How to get free US military weapons—build fake website and DOD will oblige

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Some of the free gear the Defense Department handed over to a fake police agency with a fake website.


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If you’re not a US military or police buff, you probably have never heard of the 1033 Program. It essentially provides a bureaucratic means to transfer excess military grade weapons to local law enforcement agencies. Sure, you may not like local police departments having all types of military gear, such as grenade launchers, helicopters, boats, M14s, M16s, and so on.

And you probably won’t like how the agency seemingly doles out the weapons to anybody. All you have to do is apply, create a fake website, and the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) will oblige. Law enforcement experience is not required. There doesn’t seem to be a requirement that the requesting agency actually be real, either.

That’s according to a new Government Accountability Office report. The government auditing agency created a fake website of a fake police department and applied for the surplus goods. The fake agency was handed $1.2 million in weapons, including night-vision goggles, simulated rifles, and simulated pipe bombs. The simulated rifles and pipe bombs could have been turned into “potentially lethal items if modified with commercially available items,” according to the report. Simulated weapons are used for training purposes.

The GAO even used a fake physical address—a dirt lot—for the fake law enforcement agency. According to Zina Merritt, a GAO director who coordinated the investigation, this sting operation of sorts found that the DLA did little to verify who was requesting the military leftovers and who was actually picking up the gear.

The biggest problem is that DLA’s internal control processes for this program were really broken. We found, for example, that when we applied for the program as a fake organization, no one ever even called us to verify information. They didn’t attempt to come out to the location to visit us. Secondly, when the investigators went to the location, they were actually able to get the items without presenting the proper identification. Third, they were able to get a quantity of items that wasn’t consistent with what we bid for; actually, we got more items. And fourth, we found that [the DLA] just [doesn’t] have a framework in order to do fraud mitigation at all stages of the program. Essentially, that puts any organization at risk of this happening again.

The DOD said in the report that it was taking “actions to address identified weaknesses in its excess controlled property program.”

The program has given upwards of $6 billion dollars’ worth of weapons to more than 8,600 law enforcement agencies since it started in 1991.

Some public attention on the 1033 program followed in the wake of the Ferguson, Missouri, riots over the killing of Michael Brown. In 2015, then-President Barack Obama ordered the blocking of “battlefield” military equipment from being doled out. Obama also demanded more oversight of the program.

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Amazon Dash Wand Review: Alexa, help me spend even more money on Amazon

The Dash Wand is basically a food scanner with Alexa built in. Tell her what you want, or physically scan the item you’re about to run out of, and the wand will instantly add it to your Amazon shopping cart. Plus, it’s basically free.

Testing

Slide the two included AAA batteries into the back of the Dash Wand, visit an online activation page on your phone, and choose the Wi-Fi network you want to join—that’s really all it takes to start shopping with the Dash Wand. You’ll obviously need to have an Amazon account, too.

We used the Dash Wand as our exclusive food procuring device for a week to see if Alexa could make grocery shopping a more pleasant and efficient experience. One thing is certain: She helped us spend more money on Amazon.

Observations

Amazon charges $20 for the Dash Wand, but once you register the scanner you’ll get a $20 credit that instantly shows up on your next purchase. That effectively makes it free as long as you’re an Amazon shopper.

For Amazon, this makes perfect sense. The Dash is yet another way to embed Alexa into people’s homes, even if it’s a less robust version of the personal assistant (more on that below). It also puts a smart grocery scanner in the hands of Amazon shoppers just as the company finalizes its $13.4 billion purchase of Whole Foods. Smart move.

So how does this Alexa-powered food summoner actually perform? For the most part, pretty well. There are two ways to get food into your Amazon cart. You can scan it by pointing the Dash at a barcode, holding down its one button, and then releasing it when you hear a bloop. You can also simply tell Alexa what you want her to add. Of the two, scanning proved to be the most accurate and reliable. The Dash adds produce and other perishables to your AmazonFresh cart (AmazonFresh is an extra $15/month for Prime subscribers, but you get a month free), while other, non-food items are added to your standard check out cart. One nice thing about the Dash is that it’s smart enough to not repeatedly add the same thing to your check out cart if you bungle the scan. It’s not always clear when the Dash has successfully recognized something so this is a nice touch.

If the Dash can’t find an item or recognize a barcode, it lets you know. We found it did have some trouble with rounded or reflective barcodes, like those found on soda cans and bottles, but for the most part everything we scanned, ended up in our cart. One thing to keep in mind: You’ll need to live in an area serviced by AmazonFresh to get produce and other perishables with the Dash Wand. Right now, those areas are limited to Seattle, Northern California, Southern California, New York, and Philadelphia.

