Our March grantees thank you for your support

Each month, CREDO members vote on how we distribute funding to three incredible organizations. Those small actions add up – with one click, you can help fund groups fighting for civil rights, press freedom and net neutrality, and workers’ rights. Just last month, over 65,000 CREDO members voted to distribute our monthly donation to Center for Popular Democracy, Free Press Action Fund and OUR Walmart.

These donations are made possible by CREDO customers and the revenue they generate by using our services. The distribution depends entirely on the votes of CREDO members like you. And for that, our March grant recipients thank you.

Center for Popular Democracy
“Thank you for supporting CPD! CREDO members like you help make our work to protect our communities possible. Through our collective action, we can and will transform America to be the country of our hopes and aspirations.” To learn more, visit populardemocracy.org.

Free Press Action Fund
“Thank you for your support! CREDO members like you are helping Free Press Action Fund and our 1.4 million members to save net neutrality, fight for your rights to connect and communicate – and transform media and technology.” To learn more, visit freepress.net.

OUR Walmart
“Thank you for your support! CREDO members have always stood with people working at Walmart as we fight to make our lives better. We couldn’t do it without your love and support. We love you, CREDO” To learn more, visit united4respect.org.

Now check out the three causes we are funding in April, and cast your vote to help distribute our donations.

CREDO members who use our products are the reason why we are able to make these donations each month. Learn more about CREDO Mobile, the carrier with a conscience.

These three progressive groups are waiting for your vote this April

Every month, CREDO members vote to help distribute tens of thousands of dollars among three great progressive causes. This April, you can help fund groups fighting for gun control, against Big Oil and for economic justice by voting for the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, Oil Change International and People’s Action. Learn more about each of these groups, and then cast your vote for one, two or all three by April 30.

Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence
The Brady Center is committed to creating a safer America by cutting gun deaths in half through public awareness, legal action and public policy.

A grant from CREDO members would have a significant impact on the three main areas that the Brady Center focuses on: reducing the flow of crime guns into communities most heavily impacted by gun violence, expanding and protecting the Brady Background Check system and changing the cultural perception that owning or carrying a gun makes you safer.

Our favorite protest signs from the March for Our Lives

On March 24, more than 1 million students, teachers, parents and supporters across the country took to the streets to push for stronger gun control laws as part of the student-led March for Our Lives protests.

In Washington alone, roughly 800,000 people turned out for what USA Today has said was the “the largest single-day protest in the history of the nation’s capital.”

We were so inspired by the powerful signs many protesters carried, and CREDO was on hand at several March locations to provide signs for those who didn’t have one.

Here are some of our favorites:

Tuesday Tip: How to Take a Volunteer Vacation – The Alternative Spring Break

How to Take a Volunteer Vacation – The Alternative Spring Break

What’s your goal when you travel? Taking selfies – or is it finding yourself? If you’re in search of meaning more than museums, try a volunteer vacation this spring. Research wildlife in Nepal, build housing in Trinidad and Tobago, or restore a bird habitat on the Big Island in Hawaii. You’ll learn about the local people, do meaningful work and meet other travelers like you.

Take a trip, make a difference and come home with experiences that will never leave.

A lot of people are doing it. Service travel is now the second-fastest-growing travel sector, after adventure travel. Many of these travelers are young people, but many are also families, career-breakers and retirees.

If you do choose to volunteer on your next vacation, you’ll need assistance from people who specialize in service travel. You can’t just show up and offer to pitch in. Luckily, there are a lot of organizations that arrange volunteer vacations.

Choosing one that suits you will require research. But here are three reputable groups to get you started.

 Earthwatch Expeditions

Earthwatch Expeditions take you into the field with respected scientists who are investigating urgent environmental issues. You’ll make a make a personal contribution to the research while experiencing the nature and culture of your destination. Expeditions cover four areas of interests: wildlife and ecosystems, climate change, archeology and culture, and ocean health. Choices this year include exploring lions and their prey in Kenya, rewilding the Scottish Highlands and studying orcas in Iceland.

