Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Consumers Union: New federal principles for student loan servicing will help clean up system

Consumers Union: New federal principles for student loan servicing will help clean up system

Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to explore potential industry-wide rules to increase borrower protections

WASHINGTON, D.C.  ̶  In response to the escalating crisis of student loan debt and defaults, the federal government today issued a set of principles to strengthen consumer protections for student borrowers.

The principles aim to clean up the notoriously murky system of student loan servicing by promoting more accountability, accuracy, consistency, and transparency among the servicers who manage student accounts. This framework was issued by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the Treasury Department, and Department of Education.  The CFPB said it intends to explore potential industry-wide rules to increase borrower protections.

Consumers Union, the advocacy arm of Consumer Reports, said this is encouraging news as more than 41 million Americans now owe more than $1.2 trillion in student debt.  CU has worked closely with federal regulators on ways to reform student loan servicing.  CU provided the CFPB with more than 500 personal stories from consumers who were harmed by the failures of the system.

Suzanne Martindale, staff attorney for Consumers Union, said, “The process for education loan servicing today is a mess.  Your servicer is supposed to manage your account and help you avoid default.  Too often, a servicer provides the student with information that isn’t accurate or consistent, and that can drive students deeper into debt.  Students and families deserve better treatment from their loan servicers, and they truly need change now.”

Martindale added, “We applaud the regulators for taking students’ complaints seriously.  The CFPB is exploring new rules of the road for all education loan servicers, which would be a big step in the right direction.  Holding student loan servicers to a higher standard is long overdue.”

The CFPB today issued a new report on student loan servicing that outlines what the bureau called “widespread servicing failures reported by both federal and private student loan borrowers.” The report analyzes recent input and recommendations from a variety of stakeholders, including Consumers Union. This past year, Consumers Union filed formal comments with the CFPB in support of comprehensive reforms.

__________

Consumers Union is the public policy and advocacy division of Consumer Reports.  Consumers Union works for health reform, food and product safety, financial reform, and other consumer issues in Washington, D.C., the states, and in the marketplace. Consumer Reports is the world’s largest independent product-testing organization.  Using its more than 50 labs, auto test center, and survey research center, the nonprofit rates thousands of products and services annually.  Founded in 1936, Consumer Reports has over 8 million subscribers to its magazine, website, and other publications. 

Media Contacts:
David Butler, Consumers Union, 202.462.6262 or dbulter@consumer.org
Kara Kelber, Consumers Union, 202.462.6262 or kkelber@consumer.org

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New TiVo Bolt Seems Like a Binge-Watcher's Dream

New TiVo Bolt Seems Like a Binge-Watcher’s Dream

Love watching TV shows without commercials? Then you might be interested in the new TiVo Bolt, an all-in-one DVR with a mode that lets you zip through advertisements with the press of a single button.

In fact, the new player seems to be all about speed. Not only does it rocket you through commercials—one at a time or an entire block—using SkipMode, it also has an innovative QuickMode, which the company claims wisks you through recorded shows up to 30 percent faster without causing any audio sync issues. Imagine watching a replay of the Academy Awards, for example, in less than three hours—all without missing a word.

Like other TiVo models, the distinctively angled Bolt box offers multiple sources of content—cable, video on demand, over-the air (via an antenna) broadcasts, and streaming—with universal search capability. It can also record up to four shows at once. And its HDMI 2.0 output makes this the first TiVo to support 4K video content.

The SkipMode ad feature frees you from repeatedly hitting a 30-second skip button or futilely trying to pull your finger off the fast-forward button precisely at commercial’s end. For now, though, it’s somewhat limited. It only works with recorded programs from specific providers—TiVo says that includes the top 20 most-watched networks—and (unlike QuickMode) it’s not offered at all on sports programs. To see if a show is skip-enabled, look in your My Shows folder, where titles will be listed with skip icons beside them.

The TiVo Bolt will start appearing in stores October 4th. It’s already available online at TiVo, Amazon, and Best Buy. It comes in two flavors: The 500GB hard drive model costs $300 and the 1TB version is priced at $400. Both include one year of TiVo service, which currently costs $150.

TiVo says it will offer a few updates this fall, including the ability to create a personalized “what to watch” screen based on your hobbies and interests, and a social sharing feature that provides links so your friends can watch the same show as you.

The TiVo Bolt replaces the basic TiVo Roamio model in the company’s lineup, but the other Roamio models will still be offered.

The pursuit of commercial-free TV is nothing new, of course. More than two decades ago a company called Arista introduced a product called Commercial Brake that let you skip past ads on your VCR, and more recently the AutoHop feature on Dish’s Hopper DVR offered auto ad-skipping on some recorded shows. We can’t say for sure if this new one is a step forward until we’ve actually tested the TiVo Bolt.