Using Alexa to add things was more hit and miss. As far as barking commands, you can be as general or specific as you want to be. You do have the chance to specify brands and varieties (ex: red grapes vs green grapes) in the shopping cart if you just want to be general about it at first (“Alexa, add cereal!”). Still, Alexa doesn’t always get it right. Asking for paper towels added a six pack of Kleenex boxes to our cart for some reason. A can of kidney beans transformed into a can of black beans, too. You can always ask Alexa what’s in the cart to ensure it’s what you think, but we found the discrepancies between requested items and cart items persisted. All of this means you’ll definitely want to visually double check your cart before paying for anything.

Physically, the Dash Wand looks similar to the previous version. It’s about the same length, but comes with a loop at the top (for hanging on an included hook), and also has a magnet inside so that you can stick it directly to your fridge. Given that it runs on two AAA batteries, you won’t get instant, hands-free Alexa, but that’s probably obvious.

As for Alexa, her powers are understandably limited in Dash Wand form. You can still ask her about the news, traffic, and weather, but you cannot use her for voice messages, timers (for some reason), or streaming music (not that you’d want to).

For us, the biggest limitation to the Dash Wand had nothing to do with Alexa or the scanner; It was the lack of variety. Take something like tomatoes. When we checked, you could buy standard beefsteak or vine tomatoes, and that’s it. No Heirloom, no Cherry, no Roma. That’ll change obviously with the Whole Foods acquisition, but for now, it’s annoying. Also annoying? Scanning items you regularly buy only to have Amazon add a ridiculously priced version of that item to your cart. A $5 bottle of dish soap we regularly use showed up in our cart with a price of $18. That’s silly.

Obviously you have to deal with these same issues on Amazon when you’re shopping without a scanner or a voice assistant, but having to double check the price on everything you add to ensure you’re not getting screwed grows tiresome.

All of this made the Dash Wand more suited for basic, non-perishable pantry staples like rice, beans, cereal, and various snacks. It was nice getting to skip our weekly trip the grocery store, but we’ll continue to make it until Amazon fine-tunes its grocery shopping process.

Conclusion

Given the price, it’s hard not to recommend at least giving the Dash Wand a shot if you’re mildly curious. It worked well for us in most cases, but the lack of AmazonFresh choices along with some occasionally outrageous markups means it’ll remain a novelty device until Amazon builds out its grocery offerings.

Details

Price: $20

Dimensions: 5.6 x 1.2 x 0.8 inches

Weight: 1.1 ounces

Batteries: 2 AAA (included)

Grade: 3/5

Official site | Buy it here

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How fentanyl is making deadly drugs even deadlier

It’s relatively new to America’s drug scene, but in the last few years, its victims have included everyone from musician Prince to a 10-year-old boy in Miami. The culprit is fentanyl, a lesser-known—but incredibly lethal—opioid that has become increasingly prevalent in the United States.

The recent death of 10-year-old Alton Banks has fueled concerns about the danger of exposure to fentanyl. Banks went to a local community pool, and when he returned, he began vomiting. By that evening, he was unconscious and pronounced dead at the hospital, with the dangerous mixture of heroin and fentanyl detected in his system. Authorities currently believe that he may have been accidentally exposed to the drugs at the pool or on the walk back to his house. But, although fentanyl can be absorbed through the skin, it’s not the most likely route—William Matthews, a physician assistant and project coordinator at the Harm Reduction Coalition’s Overdose Prevention Program, says he’s never heard of such a case from active users.

“We think most incidental exposures to fentanyl happen through inhaling it by respiratory means,” says Marc LaRochelle, an assistant professor at the Boston University School of Medicine’s Clinical Addiction Research & Education Unit.

What is fentanyl and why is it so dangerous?

As a prescription drug, fentanyl has been around since the 1960s—even its illegal use traces back to the 1990s—but it’s only taken off in the last five years. The number of fentanyl confiscations in 2015 was seven times higher than in 2010, and 9,500 fatal overdoses in 2015 were due to synthetic opioids like fentanyl. The effects are concentrated in certain states, like Ohio, which had over 500 fatal fentanyl overdoses in 2014.

Fentanyl is an opioid, like heroin and some legal prescription painkillers (morphine and oxycodone, for example). Opioid drugs typically act by traveling through the blood to the brain, where they have the rare ability to cross into the brain and bind to specific opioid receptors on the cells. Once they are bound in place, they induce a generally calming effect: numbing pain, slowing breathing, and creating a feeling of euphoria.

