10/29/2010 (2:12 am)

Health reform’s side effect: Scams

Filed under: term |

Fraud experts say health insurance scams are on the rise as criminals quickly exploit consumers’ confusion about how the new health care law changes their insurance coverage.

Most of the schemes are poorly constructed, using the pretext of reform. "So far there’s no major criminal organization behind them," said James Quiggle, spokesman for non-profit group Coalition Against Insurance Fraud.

But Quiggle is concerned that as more of the provisions mandated by the new law are phased in over the next four years, these scams "could grow to become an all-encompassing tsunami."

The government has taken note. Earlier this year, Health and Human Services (HHS) Secretary Kathleen Sebelius warned state insurance commissioners about new schemes to sell bogus insurance policies.

Last week, HHS announced grants to states to strengthen ongoing efforts to protect consumers from some of the worst insurance industry practices.

Consumers beware: Sally Hurme, who handles consumer fraud issues at AARP, said seniors are especially vulnerable to these new scams. "We’re making a concerted effort to get the word out to our 40 million members," she said.

But seniors aren’t the only targets. People who buy insurance out of pocket — unemployed individuals, underinsured individuals, as well as individuals who do not get dependent coverage through their work — are also vulnerable, said Lou Saccocio, head of the National Health-Care Anti-Fraud Association, whose members include insurers, law enforcement and regulatory agencies.

Saccocio, citing anecdotal information, said the most common scams involve selling fake health plans, fraudulent medical discount plans and Medicare rebate checks scams.

Here’s what to watch out for:

Phantom government coverage: Scammers, claiming they represent the government, go door-to-door selling fake policies. "These crooks tell people without insurance that the law requires them to buy a policy immediately," said Quiggle. "They also say there’s a limited enrollment period to sign up."

Both claims are false. There is no enrollment period in the individual market. And the law gives uninsured individuals until 2014 to buy coverage before having to pay a penalty.

Fraudulent discount plans: Crooks are taking advantage of heightened concerns about health insurance costs to sell people "discount plans" disguised as insurance plans, said Kim Holland, Oklahoma’s insurance commissioner.

Holland said these medical discount plans are not insurance policies. These plans only provide discounts on some medical services. The Federal Trade Commission said 24 states have filed 54 lawsuits this year to stop this deceptive practice.

"Some states have outlawed these plans," said Holland.

$250 Medicare rebate scam: For beneficiaries who’ve fallen into the prescription-drug coverage gap known as the "doughnut hole," the law created a program this year where the government mails them a $250 check to cover the gap.

Quiggle said scammers are exploiting this opportunity by calling up seniors, asking for their Social Security and Medicare beneficiary numbers, and promising to expedite the checks.

The crooks will then use the information to bill Medicare for false services.

AARP’s Hurme said the group has also become aware of a Medicare card scam. "Scammers are telling seniors that because of the changes in the law, they will have to send them a new card," she said. And they ask for their personal information.

"This is blatant identity theft," Hume added.

Peter Ashkenaz, spokesman for the Center for Medicare & Medicare Services, said the agency was aware of anecdotal reports of such scams.

"We have aggressive efforts in place to educate beneficiaries that they do not need to do anything to get the $250 rebate checks," he said.

How to protect yourself

As key provisions of the health care law continue to be phased in, scammers will try to take advantage of consumers who aren’t aware of the new changes.

Coming up in January, Medicare beneficiaries will not have to pay co-pays on preventive services. Ashkenaz said scammers might try to exploit that change.

Experts stress the need for consumers to educate themselves about the new law. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners also offered these tips on how to avoid being a victim.

  • Beware of fax, email, telephone poll solicitations: Be especially suspicious of solicitations that are blasted to consumers through these means.
  • Check if insurer is legit: Don’t give out any personal information such as your Social Security numbers or bank information until you verify with your state insurance department that the insurer and agent are licensed to write insurance in your state.
  • Keep paperwork: Ask for copies of all of the paperwork you sign. Keep a copy of the payment receipt or check for your initial premium payment.
  • 30-day deadline: Call the insurer if you don’t receive a copy of your insurance policy outlining your coverage within 30 days of your purchase.
  • Medicare beneficiaries: If you are approached to buy any kind of medical insurance package, do not give any personal information to anyone you don’t know.

