Eclipse eye safety and airline phone scams: CBC's Marketplace consumer cheat sheet
Plus: PC Financial ends its banking deal with CIBC and ineffective back pain medication
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Protect your eyes during the eclipse
Planning on watching the eclipse Monday? Regular sunglasses won't be enough to protect your eyes.
NASA suggests you make sure to have these specially-designed glasses. But watch out for fakes. One Vancouver woman who was giving away free glasses found out the hard way.
Back still sore? This could be why
Patients are being prescribed anti-seizure and nerve pain medications for a common type of chronic low-back pain.
But a new review suggests there's a lack of studies supporting the effectiveness of these off-label prescriptions.
That airline call is probably a scam
Police say con artists are pretending to represent airlines like Air Canada and trying to get credit card information.
If you receive a suspicious call, Air Canada says you should hang up and call the airline's official number.
The CIBC-PC Financial breakup
After 20 years together, CIBC and PC Financial are ending their banking collaboration.
CIBC will swallow PC's banking operations and will rebrand it as Simplii Financial. But it's not the end for PC. It will keep its loyalty point program and branded MasterCard credit card.
One financial expert says this isn't necessarily a good or bad thing for consumers.
Fewer Canadians cutting cable
The pace of cord-cutting is slowing down for the first time in years.
A new report shows Canada's biggest TV providers lost fewer cable customers in the first half of this year than the same time in 2016. But according to at least one expert, it's not all good news.
Case in point: The number of cable subscribers is still declining thanks to streaming options and other services.
What else is going on?
That's a lot of points: Pharmaprix, the name under which the Shoppers Drug Mart chain operates in Quebec, has agreed to pay more than two billion Optimum points to settle a lawsuit.
A lawyer is working to get certification for an $825-million class action lawsuit in Canada against Ford over transmission problems in some of its Focus and Fiesta models.
Ontario's privacy commissioner is investigating after a man found the names, birth dates and health card numbers of 60 patients on the back of his wife's prescription.
This week in recalls:
Watch what you eat. These raspberry mousse cakes were recalled due to norovirus and these chicken hot dogs may contain bone. Also, this toy hammer may crack and create a choking hazard, and this shampoo was recalled because it is contaminated and could cause infections in people with weak immune systems.
Real estate agents breaking the rules
With bidding wars for houses cloaked in secrecy, how do you know your real estate deal wasn't already rigged? Our hidden cameras catch some agents in the act. Watch it again on TV this weekend or online.