In comparison to the Roamio DVRs, however, the Bolt has a faster processor, improved Wi-Fi (it supports 802.11AC), and more memory, so we imagine it will operate more quickly. If you decide to get a TiVo Bolt, let us know what you think of it, and how well the commercial skip feature works.

Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers on this website. Copyright © 2006-2015 Consumers Union of U.S.

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New Credit Cards With EMV Chip Aim to Reduce Fraud

New Credit Cards With EMV Chip Aim to Reduce Fraud

It’s the beginning of the end for swipe-and-sign card payments. 

Over the past year, many credit card issuers have updated their customers’ magnetic-stripe-only card with those that have both the stripe and what’s known as an EMV chip. (EMV stands for the three companies that came up with the standard: Europay, MasterCard, and Visa.) Now, starting in October, the liability for fraudulent credit card transactions will shift from the credit card issuer to whichever party—the credit card issuer or the merchant—is using the least secure technology.

For consumers, the rollout will be gradual as merchants begin using new card readers. Instead of swiping your card through a card reader at the cashier (so it can read the data on the card’s magnetic stripe), you’ll insert it until the transaction is complete.

The card reader will then communicate with the chip inside your card using cryptographic algorithms to authenticate the card. The benefit is that because the data is housed on the chip, it will be much harder for thieves to replicate than it was when it was stored on the magnetic stripe.

For years, the U.S. had been behind most other nations in card-payment technology. Most other countries have long used chip-and-pin technology, requiring the user to insert the credit card into a reader, and then enter a personal Identification number. (Indeed, it’s a process that’s long frustrated some Americans when traveling abroad). 

Meanwhile, Americans cardholders have still been using a decades-old magnetic-stripe-card technology to make credit and debit purchases. The data stored on these magnetic stripes are unencrypted, easily counterfeited by skimming devices, and have cost credit card issuers—who until now usually bore the cost of the fraudulent transactions—billions of dollars annually.

The expectation is that the new chip will help reduce fraud. But when there is fraud, it may be the merchant that is liable since many haven’t yet upgraded their card-reading machines to read the new EMV chips.

One thing to realize, though, is that just because your card has an embedded EMV chip doesn’t mean its necessarily using true chip-and-pin technology. Many U.S. issued credit cards will instead use what is known as “chip-and signature” technology. So even though you will dip your EMV-ready card into a new card reader, you’ll still need to sign for purchases, instead of entering a PIN—a less secure process.

Unfortunately, even true chip-and-pin transactions can’t guard against other types of credit card fraud. According to one industry forecast, online transaction fraud is expected to double over the next three years

Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers on this website. Copyright © 2006-2015 Consumers Union of U.S.

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Financial Elder Abuse Costs $3 Billion a Year. Or Is It $36 Billion?

Financial Elder Abuse Costs $3 Billion a Year. Or Is It $36 Billion?

Financial elder abuse—broadly defined as the illegal or improper use of the funds, property, or assets of people 60 and older by family, friends, neighbors, and strangers—costs older people and their families billions of dollars. But how many billions? That’s subject to debate.

When Consumer Reports recently reported on elder financial fraud, Lies, Secrets, and Scams: How to Prevent Elder Abuse, we used the number $3 billion. It comes from a study published in 2011 by the MetLife Mature Market Institute, in collaboration with the National Committee for the Prevention of Elder Abuse and the Center for Geronotology at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. We rounded up from that study’s estimate of $2.9 billion annually (see page 2 of the download).

The MetLife study’s methodology involved reviewing news articles mentioning elder financial abuse committed by strangers; family, friends, and neighbors; and the business sector, as well as Medicaid and Medicare fraud. 

We chose that figure because a number of experts we interviewed thought it was a credible figure. But they—and an author of the study—admitted to us when we first reported it a couple of years ago that the figure probably represents the tip of the iceberg. The figure is probably far larger than that.

Other, Much Higher Estimates

At the other end of the scale, TrueLink, a company that provides account-monitoring software for elders and their families, has projected that financial elder abuse costs families more than $36 billion a year, 12 times the MetLife estimate. TrueLink arrived at its estimate by surveying family caregivers of older people. TrueLink CEO Kai Stinchcombe says that abuse committed by strangers—the main topic of our article—is more than $29 billion.

The TrueLink study used a broad definition of financial elder abuse. It included exploitation (about $17 billion), in which fraudsters operate openly, claiming victims’ consent; examples are quack weight loss or dietary products, work-from-home schemes, hidden shipping and handling or subscriptions, and misleading financial advice. It also included a loss of $12.76 billion from criminal fraud (anonymous con artists and identity thieves), and $6.67 billion from abuse by caregivers: family members, and others exploiting a trusting relationship.