Fentanyl differs from other opioids, however, because it is designed to be startlingly quick. A high can disappear in just one hour, Matthews says. If the high is replaced by feelings of withdrawal so quickly, then why do people use it? The incentive for drug users is the initial euphoria, which is much stronger: nearly 100 times more powerful than morphine, and almost 50 times stronger than heroin. That’s the reason that fentanyl is often used in combination with heroin: “Strong rush and long legs,” Matthews says of the mixture, which offers the rapid onset of fentanyl with the long-lasting high of heroin.

But that’s exactly what makes it a particularly risky drug. Fentanyl is effective at doses of just micrograms—unlike heroin, which is used in doses on the milligram-scale (there are 1,000 micrograms in a single milligram)—and just a few micrograms more could lead to an overdose. And unlike heroin, which can take up to an hour to take effect, fentanyl can stop a person’s breathing in seconds, LaRochelle says. According to the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), it only takes about two milligrams of fentanyl to kill a person. That’s the size of a few grains of sand, and it could be the difference between life and death.

Why is it becoming more popular?

Despite its dangers, fentanyl has been on the rise in the United States over the past five years. As a schedule II drug in the United States, prescription fentanyl is heavily regulated and is usually found in hospital settings—it’s not the kind of opioid your dentist sends you home with after your wisdom teeth come out. “If I wrote a prescription for a vial of fentanyl, it would raise eyebrows,” Matthews says. But it’s not impossible to get as a consumer.

Some patients are prescribed patches with low doses of fentanyl for heavy-duty pain relief, but the design of these patches has changed over the years as people figured out how to extract the fentanyl from them. The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) warns that fentanyl patches pose a high risk to kids, who may see them as stickers or Band Aids; a four-year-old died from putting one of his mother’s fentanyl patches on his body. ISMP recommends that adults don’t show their kids how they use the patch to reduce the risk of imitation.

But most of the overdoses you read about come from illegal fentanyl, LaRochelle says. The fentanyl sold illicitly is generally thought to be composed of analogs—similar, but not actually identical to the fentanyl you’d get in a hospital—synthesized in China and brought into the United States by Mexican cartels. Some analogs, like carfentanil, are especially dangerous—that elephant tranquilizer is actually 100 times stronger than fentanyl itself. In some cities, when people purchase illegal drugs, they expect that the product contains at least some fentanyl, Matthews says. It’s relatively cheap and takes effect at very small quantities, making it an appealing additive.

Fentanyl plays a more sinister role as an ingredient in imitation versions of other drugs. A pill might be labeled as oxycontin, but cheaper fentanyl might be the main active ingredient, theoretically offering the same pain-relieving high at a lower cost. If someone swallows multiple pills under the assumption that they’re consuming mostly oxycontin, they’ll actually be ingesting something nearly 100 times stronger.

Is it possible to overdose without intentionally taking the drug?

Fentanyl can be taken by swallowing, snorting, or injecting it, but also by absorption through the skin or accidental inhalation. Banks’ death wouldn’t be the only example of this; last year, the DEA issued a warning for first-responders to take extra precautions when they arrive at the scene of an overdose or a drug raid.

But overdosing on fentanyl through skin contact is quite rare, according to Matthews. “Among the drug-using community, there would be tons of overdoses if it were affecting people through skin contact,” he says. Accidental inhalation is more common and has a higher potential to be lethal, LaRochelle says, adding that inhalation is actually one of the most effective methods of taking fentanyl intentionally—the nose has many blood vessels close to the surface, so the symptoms kick in almost instantly.

So, how much should you worry about accidentally overdosing on fentanyl? You probably aren’t at risk unless you regularly encounter loose opioid drugs in your work or neighborhood. Fentanyl that is kicked up into the air is easily inhaled, LaRochelle says, which might be why first-responders suffer adverse symptoms.

Fortunately, despite fentanyl’s potency, overdoses can still be treated with naloxone, a drug that evicts the opioids from their cozy receptor perches to reverse the overdose. There have been a lot of questions about how effective naloxone is in fentanyl overdoses, but Matthews says it is still very effective, despite public concern about “naloxone resistant fentanyl.” That doesn’t exist, he says—it just might take more naloxone to treat a fentanyl overdose than a traditional heroin overdose.

With the mystery mixtures of ingredients in street drugs, people who purchase them just don’t have enough information to avoid overdoses entirely. But naloxone could keep these overdoses from becoming fatal, Matthews says, in combination with an immediate 911 call. The symptoms of a fentanyl overdose include nausea, vomiting, and slow breathing, but if bystanders do CPR and give the victim rescue breaths, it could keep oxygen flowing to their brain until naloxone becomes available.

“Fentanyl overdoses can develop rapidly,” Matthews says. “People can’t wait and see how it turns out.”

