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Ho ho ho! Merry ripoff! Take some precautions in a season of fraud
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The wait times to customer service are unusually long as you call to report a charge you never made. That's because this is a season of both openhearted giving and deceit. - photo by Lois M. Collins
I'm a generous soul so, for the second time at Christmas, I ordered an expensive camera online and arranged for it to be picked up at a local department store in Florida, despite the fact that I don't know anyone in the town to which I sent it.

Then, apparently still on a holiday-giving high, I also canceled my daughter's cellphone purchase contract (Sorry, Aly!), then shipped a brand-new iPhone 7 to a town I didn't know existed in New Jersey.

Or at least that's what my credit-card and cellphone bills would like people to think about me: Golly, she's a giver!

This season of generosity and faith and, for the most part, kindness hands-down my favorite time of year, despite snow I don't love and cold that leaves me feeling brittle also brings out predators on a grand scale.

You can tell how bad it is by the wait times as you try to reach customer service to dispute a charge. I was on hold with my cellphone carrier for 56 minutes, then spent another 15 as the company representative tried to untangle why a routine monthly bill I'd paid two days before suddenly had a balance of more than $400, due instantly. That charge, it turned out, was the cost to get out of the contract I'd supposedly canceled. Then we had to add a few minutes to text and verify my daughter hadn't ordered a new phone without my permission, something I knew but of which he had to be convinced before he gave me the number for the fraud department.

That led to another phone call and an even longer wait because, as an especially competent young man who answered told me, fraud is popping from mid-November to mid-January. It lingers into the post-holiday season while scammers try to get in one last rip-off, hoping folks won't notice it amid after-holiday bills.

Although the cellphone company will work some digital magic so the new iPhone it shipped out to an unauthorized stranger will not activate, there's probably yet another, not-yet-identified victim downstream who hasn't yet been ripped off. It's coming.

The fraud guy said it's likely the person who managed to order the phone online using my daughter's phone number never mind that I'm the only one with the code to order on the account or make changes like dropping the contract will make money despite my efforts to thwart it. The phone will probably be sold online to someone who's looking for a bargain. It will be offered new in its original packaging at a price that's not crazy but is a good deal. The phone, of course, will be worthless. It wasn't paid for and the cellphone company can prevent it from making calls. That thus adds a third victim to the deal that started with me and then cheated the cellphone carrier out of the money for the phone once I got out from under the charge. And on it goes.

These are not victimless crimes and people who figure that companies like my cellphone carrier are big enough to absorb the cost are wrong. We all pay more for all kinds of service because of fraud. It steals our money, our merchandise and our time.

In the early days of online fraud, it seemed to me that big credit-card companies, phone carriers and others were unwittingly complicit, because it was easier to write off the cost than to pursue it. I think it's ballooned past that point.

Until the punishment is severe enough to deter these thieves, all we can do is be careful.
Its toxic: New study says blue light from tech devices can speed up blindness
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A new study from the University of Toledo found that blue light from digital devices can transform molecules in your eyes retina into cell killers. - photo by Herb Scribner
It turns out checking Twitter or Facebook before bed is bad for your health.

A new study from the University of Toledo found that blue light from digital devices can transform molecules in your eyes retina into cell killers.

That process can lead to age-related macular degeneration, which is a leading cause of blindness in the United States, according to the researchs extract.

Blue light is a common issue for many modern Americans. Blue light is emitted from screens, most notably at night, causing sleep loss, eye strain and a number of other issues.

Dr. Ajith Karunarathne, assistant professor in the UT Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, said our constant exposure to blue light cant be blocked by the lens or cornea.

"It's no secret that blue light harms our vision by damaging the eye's retina. Our experiments explain how this happens, and we hope this leads to therapies that slow macular degeneration, such as a new kind of eye drop, he said.

Macular degeneration is an incurable eye disease that often affects those in their 50s or 60s. It occurs after the death of photoreceptor cells in the retina. Those cells need retinal to sense light and help signal the brain.

The research team found blue light exposure created poisonous chemical molecules that killed photoreceptor cells

"It's toxic. If you shine blue light on retinal, the retinal kills photoreceptor cells as the signaling molecule on the membrane dissolves," said Kasun Ratnayake, a Ph.D. student researcher working in Karunarathne's cellular photo chemistry group. "Photoreceptor cells do not regenerate in the eye. When they're dead, they're dead for good."

However, the researchers found a molecule called alpha-tocopherol, which comes from Vitamin E, can help prevent cell death, according to Futurism.

The researchers plan to review how light from TVs, cellphones and tablet screens affect the eyes as well.

"If you look at the amount of light coming out of your cellphone, it's not great but it seems tolerable," said Dr. John Payton, visiting assistant professor in the UT Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry. "Some cellphone companies are adding blue-light filters to the screens, and I think that is a good idea."

Indeed, Apple released a Night Shift mode two years ago to help quell blue lights strain on the eyes, according to The Verge. The screen will dim into a warmer, orange light that will cause less stress on the eyes.