Calorie labelling causes only small reduction in consumption - study
Labelling fast food with the calories it contains causes only a small reduction in the amount customers buy, according to a new study.

Write comment (100 Comments)
Work permit delays disrupt foreign workers& career plans

Immigration advocates are rightly fretting over the Trump administration&s new health insurance mandate and efforts to dismantle the asylum system. But away from the spotlight, another crisis is quietly brewing that could affect virtually every foreign-born STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) student and worker.

The problem lies in Employment Authorization Documents (EADs). These work permits, issued by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), authorize international students and green card applicants to take jobs. Requests for EADs, known as I-765s, now account for more than a quarter of all forms USCIS receives. But technological hiccups, staffing shortages, and the pressures of conforming to new immigration policies mean the agency is taking longer and longer to process them. Thatleaving tens of thousands of students and skilled workers unable to work and hundreds of thousands of tech positions unfilled for months, or even years.

The EAD crisis has been simmering for years but reached a head in early 2017 when officials scrapped a rule requiring USCIS to process I-765s within 90 days. Along with an influx of new EAD requests from DACA and TPS recipients, thatled to spiraling delays. In 2015, 23 percent of EAD applications took more than three months to process; by 2018, it had doubled to 46 percent. The average processing time today for non-DACA-related EADs is almost five months, with over a third of applications taking significantly longer — last year, over 118,000 applications took more than nine months to process.

That squares with what we&re seeing at Boundless: our internal data show that average EAD wait times have climbed above five months, with many customers waiting eight months or more for work permits. We&re also seeing an enormous disparity among processing facilities, with some USCIS service centers far more clogged than others. At the time of writing, if your I-765 is processed in Texas, for example, you could get your EAD within three weeks; if in Vermont, you could wait more than 17 months, depending on the immigration status you seek.

That adds up to an unpredictable, unfair, and deeply frustrating situation and one more obstacle for the skilled immigrants that President Donald Trump says hetrying to attract to the United States. Whether you&re trying to make ends meet while waiting for your green card, seeking a summer job, or hoping to work after graduation, EAD delays can be excruciating — and unless your employer is willing to wait for you, the holdup could cost you your dream job.

So what could you do if you find yourself stuck in EAD limbo? Fortunately, you have options:

If you already have a visa, hold on to it

Many immigrants file EAD requests as part of their green card applications, even if they&re already authorized to work under visas such as an H-1B or L-1. Thata smart move: If your current work visa expires, but you&ve been issued an EAD, you&ll be able to keep working until your green card arrives. Still, if your EAD gets delayed, you&ll be glad to know that as long as your original employment-based visa remains valid, you can keep working without a problem.

Bear in mind, though, that you won&t be able to renew your existing visa after filing a green card application. Itworth applying for your green card as soon as you&re eligible to give you plenty of time before your existing work visa expires.

If you&re still waiting, tell USCIS

Itnot impossible for your EAD to slip through the cracks or be sent to the wrong address, so check with USCIS if things are taking too long. Start by checking the processing times for your service center. If you filed your I-765 before the &receipt date for a case inquiry& listed on the USCIS processing times tool, you can file an e-Request or call 1-800-375-5283 for an update.

In some cases, you can also ask USCIS to expedite your I-765. This is only available in certain circumstances, such as if delays are due to USCIS error or if you or your prospective employer would otherwise suffer major financial losses. Unfortunately, the possibility of losing or delaying acceptance of a job offer isn&t sufficient grounds for expediting an application.

Still stuck in limbo? Ask for help

Write comment (94 Comments)
Tech reviews: Nokia 7.2
The new Nokia 7.2 edges closer to a premium smartphone, but is still in the (lower) mid-range segment, competing directly with phones like Samsung's recently launched Galaxy A50.

Write comment (92 Comments)
Measles virus reduces immunity against other diseases
Measles is not only a serious and potentially fatal disease, but it wipes out antibodies that protect against viral and bacterial strains a person was previously immune to.

Write comment (94 Comments)

If you&ve ever tried buying a bike online, or ski equipment, or any number of expensive goods where it would be useful to know a lot more than you do, you might check out Curated, a two-year-old San Francisco-based startup that wants to help busy shoppers who know generally what they want but don&t necessarily have time to visit a specialty store to learn more.