Additionally, Hurme said the AARP launched a major campaign called "Fight Health care Fraud" in September to educate seniors.

"Seniors can get information on our website," she said. "We’re also training volunteers to go to senior centers in various states to educate the community." 

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10/24/2010 (1:34 am)

CPI: Inflation rate stays uncomfortably low

Filed under: Uncategorized |

Consumer prices are up slightly over last year driven by climbing food and energy costs, but still lower than policymakers would like.

The Consumer Price Index, a key measure of inflation, rose 1.1% over the last 12 months ending in September, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said Friday, unchanged from the previous month. Any number above zero means prices are rising, but a rate around 1% is considered slow growth.

Shortly ahead of the report, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke gave a speech on the "low inflation environment," saying inflation trends will likely "remain subdued for some time."

"Inflation is running at rates that are too low" Bernanke warned. "The risk of deflation is higher than desirable."

The possibility of rising inflation had also been a concern amid speculation of further easing of U.S. monetary policy. But the low CPI reading dissuaded some of those fears, lending more support to predictions that the Fed will buy more long-term Treasurys in November, said Mark Vitner, senior economist with Wells Fargo.

"There really isn’t a whole lot of reason to worry about inflation right now, and that gives the Fed a free hand to do whatever they need to do," Vitner said.

The CPI report was also closely watched by policymakers this month, because the government used the data to determine Social Security beneficiaries will not get a cost of living increase in 2011.

Prices remain sluggish

The so-called core CPI, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, rose at a 0.8% annual rate in September, down slightly from 0.9% in August.

Food prices posted their largest increase since October 2008, rising 1.4% during the year. Energy prices rose 3.8%.

For September, CPI rose just 0.1% month over month, lower than expectations. Prices were expected to have increased 0.2% in September, after climbing 0.3% the previous month, according to consensus estimates from Briefing.com.

Core CPI for the month was flat. Economists had expected it to have inched up 0.1%, after rising the same amount in August.  

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10/17/2010 (11:18 pm)

CVS to pay $77.6 million in meth case

Filed under: term |

CVS Pharmacy Inc. has agreed to pay $77.6 million in fines and returned profits in a case alleging improper control in the sale of an ingredient used to make methamphetamine, federal prosecutors said Thursday.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles said CVS, the largest operator of retail pharmacies, repeatedly failed to properly monitor sales of pseudophedrine, which is contained in some cold medicines and is also used to make meth.

Through failing to monitor these transactions, the pharmacy helped methamphetamine traffickers in Southern California and the area around Las Vegas to get their hands on "large amounts" of pseudophedrine, the prosecutors said in a statement - adding that the sales fueled a rise in methamphetamine production in California.

As part of the pharmacy’s agreement with prosecutors, CVS will pay a $75 million fine, the largest civil penalty ever paid under the Controlled Substances Act, the prosecutors said. They also said CVS will forfeit $2.6 million in profits received from illegal transactions.

"This case shows what happens when companies fail to follow their ethical and legal responsibilities," said U.S. Attorney André Birotte Jr. "CVS knew it had a duty to prevent methamphetamine trafficking, but it failed to take steps to control the sale of a regulated drug used by methamphetamine cooks as an essential ingredient for their poisonous stew."

Because CVS has admitted to the charges and has agreed to enter a compliance agreement with the government, criminal charges against the pharmacy will not be pursued, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

CVS said it will continue to cooperate with federal prosecutors on the case.

"While this lapse occurred in 2007 and 2008 and has been addressed, it was an unacceptable breach of the company’s policies and was totally inconsistent with our values," CVS Caremark CEO Thomas Ryan said in a prepared statement. "CVS/pharmacy is unwavering in its support of the measures taken by the federal government and the states to prevent drug abuse."

Shares of CVS (CVS, Fortune 500) closed 1.2% lower Thursday.  

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10/14/2010 (1:39 pm)

Integrated Pharmaceutical Packaging plans Glasgow expansion

Filed under: business |

Integrated Pharmaceutical Packaging, which provides packaging products to the pharmaceutical industry, will expand its Glasgow, Ky., operations and add about 100 jobs as a result of a planned expansion of one of its clients, Amneal Pharmaceuticals.

In May, Amneal, a maker of generic prescription drugs, announced a $6.6 million expansion in Glasgow that was expected to lead to the creation of nearly 50 jobs.