These figures were compelling, especially given that TrueLink consulted experts from the respected Financial Fraud Research Center at the Stanford Center on Longevity. When I spoke with Martha Deevy, director of the center’s financial security division, however, she noted that she and her colleagues didn’t write the survey. “We gave them input regarding how to frame the questions,” she said. “We believe the challenge with the TrueLink numbers was the way they extrapolated and generalized across the population and think that should have been questioned in a peer-reviewed journal.”

On the other hand, Deevy noted, the MetLife results may have been too conservative. “I think they leaned on the pieces of evidence they could authentically count,” she said. “But people misrepresent how much they lost. A large percentage of victims are not reporting at all.”

A problem with both estimates, Deevy says, is that there’s no standardized way to define fraud types. She and her colleagues are working on a taxonomy that she hopes will be used by all professionals who deal in the field, including researchers; law enforcement; consumer protection advocates; and adult protective services workers.

More on Financial Elder Abuse

Combine the dilemma of defining financial elder abuse with widely divergent estimates of incidence, and you’ve got a crime that’s difficult to put one’s statistical hands around. The Investor Protection Trust says the likelihood that a senior has been financially victimized is 1 in 5. Another recent estimate, published last year in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, puts the figure at 4.7 percent of seniors, about 1 in 20. Any way you look at it, that’s a lot of older people who have or will fall victim of financial fraud.

Another reason for the discrepancy in estimates is the myriad sources of data. There are many different places where seniors and their caregivers can report fraud, including AARP’s Fraud Watch Network (877-908-3360); the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s Office of Financial Protection for Older Americans; FTC; Senate Special Committee on Aging, local police, and local Adult Protective Services offices through the National Center on Elder Abuse. No central database on elder fraud has yet compiled and crunched all the numbers.

And of course, many people don’t report the crime at all. The FTC says 1 in 24 financial elder abuse crimes ever get reported, while a study done in New York State in 2011 said it’s 1 in 44. (See, there’s even a discrepancy there!)

A Big, Amorphous Number

When we finally had to pin down a number for our headline, we ended up going with the more-conservative figure from MetLife, rounding up to $3 billion. Though the article focuses on financial exploitation at the hands of strangers, the headline encompasses abuse by all types of con artists, including family members and people the senior knows. When discussing stranger-initiated abuse, we couldn’t arrive at a figure that made sense to us. Experts I consulted through a listserve used by professionals in the elder-abuse prevention and treatment community couldn’t agree on a figure themselves. However, several professionals I interviewed said they were comfortable with saying it was in the “billions.”

The point of this difficult exercise is that no really one knows how big the problem is. But clearly, it’s huge. And until seniors feel comfortable reporting their victimization—and there’s a standard way to define it and a central place to report it—we’ll never know the total impact. Here’s hoping that day comes, so the individuals working to help victims and prevent the crime can get the attention and resources they deserve.

Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers on this website. Copyright © 2006-2015 Consumers Union of U.S.

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Prevent a Health Crisis From Becoming a Financial Catastrophe

Prevent a Health Crisis From Becoming a Financial Catastrophe

What if an accident or illness leaves you unable to manage your financial affairs or tell your doctors how you’d like to be treated? Three documents can inform your spouse, partner, or trusted friend of your preferences in a health crisis and give them the power to act on your behalf.

Think of a financial power of attorney, health care proxy, and living will as an “Open, sesame!” that gets things done when you can’t do them yourself in a health crisis. Without them, even your nearest and dearest may be shut out of decision-making conversations with doctors or lack the means to pay the mortgage without going through time-consuming and stressful court proceedings. With those documents, they can make sure your finances stay healthy as you recover.

The good news is that the process is simple and inexpensive. In general, all you need to do is properly complete a fill-in-the-blanks form that’s a few pages long and sign it in front of a notary public. Because some states have their own health care proxy forms, it’s best to Google the name of your state and “health care proxy” to download the proper form. Some banks and brokerage companies also have proprietary forms; in that case, you may need to prepare both your state’s official form and the form provided by your financial institution. Forms can be downloaded for free; Nolo’s award-winning WillMaker Plus software costs $54.99 but also includes all advance directive and estate planning forms.

There’s one catch, though, and it’s key: You have to sign and officially stamp these documents before a health crisis happens. Once a health crisis occurs, it’s too late. 

Financial Power of Attorney: Paying the Bills

The last thing you want in a healthcare crisis is to get better and find that your finances are a mess. A financial power of attorney gives the person you designate—called “your agent”—the legal authority to tap your assets to take care of such important money management tasks as: paying your bills and mortgage, operating your small business; filing your taxes; collecting your Social Security benefits; handling transactions with your bank and brokerage. You can give your agent as much or as little power as you wish.

A financial power of attorney can be drafted so that it goes into effect as soon as you sign it. Many couples have an active financial power of attorney for each other in case something happens to one of them. If that’s your choice, be sure to specify that you want the power of attorney to be “durable,” otherwise the authority will automatically end if you become incapacitated—exactly when your spouse needs it.

