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Consumer Watchdog investigations and advocacy on data privacy, surveillance, AI, and your right to control your personal information.
Prop. 89 Supporters’ Unique Campaign;

Prop. 89 Supporters’ Unique Campaign;

<h3>Campaign Finance Reform Initiative</h3><p class="source">KGO-TV ABC - San Francisco, CA</p> <p><a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=IhdS9BWXpgo">Check out this Web video</a> shot by the Yes on 89 campaign. It was shot last week outside a fundraiser for Assemblyman Rick Keene of Chico. He was charging $1,500 a head and serving donuts for breakfast. The woman from Proposition 89 is offering the lobbyists donuts for 89-cents. </p>
Pledging muddles campaign finance picture;

Pledging muddles campaign finance picture;

<h3>Legislators accept promises instead of cash, confounding watchdogs who want to know who is trying to influence bills as the session winds down.</h3><p class="source">The Orange County Register</p> <p>"It's like Enron accounting for politicians," said Doug Heller, executive director for the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights and a vocal critic of end-of-session fundraisers. "That's a total evasion of the disclosure expectations we have of politicians. The reason we have disclosure is because we want to have confidence that politicians are not making decisions based on contributions."</p>
Big business lobbies hard for video licensing bill;

Big business lobbies hard for video licensing bill;

<h3>Creating statewide franchises would shake up telecom world</h3><p class="source">THE SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE</p> <p>Another byproduct of more companies jumping into the video service fray could be tearing up of streets to lay the fiber optic cables, and in the case of AT&T, installing large gray boxes that contain circuitry to bring faster Internet connection to each home, said Judy Dugan, a researcher at the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights in Los Angeles.</p>
Getting Arnold in the Spirit of Wine Month

Getting Arnold in the Spirit of Wine Month

<font face="Verdana,helvetica,Arial"><br/> </font> <!-- body text starts --><!-- startbodytext --> <font face="verdana,sans-serif" size="2">Arnold has been all over the airwaves this week toasting California's wine industry and...</font>
Donors to governor get posts of prestige;

Donors to governor get posts of prestige;

<h3>Del Mar Fair Board a prized assignment</h3><p class="source">The San Diego Union Tribune</p> <p>At least 13 of Schwarzenegger's appointees, their spouses and their companies have contributed more than $1.4 million to his campaigns, according to campaign disclosure forms and a review by the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights. "Large contributors shouldn't be rewarded for their loyalty. These appointments should be based on merit alone," said Carmen Balber, who works for FTCR. "In some cases, these people weren't the best appointees." </p>
Cable monopoly bill in works as lawmakers wrap up session

Cable monopoly bill in works as lawmakers wrap up session

<p class="source">Inside Bay Area (California)</p> <p>"The cloud of industry influence over our elected officials in this debate is just as thick as it was when politicians crafted the doomed electricity deregulation law in 1996," said Judy Dugan of the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights.</p>
Builders give Perata $500,000

Builders give Perata $500,000

<p class="source">Sacramento Bee</p> <p>Rebuilding California, a campaign committee founded by Don Perata to promote housing, transportation and flood control, received a $500,000 donation from the Building Industry Association two days after the Senate President Pro Tem killed flood-control legislation opposed by the group. </p>
Patent foes get a break in fight;

Patent foes get a break in fight;

<h3>Breakthrough in stem-cell engineering may weaken group's lock on research.</h3><p class="source">Sacramento Bee</p> <p>Last month, the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, a Santa Monica-based consumer-advocacy group, requested that the U.S. Patent Office reconsider the patents, arguing that they are overly broad and contrary to the public interest. "We still very much think that the WARF patents should never have been issued," said John Simpson, the group's spokesman, on Thursday.</p>
There’s a new dynamic in the stem cell debate;

There’s a new dynamic in the stem cell debate;

<h3>Impact of new stem cell extraction on WARF patents remains unclear</h3><p class="source">Wisconsin Technology Network</p> <p>If the WARF patents are upheld, would the organization have the right to make a claim on stem cells derived by this new method? John Simpson, stem cell project director for the Santa Monica-based Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, believes they would. "They would claim the right to human embryonic stem cell patents derived in this [new] way," Simpson stated. He also said the new method of deriving stem cells doesn't make the WARF patent a moot point because it hasn't been replicated elsewhere, and the research community still isn't sure how robust it is.</p>
Arnold flexes fundraising muscle in Texas

Arnold flexes fundraising muscle in Texas

<p class="source">Austin American-Statesman (Texas)</p> <p>ArnoldWatch, a project of California's nonpartisan Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, says Schwarzenegger has corralled more than $97 million in donations since 2003. Doug Heller of ArnoldWatch called Schwarzenegger "the most prolific fundraiser in California history. He usually doesn't travel anywhere without holding a fundraiser. He's very efficient."</p>
Stem cell disclosure resisted;

Stem cell disclosure resisted;

<h3>Financial ties of grant reviewers for California stem cell institute kept confidential</h3><p class="source">The Scientist</p> <p>John Simpson, stem cell project director for the Foundation for Taxpayer & Consumer Rights based in Santa Monica, Ca., said CIRM's conflict of interest disclosure policy is a step in the right direction, but the review of those statements should not be done only behind closed doors. </p>