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New Zealand Woman Fired for Using Bolded ALL CAPS in E-Mail

A New Zealand office worker recently learned a tough lesson: When sending an e-mail, be careful with fonts and colors. Someone could interpret that bold sentence the wrong way.

According to The New Zealand Herald, Vicki Walker was fired from her position as financial controller at ProCare Health for sending "confrontational" e-mails that included words in red, bold, and worst of all, capital letters. This happened in December 2007, after Walker had already worked her white-collar job for nearly two years. ProCare says that Walker's e-mails had sown seeds of discord in the office, because they included things like specified times and dates in red. Oh, my! And how dare Walker highlight and bold this statement in blue: "To ensure your staff claim is processed and paid, please do follow the below checklist." What an outrage!

However, Walker may have the last laugh, here. After being fired, she did what any sane person would do and took her former employer to court. Not only did Walker receive the equivalent of $12,000 for unfair dismissal, but she also plans on pressing further charges. Get it while you can, lady. At least she has a legitimate complaint, unlike this fool who badmouthed his job on Facebook. After all, office workers' rights to bold, highlight and capitalize should be protected at any cost. How else do you get a point across in this day and age? Speak it, or something? [From: The New Zealand Herald]

Web, Social Networking

Facebook Update Exposes Couple's Bank Fraud Romp



When a New Zealand couple applied to borrow $NZ10,000 (about $6,000) for the gas station they owned, they could not have possibly foreseen the windfall a simple computing error would bring them. And New Zealand's WestPac bank could not have possibly foreseen Facebook's role in the investigation of the $NZ10 million fraud.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, when New Zealanders Leo Gao and Kara Yang-Hurring recently found more than $6 million deposited into their bank account (due to a WestPac employee's accidental inclusion of a few extra zeroes), the couple wasted no time in fleeing with their bounty. New Zealand authorities have been tracking Gao and Yang-Hurring since, and were undoubtedly glad to encounter a bone-headed move by one of the couple's several hangers on.

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Double-Amputee Gets Mermaid Tail


New Zealander Nadya Vessey, who lost both of her legs to the knee when she was a child, has just received a prosthesis that's unlike anything we've ever seen, outside of 'Splash'. About two years ago, she approached Weta Workshop, which specializes in design and manufacturing of costumes and special effects -- their credits include The Lord of the Rings' trilogy -- to see if the company might be interested in making her a working, prosthetic mermaid tail. Turns out they were, and they've just completed the final product. The tail, which is composed of wetsuit fabric and plastic molds, has a custom paint job and digitally-imaged effects. Apparently, it enables Nadya to swim quite effectively and is an all around sexy piece of machinery. No word yet on what one of these slick dudes would cost in real life, but we have a feeling we couldn't justify the expense just to tool around in the kiddie pool.

Check out the video after the break!

[Thanks, Pyper]

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Computers

New Zealander Buys MP3 Player, Finds Classified US Army Files


While used and refurb'd electronics have a long history of delivering more than the purchaser bargained for, like assembly-line photos, MI6 documents, or the phone number to Sarah Palin's hair stylist, New Zealand man Chris Ogle's surprise find is a little more troubling. He picked up the above unidentified MP3 player at a thrift shop in Oklahoma for $18 used. On it were 60 files, many of which appear to be US Army property of a confidential nature, including one that lists soldier names, SSNs, and phone numbers, and another doc that appears to be a mission plan.

Sadly, the Government is choosing to ignore this little security breach, but we think it should step up and make Mr. Ogle an offer. He's likely to let the thing go cheap thanks to a second unfortunate discovery: it doesn't even play music any more. [Via The Sydney Morning Herald]

Computers

New Zealand Police Make 'First Facebook Arrest'


This week in New Zealand, the Queenstown police identified and arrested an attempted burglar with the help of an unconventional investigative tool: social networking site Facebook.

When police obtained a surveillance video of the would-be safe cracker, they could not immediately identify him, according to CNN. So, using the department's two-month-old Facebook account, investigators posted still images and video of the culprit on the department profile, asking "friends" to identify the man.

Within 24 hours, the suspect -- whose name has been withheld -- was identified, located and arrested.

Apparently, the Law in the southern hemisphere finds something about Facebook to be terribly appealing.
[From: CNN]

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Cell Phones

Nude New Zealander Arrested After Responding to Fake Sexy Text Message

N.Z. Texter Responds to Sexy Invite Naked, Gets ArrestedNew Zealand is a long, long distance away from Switched H.Q., but this story sure sounds like something that could have happened right here in the good ol' U.S. of A. In the city of Wellington, N.Z., a man received a text message offering him an early Christmas present that would be, erm, "presented" by two very friendly ladies. They gave him their address, told him to hurry up, and added that if he really wanted to save time, he should just show up naked.

You can probably see where this is heading.

The man dutifully arrived, stripped naked, threw his clothes through an open window, and then discovered that the place was indeed not home to two lusty girls, but was instead occupied by a very shocked kiwi, who promptly called the police. The naked man was caught and arrested for being unlawfully on someone else's property. There is justice in N.Z., though, as the girl who sent the misleading text message was also charged with the crime of "misusing a phone." Both went un-prosecuted, however, in the end.

So, if you want to get away with breaking into someone's house without any clothes on, you should probably go to New Zealand to do it.


From Reuters


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Tagged Fish Found 8,000 Miles Away From Home, In a Bird's Stomach!

Tagged Fish Nearly 8,000 Miles From Where Expected

When researchers at a Washington State fish hatchery implanted one of their tiny steelhead fish with an electronic tag in 2005, they expected to find the little guy to the northwest in the frigid waters near Alaska, where many of the fish end up.

The steelhead's tag, a tracking device similar to those used in household pets, was, much to the researchers' surprise, recently found in the stomach of a baby bird nearly 8,000 miles away on an island, charmingly called Big Moggy, off of New Zealand.

Scientists are attempting to figure out just how the fish's tag got in the stomach of the chick, known as a sooty shearwater. The two most prevalent theories about the tag include:

  • The shearwater ate the fish off the coast of Oregon, where the birds migrate every year, and then the tag got lodged in its stomach and made its way into the chick's mouth over a year later.
  • The fish was caught in a net by Japanese or Russian fishermen near Alaska, then was thrown overboard to become food for the flocks of birds that follow the fishing vessels looking for a bite.

Now, what's the point of this story? Apparenlty, scientists hope to use this case to shed light on the connection between ecosystems throughout the Pacific and the Northwest U.S., particularly that of salmon. It looks like they hit the jackpot with this bizarre bit of eco-evidence.

From News-Leader

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