Integrated Pharmaceutical Packaging will invest more than $5.1 million to move into a 106,000-square-foot facility, where it will create dose-sized packaging for customers, according to a news release from Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear’s office.

Integrated Pharmaceutical Packaging received preliminary approval from the Kentucky Economic Development Finance Authority for up to $1.5 million in tax incentives over a 10-year period through the Kentucky Business Investment Program.

The performance-based incentives can be earned through corporate income tax credits and wage assessments.

The city of Glasgow and Barren County also received a $1.1 million Community Development Block Grant, which will be used to purchase production equipment that will be leased to Integrated Pharmaceutical Packaging through a capitalized lease program, according to the release.

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10/09/2010 (8:45 pm)

Google’s next giant revenue stream

Filed under: term |

Google has made its famous search algorithm into a $20 billion business, but for years, investors have asked, "What’s next?"

Google finally has an answer: Android.

The company’s numbers are still impressive — analysts expect revenue to increase about 15% a year for the foreseeable future — but they’re a long way off from the heady days when Google was growing at a lightning-fast 40% each year. Google (GOOG, Fortune 500)’s stock price has tumbled 15% this year amid worries that the company is on its way to becoming a big, bad blue-chip stock like IBM (IBM, Fortune 500).

Despite years of developing and acquiring a dizzying array of social, productivity, communication and media applications, Google hadn’t hit on any viable sales stream beyond Web search. That’s become an increasingly important problem, with Facebook breathing down Google’s neck for the lead in referrals to other websites — one of the key statistics that advertisers look to when deciding which advertising networks to join.

But Google seems to have found its second magic bullet.

It gives away its open-sourced Android — no money there — but that approach has put Google’s software at the heart of the technology that is poised to dominate the next decade.

Google is now one of the world’s biggest players in smartphones. Android will command 17.7% of the global mobile device market by year’s end, according to a Gartner forecast, making it the second best-selling smartphone operating system, behind Nokia’s Symbian OS. IDC released a very similar forecast, though it expects Android to come up just short of Research in Motion’s BlackBerry OS this year — but still ahead of Apple’s iOS.

By 2014, both Gartner and IDC expect Google to be neck-and-neck with Nokia in smartphone OS market share. And by 2015, Android will take the lead, attracting more than half billion users, according to Informa Telecoms & Media.

That’s stunning, considering Android didn’t debut on its first device until late September 2008. Its first successful launch was another year off, when Verizon (VZ, Fortune 500) started selling the Motorola Droid in November 2009. Android’s market share was just 3.9% in 2009, according to Gartner — well behind Windows Mobile and "other."

So how can such a wildly successful product be overlooked by investors?

Google doesn’t make a penny licensing Android. Because Android is open-source, anyone can grab its code and use it to run mobile devices. That price point — free! — reeled in major manufacturers like Motorola (MOT, Fortune 500), HTC, Samsung and LG.

But Google isn’t giving away a vital smartphone component out of the goodness of its heart. Its plan is to make money by driving mobile users to enter searches, both on its mobile site and through pre-installed apps that route traffic to Google. It also gets a 30% cut of Android Marketplace app purchases, and sells in-app ads for outside developers through its AdMob network.

By 2013, Android will be a $4 billion-a-year business for the company and "a blockbuster success," Caris & Co. analyst Sandeep Aggarwal forecasts. That’s a nice revenue bump for a company that had sales of $24 billion last year.

But Google is dreaming even bigger: At last month’s Zeitgeist conference in Arizona, Google CEO Eric Schmidt told reporters that he sees Android as a $10 billion business.

"If we have a billion people using Android, you think we can’t make money from that?" he asked.

And Google isn’t stopping with phones. The Android network is already connecting 200,000 new devices each day and will soon be making its way into tablets and TVs. Other connected devices — even refrigerators — are likely to join the ecosystem.

The company also has some tricks up its sleeve that could expand its mobile kingdom.

Three years ago Google snapped up communications technology developer GrandCentral Communications, which created a system for letting one phone number ring multiple devices. GrandCentral’s software grew into Google Voice, an addictive service that centralizes voice communications and offers a bunch of enhancements, like instant voice-to-text transcription.

Google Voice’s mobile service currently piggybacks on carriers’ networks to enable free domestic calls and texts, and low-cost international calls. But on PCs, Google lets users place voice calls directly over the Internet. It’s easy to connect the dots and envision a scenario in which Google launches its own data-only phone network, in competition with the major wireless networks.