It isn&t the first startup to help with shopping recommendations. Among its predecessors is Hunch, a company that delivered customized recommendations to users based on signals around the web (and sold to eBay in 2011). Another variation on the same theme can be traced back to the dot com era company Keen.com, a live answer community where people could get answers to their questions over the phone.

Still, Curated makes enough sense in todaymarket that Forerunner Ventures, which has established a name for itself as the preeminent investor in e-commerce companies, just led its $22 million Series A round. It was the only venture firm in the round by design, says cofounder and CEO Eddie Vivas, who says the funding was filled out by the same friends and family who&d participated in Curated$5.5 million seed round.

As part of the deal, Forerunner founder Kirsten Green has also joined the board.

Iteasy to appreciate the companyappeal. Curated works by matching bewildered shoppers with people who are passionate and knowledgeable and &expert& in their fields. Right now, those experts are mostly athletes or coaches, as the platform is starting out with a handful of verticals, including golf, cycling, and a few winter sports. Longer term, the idea is to launch new sections on the site every six to eight weeks, including fly fishing, kiteboarding, camping and hiking.

How the economics work: Curated strikes deals with manufacturers — say makers of snowboard equipment or mountain bikes — that sell Curated their goods at wholesale prices. Curated can then sell them at retail prices to its customers. (Curated fulfills the order itself.)

Part of that markup is used to pay its experts, who tend to be people who have jobs in related fields but could use more income and who love sharing what they know about a topic. To ensure that these experts know as much as they claim, they are vetted by other experts on the platform, answering a battery of questions as part of that process.

Vivas stresses that experts are in no way incentivized to recommend anything in particular to a customer, but he says customers can tip the experts if they wish. (Curated suggests tips of 5%, 7.5%, or 10%, and Vivas says they are sometimes given much more than that by shoppers who are thankful for their time and effort, especially when their interactions end up leading them to products that cost less than they might have paid otherwise.)

The end goal is for customers to complete transactions on the platform that they wouldn&t otherwise feel comfortable completing at a site where they aren&t actively educated.

The platform is seizing on a number of trends that make it a smart idea for this day and age. For one thing, it uses artificial intelligence to connect shoppers with the right advisors. Though everyone tosses around AI as a competitive advantage, Curated seemingly has a genuine competitive advantage on this front, owing to the background of Vivas, who sold to LinkedIn an earlier company that used AI to automate the recruiting process.

At the time, in 2014, it was LinkedInbiggest acquisition ever. And Vivas stayed at LinkedIn for another 3.5 years as the head of product within its talent solutions business, which is where LinkedIn derives most of its revenue. (In fact, itwhere he met some of the 32 people who now work at Curated.)

Curated is also putting to work far-flung knowledge workers who, like a lot of Americans, increasingly work for themselves or in part-time roles that they&re looking to supplement with other part-time roles.

But perhaps most meaningfully, Curated is a kind of antidote to Amazon, where shoppers can turn when they need something fast but thatincredibly limited when it comes to providing the kind of information needed to comfortably make big purchases. Consumers may pull the trigger on items anyway, but often, they end up with merchandise that they then have to send back or never wind up using.

The question now is whether the company can scale. To do so, it&ll need to rise above the din of other e-commerce platforms to attract enough customers to support its network of experts (and vice versa), and ita pretty crowded landscape out there, even with the magic of search-engine optimization and Facebook ads.

Curated will also need to strike enough deals with goods manufacturers to make the platform compelling for shoppers, and to ensure that the level of the advice thatprovided to those consumers is, and remains, high.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Vivas doesn&t sound concerned. He thinks hebuilt a strong team. Healso excited about the growing network of experts the team has pieced together since founding the company in the summer of 2017.

&You take someone who is passionate about something and you let them make money off it, and good things happen,& he says.

&In allowing people to monetize their knowledge, the unlock is just unbelievable.&

Time will tell. The service launches publicly today.

Write comment (100 Comments)
Starting a business can place demands on your mental health - here's how a mentor could help
When you found a startup, one of the first pieces of advice you get is to find yourself at least one mentor - a more experienced businessperson that can guide your decisions.

Write comment (92 Comments)