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This Story About Facebook Workers in Menlo Park Is Depressing as Hell

In his recent adventures beyond the valley, Mark Zuckerberg has made a point of hammering on the issue of income inequality, saying the US should “explore ideas like universal basic income to give everyone a cushion to try new things.” But Zuckerberg needs to look no further than his own workers who live just miles from Facebook’s Frank Gehry-designed campus to find striking examples of appalling income disparity.

A new story from The Guardian sheds light on two Facebook contractors who live in a two-car garage with their children. Nicole and her husband Victor both work in Facebook’s cafeterias, but even though they earn well above Facebook’s $15-per-hour minimum, they say it’s not enough to provide for their three children—ages nine, eight, and four.

“He doesn’t have to go around the world. He should learn what’s happening in this city,” Nicole said.

Nicole makes $19.85 an hour, while Victor makes $17.85 an hour, but both say they don’t make enough to even afford the company’s health insurance. “Back in the day, [the wage] would have been a great number,” Victor told the Guardian. “But because of Facebook moving in, everything is so expensive. I have to get payday loans sometimes. We barely make it.”

While $19.85 an hour may sound good in some parts of the US, MIT’s Living Wage Calculator estimates that Nicole and Victor each need to earn about $24 an hour to raise three kids in San Mateo County, where Facebook’s headquarters are located. Ever-expanding tech companies like Facebook have been found to exacerbate income inequality. And in San Mateo, Facebook has been pegged as the cause of spiking housing prices.

On Friday Facebook’s cafeteria contractors voted to unionize “in the hopes of achieving a better standard of living,” the Guardian writes. Facebook reportedly did not try to prevent its workers from joining the union.

A Facebook spokesperson told the Guardian that Facebook is “committed to providing a safe, fair, work environment to everyone who helps Facebook bring the world closer together, including contractors.” Yet, contract workers such as Nicole and Victor don’t have access to the company’s clinics or gyms.

These two contractors might not be representative of everyone working at Facebook, but it’s still pretty jarring to hear that Facebook contractors struggle to buy their children clothes and food—especially after you learn how much Facebook pays its interns.

[The Guardian]

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Your Favorite Childhood Lego Set Has Been Turned Into a Flying RC Toy

Kids and space ships go hand in hand, which is why so many of us fondly remember Lego set #1682, the Space Shuttle Launch, released 27 years ago. Last month Adam Woodworth created a tiny drone version of Lego’s shuttle that could fly indoors, but now he’s created a larger version that can soar through the sky like an RC plane.

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As a follow-up to turning the classic Lego Solo Trainer set into a fully-functional RC plane,…

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Turning a Lego set into a flying toy is no easy feat. Lego’s designers don’t take into account aeronautics when they’re creating a set like this, they just want the space shuttle to look realistic to entice kids. As a result, the final product features rough angles, tiny wings, and unrealistic proportions. Since Woodworth is actually an aerospace engineer, however, he was able to work around those limitations.

Woodworth’s shuttle is five times as large as Lego’s and its made from 9-millimeter-thick foam sheets instead of hundreds of plastic bricks. The flying shuttle’s motors were mounted to the moving elevons on its wings, which adds to its maneuverability in the air, but makes it especially sensitive to pilot error. Luckily, the lack of actual rocket engines means a crash isn’t going to result in a catastrophic fireball.

[YouTube]

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China Selling ‘Anti-Pervert’ Personal Flamethrowers

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Several online retailers in China are currently selling ‘anti-pervert’ personal flamethrowers. The devices, which range in price from $13 to $40, can shoot flames as far as 20 feet, reaching temperatures in excess of 2,000° Fahrenheit. Obviously, I am 100% for melting gropers’ hands off.

One vendor told the Beijing Youth Daily, as reported by the Telegraph, that the products “can leave a permanent scar, but are a legal, non-lethal tool,” adding that they’re “not a weapon.” But police seem to disagree, saying that they’re very much against the law and that it’s also “technically illegal” to send the flame-throwers to customers through the postal service.

While it’s hard to be concerned for sexual harassers, there are other safety problems to be considered. Many are considering the possibility of the flame-throwers being switched on accidentally inside the carrier’s handbags, a terrifying thought.

It sucks we live in a world where women have to resort to personal flamethrowers to keep perverts at bay. I’m genuinely surprised God hasn’t pushed the big red DO-OVER button yet. What’s he waiting for? I’d push it if I had the chance. How hard do think it would be to sneak into heaven anyways? I’d just have to jump the pearly gates when Saint Peter isn’t paying attention, right? “Not so fast.” The devil! “You belong to me.” Dammit, don’t you have some gropers you should be attending to?

Keep going for a shot of an ad for a personal flamethrower.

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Thanks to Mark V, who agrees fire fixes everything.

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