The best indication of Android’s success may the scare it’s put into Google’s rivals. Oracle slammed Google last month with a lawsuit claiming Android infringes on Java patents. Mark Driver, an analyst at Gartner, thinks Oracle picked that fight because "there’s just tons and tons of potential money in this."

Last week, Microsoft piled on, suing Motorola for patent infringement related to its Android-powered smartphones.

And, of course, there’s Apple CEO Steve Jobs, who has accused Google of falsely inflating its activation numbers.

Google’s had its share of product flops this year, including the widely criticized Buzz and now-dead Wave. "Our policy is we try things," CEO Eric Schmidt said of Wave’s demise. "We celebrate our failures."

We’re betting they celebrate the successes more — and with Android, it looks like Google is sitting on a gold mine. 

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10/06/2010 (5:21 am)

Blinkx inks deal with KidMango

Filed under: technology |

Video search engine Blinkx plc inked a deal with KidMango, a collection of videos for children.

Now KidMango’s library of videos aimed at kids under 12 will be added into the Blinkx system, so users can find them and watch them on the Blinkx site.

Suranga Chandratillake, who started Blinkx, is its CEO. He said adding the KidMango videos gives Blinkx “wholesome, premium online programming” to entertain kids paydayloan.

Blinkx is based in San Francisco and London. It didn’t give any financial details of this deal.

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10/03/2010 (5:48 am)

Want to share your bike? There’s an app for that.

Filed under: online |

At the Web 2.0 Expo in New York City this week, executives from big sites like Facebook, Twitter and Pandora all spoke about industry trends. But the showcase of 27 startup tech companies stole the show.

One clear trend emerged among the new companies: A handful of startups focused on apps tied to highly localized information, be it about specific neighborhoods or even physical objects.

Here’s a look at five of the most promising startups.

Roadify: Brooklyn, N.Y.-based Roadify is a social transportation company. Users text "road" to 95495, and they can get real-time information from other users about a full parking lot or a delayed subway. For example, a member can ask if a bus is running late; another user can respond that she just saw the bus six blocks away.

Roadify relies on social karma and discounts as an incentive for users to offer tips. When users post a message about an open parking spot or a bus location, they’ll get points to use toward local freebies and deals. Roadify also gives easy access to official data sources like Google Transit. The service is available only in Brooklyn for now, but the company hopes to expand soon. Text-messaging rates apply, but the service itself is free.

NabeWise: NabeWise is a startup that aims to give users the ability to explore any neighborhood on such a local level that it feels as if they’ve already lived there — even if they’ve only explored it online. The goal is to help members find neighborhoods that are perfect for them.

To do that, NabeWise lists real-time neighborhood rankings across 65 key attributes "that people really talk about" — like trendiness, safety and even "hipster levels."

Users can also use the NabeFinder, a tech-driven tool that uses data and algorithms to display heat maps of the best nabes for their specific combo of preferences. It’s currently in New York, San Francisco, Boston, Seattle and Chicago but promises to expand "in the coming months."

Intersect: Intersect adds a social, storytelling aspect to neighborhoods. Users can upload photos and stories about anything in their lives, linking the posts to a specific date and location. Stories can be shared with the whole site or with specific groups.

Users can search by place or time to see if their stories "intersect" with anyone else’s. People can post as many stories as they want on their timelines, and Intersect says it hopes the project will help foster community connections. The site’s in beta testing now, but the company accepts email requests to become a tester.

Itizen: Like Intersect, this startup also revolves around stories. But Itizen focuses on the "life stories" of physical items like keepsakes and gifts — perhaps how it was made, or why it’s special. If people receive items with an Itizen "TrackIt Tag" (a two-dimensional QR barcode), they can scan it with their mobile app to read the object’s story — and add another tale to the webpage.

SoBi: The Social Bicycle System says it’s the first public bike share system that attaches tracking and security systems to the bicycle itself, thanks to GPS and a secure lock. Anyone can join SoBi by downloading the smartphone app, which lets users to locate nearby bikes and unlock them with a PIN.

Users can also create profiles to share their experiences with other SoBi members and check if friends are nearby, as well as track calories burned and greenhouse gases saved by biking rather than driving. A beta test is coming to New York City in the fall. 

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