County economic development administrator Lyn Edwards says the event center received news Thursday morning that the comedian would not be making the April 5 performance.


Edwards says the comedian, whose real name is Daniel Whitney, was taken to the hospital after his injury but is expected to recover.


He also canceled an upcoming Orem, Utah, show.


Whitney was a member of the Blue Collar Comedy Tour, which also included Bill Engvall, Ron White and Jeff Foxworthy.



CarMax 4Q profit falls 7 pct on accounting change


CarMax Inc. said Friday that its fourth-quarter net income fell 7 percent, as the effects of an accounting correction offset higher vehicle demand. Its revenue rose but missed Wall Street expectations.


Investors were disappointed and CarMax shares fell in premarket trading.


For the quarter ended Feb. 28, CarMax earned $99.2 million, or 44 cents per share, compared with $107.2 million, or 46 cents per share, a year ago.


The Richmond, Va.-based company said it made an accounting correction during the recent quarter that reduced its earnings per share by 8 cents. Excluding that, it would have earned 52 cents per share. That was a penny below Wall Street expectations.


Net sales and operating revenue rose 9 percent to $3.08 billion from $2.83 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet, on average, expected $3.19 billion in revenue.


CarMax said its used vehicle sales at stores open at least a year increased 7 percent, while total used unit sales rose 12 percent.


Income from the company's financing division increased 6 percent to $80.8 million.


For the full year, CarMax earned $492.6 million, or $2.16 per share, up from $434.3 million, or $1.87 per share. Revenue increased to $12.57 billion from $10.96 billion.


CarMax also said Friday that its board approved a $1 billion expansion of the company's stock buyback program. The authorization expires at the end of 2015.


The new authorization is in addition to the $800 million in buybacks previously authorized by the board, of which $282.1 million remained available as of Feb. 28.


Its shares fell 66 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $46.90 in premarket trading shortly before the market opened.



US employers add 192K jobs; rate stays at 6.7 pct.

The Associated Press



U.S. employers added jobs at a solid pace in March in the latest sign that the economy is rebounding from a weak stretch brought on by a harsh winter.


The Labor Department says employers added 192,000 jobs, slightly below February's total of 197,000. Employers also added a combined 37,000 more jobs in February and January than previously estimated.


The unemployment rate was unchanged at 6.7 percent. But a half-million Americans started looking for work last month, and most of them found jobs. The increase in job-seekers is a sign that they are more optimistic about their prospects.


March's job gain nearly matches last year's average monthly total, suggesting that the job market has mostly recovered from the previous months' severe winter weather.



Project closing stretch of I-96 in Detroit area


A major freeway construction project in the Detroit area is going to require motorists to take detours until October.


The Michigan Department of Transportation says a several-mile stretch of Interstate 96 in Livonia and Wayne County's Redford Township is being shut down Saturday, weather permitting.


The $148 million project to rebuild the roadway also includes bridge repair and replacement work. Details are posted on a website for the project.


---


Online:


http://www.96fix.com