You can also specify that you want to maintain control over your affairs until a doctor certifies that you have become incapacitated. This “springing” durable power of attorney—so-called because it springs into effect only under certain circumstances—can be reassuring if you prefer to be completely in charge. 

Health Care Proxy: Acting on Your Wishes

With the healthcare industry’s emphasis on patient privacy, it is critical to appoint a health care proxy. Also known as a durable power of attorney for health care or, less commonly, a medical power of attorney, this directive appoints a proxy to oversee your medical care and make health care decisions for you if you are too ill or injured to speak for yourself.

A health care proxy affects your finances by permitting or declining what can be very costly forms of treatment. She can also make choices— such as where you do rehab—that can help you achieve a full recovery.

“It’s critical to have a health care proxy, even for married couples,” advises Mantell, because the HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) Privacy Rule prevents medical professionals from sharing information or allowing you to implement a loved one’s wishes without that piece of paper. The proxy also gives someone who’s not your spouse access to the information they need to make medical decisions on your behalf. “It just makes things easier,” Mantell says.

Living Will: Explaining What You Want

To make your wishes clear, you need a third legal document: a health care directive, also called an advance directive or “living will.” This is where you articulate how far you want the doctors to go in preserving or prolonging your life. For example, do you want cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) or other extraordinary measures? Do you want to be intubated to assist in breathing or nutrition? Or would you prefer only palliative care to decrease pain and suffering?

The proxy and the living will depend on each other. “The health care proxy gives you access to information but it doesn’t tell you what your loved one wants to happen. And the health care directive doesn’t do any good unless you have the proxy,” notes Mantell.

“It’s hard to talk about these topics but do it anyway,” Mantell says. “You can’t figure this stuff out when you’re in the middle of an emergency. That’s too late.” 

Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers on this website. Copyright © 2006-2015 Consumers Union of U.S.

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Nexus 5X and 6P Smartphones Are Unlocked and Loaded

Nexus 5X and 6P Smartphones Are Unlocked and Loaded

Google today revealed two Nexus smartphones, the 5X made by LG and the 6P made by Huawei, which showcase the new Android 6.0 OS “Marshmallow” via some intriguing new hardware. The new phones will have the newest USB Type-C connectors, a highly anticipated cable for computing devices that has no wrong-side up, making for quick connections and the fastest potential throughput (10Gbps) for mobile devices and accessories.

These smartphones also boast fingerprint sensors on the back that can authorize transactions on Android Pay, Google’s latest NFC-based mobile-payment scheme. Google says this sensor, which it calls Imprint, can recognize fingerprints in just 0.6 seconds. What’s more, Google says, the sensor will get even faster as it becomes familiar with the way you touch it.

The large, 12.3-megapixel sensors in the new phones are supposed to deliver strong low-light performance. The 5X has a 5-megapixel front-facing camera, while the one on the 6P is 8 megapixels. A double tap of the home button launches the camera even when the screen is dark.   

These phones support Marshmallow’s No Doze, which keeps the phones in standby mode using 30 percent less energy. Part of the way it works is by only maintaining the apps you use most on standby. The rest are shut down until you begin engaging the phone. Both phones, available exclusively on Google’s Play store in late October, will be sold unlocked and support the networks of most U.S. carriers.  The LG-made Nexus 5X, which starts at $379, has 5.2-inch (423ppi) display and a plastic casing. The Huawei-made Nexus 6P, which starts at $499, is 7.3mm thick and has an “aircraft-grade” aluminum case and a 5.7-inch display. Preorders begin today.

Tasty Marshmallow Features

Here are some notable features of Marshmallow, which will become available to many late-model Android phones beginning today.

App drawer. Apps in the app drawer are now stacked vertically, from A to Z, as they have been in the App manager. Instead of flipping across screens to access them, you’ll just have to scroll down one page. Typing the first few letters of the app should take you right to the app you want.

Frequently accessed apps. Android will not only show apps by how frequently you use them, but will also consider other factors, such as the time of day when you typically access them.

Google on Tap. Essentially, these are searches you can perform that consider the context of what you’re doing. For instance, if a friend sends you a text message from the Mets game, you can easily find out when the Mets score, their current league standing, or when they’ll play again—without leaving the message. You launch the feature by long-pressing the home button.

Sophisticated voice commands. Launching apps with your voice isn’t new, but now you’ll be able to get more specific about what you want the app to do. For instance, if you launch the National Public Radio app, the app will ask you which programs you’d like to listen to.        

We’ll have more on these phones when we get them in our labs.

Consumer Reports has no relationship with any advertisers on this website. Copyright © 2006-2015 Consumers Union of U.S.

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