Category Archives: Security

Crocs Fined for Health Claims

The Environmental Protection Agency says they have settled with the manufacturer of Crocs over a case of unproven health claims.

Crocs Inc. has agreed to remove unsubstantiated antimicrobial claims on product packaging and pay $230,000 to resolve cases involving several types of its shoes, according to the U.S. EPA.

“EPA will take action to protect the public against companies making unverified public health claims,” said Jim Martin, EPA’s regional administrator in Denver. “Unless these products are registered with EPA, consumers have little or no information about whether such claims are accurate.”

So, we now officially can declare Crocs are a croc?

One of the interesting details in this story is that the US Government says products with antimicrobial claims must register and be tested as a pesticide. I never thought of it like that, but wearing an untested pesticide as a shoe sounds unwise. The marketing on the Crocs page now has to change. It used to say something like this:

…ergonomic, antimicrobial, odor resistant and recyclable shoes

I guess it was easier to remove the second claim than get tested for compliance with pesticide regulations.

It might take a while longer to retrain the doctors and experts in the field and remove their authoritative references like this one on WebMD.

“Crocs shoes do provide protection, compared to going barefoot, or wearing flip-flops or sandals,” says Donna M. Alfieri, DPM, associate professor at the N.Y. College of Podiatric Medicine. “They offer some arch support and cushion, the holes in the shoe allow air in and keep the feet from sweating, and the antimicrobial properties of Crocs could help prevent infections in kids’ feet.”

It also could be false advertising. Whoops.

This story reminds me of a marketing director of a successful Silicon Valley technical firm who asked me one day to define availability. I said something like this:

It is measured by the up time and service level. The concept of five nines, for example, is a service that is unavailable to users less than 5.26 minutes in a year.

He cut me off before I could continue, threw his head back and grew a giant smile like the Cheshire Cat.

Nooooo, availability is two power-supplies! That is what the xyz competitor said on their marketing brief, so that is what I put on ours! Easy!

I read the marketing brief he cited. It was clear he mis-understood their text as he copied it but I could tell he was making a political point, not about engineering availability. His smile really was the appreciation of the lack of a regulatory authority that measured his product for compliance. He was letting me know his methods were not deceptive because success could be redefined without accountability — easier to hit sales numbers by lowering the bar for engineering and then telling customers they never knew anything better (with quotes from paid experts), while laying blame (if any were to come back) on a competitor.

Italy bans all plastic bags

It has captured the headline for Plastics News

Four years after it was originally proposed, Italy has imposed a ban on single-use polyethylene-based retail carryout bags. Italy is the first country in the European Union to ban plastic bags.

Ireland has had a tax on plastic carryout bags since 2002. That tax was initially 15 cents, but was raised to 22 cents in 2007.

Most other sites just say plastic bags are banned, but I figured a site dedicated to plastics would make a point about the particular type.

I wrote about degrading plastic in 2009, and in 2007 I mentioned Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania had banned plastic bags.

While the African countries said they had to take “drastic measures” to change people’s attitudes, Italy’s ban is said to have been urged by more than 100,000 citizens. Ironic, considering Italy has the highest annual plastic bag count per person (over 330) in the EU.

Cloud Providers Say It’s Safe

I just ran through a set of security documentation by some large cloud service providers and an old marketing campaign came to mind, as documented by the New York Times:

Note the “T-Zone”.

“T for Taste…T for Throat…”. They forgot T for Threat to your life.

Very soon I expect we will be able to help customers describe and measure some concrete risk differences among cloud providers, as I described in my presentation on logging last month at BayThreat.

AlertMap by Havaria Information Service

A map of the world with current “actual events” is viewable here.


Event categories include power outage, vehicle incident/accident, flash flood, cold wave, snow storm, explosion, biohazard, epcidemic…but I did not see “cyber” anything.

The closest might be “Technological Disaster“, but even that seems to be caused by weather.

Sixteen people are believed trapped in an Australian cinema after the roof partially collapsed after heavy rain…