Habitat for Humanity Global Village

You have no doubt heard of Habitat. You may not know that the organization offers opportunities to build or improve housing, schools, clinics and other essential structures in 40 countries around the world. You can help build a house or make minor home repairs. You can assist with disaster recovery or join an energy-efficiency project. You’ll experience another country and meet other volunteers from many different nations.

Sierra Club Volunteer Vacations

Sierra Club arranges around 90 enjoyable, affordable volunteer trips each year. They involve hands-on conservation work like building and maintaining trails, removing invasive plants and assisting on archaeological digs. You’ll meet the people who know the local area best – forest service and park rangers. Most trips also include free time for hiking and exploring. Opportunities this year include park maintenance in Hells Canyon, Idaho (with transportation by jet-boat up the Snake River Canyon), forestry service at the New York Botanical Garden (a 50-acre urban old-growth forest) and native-bird habitat restoration on the Big Island of Hawaii (with hiking in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park).

We hope this list will inspire your travel plans and encourage you to make a real difference during your next vacation. And, if you’re not already a member, we hope you’ll consider CREDO, the mobile carrier that empowers you to make positive change in the world every day, just by using your phone.

Victory: CREDO members pressure Starbucks to reduce plastic


Activism to hold corporations accountable works. We’re proud to announce that CREDO and our partners at Stand.earth and the Break Free from Plastic Coalition successfully pressured Starbucks to create a 100% recyclable cup. The coffee giant announced it is putting $10 million into research to create a 100% recyclable and compostable cup to be introduced in stores within 3 years.

More than 85,000 CREDO members signed a petition urging the company to “go beyond its 2008 commitments, including a switch to recyclable cups and a 25 percent increase in reusable cup usage.”

Because of CREDO members’ activism, Starbucks was feeling the pressure, as they made this announcement the day before their annual shareholders meeting – exactly when our petition signatures were to be delivered.

But our work to hold Starbucks accountable isn’t over. We will have to keep the pressure on because Starbucks has gone back on similar promises in the past – but they are definitely in the spotlight to take real action now.

 

CREDO is building the capacity of progressive activists in key states

Across the country, millions are mobilizing in opposition to Trump and his dangerous, racist agenda –- and thanks to the CREDO members who use our products every day, CREDO is now leading the charge to train an “army of activists” in key states to resist Trump and fight for our progressive values.

With our new program, Project Fierce Urgency, we are training progressive activists and volunteers in effective digital skills to mount aggressive issue-based political advocacy operations to organize the resistance in key states.

At these free two-day trainings, we’re teaching activists how to use digital media to organize in their communities, construct simple yet effective messages, identify clear targets, and tell powerful stories to evoke emotional responses and get local communities to take action.

For example, we teach the best practices of Facebook live streams to amplify live events over social media, how to utilize tools like Slack to stay connected with local organizers and the power of creating engaging online content and how to distribute it effectively.

Samsung Galaxy S9 is now available

With all the bells and whistles available these days, it’s hard for a new smartphone to create buzz. But the Galaxy S9 does just that. Ringing in with a number of notable innovations, the S9 proves there is still room to push the envelope in the smartphone space.

The Galaxy S9 includes a groundbreaking camera that adjusts to light like the human eye, a brighter, more colorful, more durable display and an updated design that gives you the full-frontal screen Samsung is famous for in a package that’s easier than ever to wield with one hand.

The Galaxy S9 is now available from CREDO Mobile. Let’s take a look at the highlights.

Camera

IMAGE: MICHELLE YAN/MASHABLE

The S9 has a 12-megapixel rear camera that sets a new standard for smartphone photography. It’s the first dual-aperture camera in a phone, working much the same way as a standalone point-and-shoot camera. It adapts automatically to available light to deliver clear photos with no adjustment necessary.

Outdoors on a sunny day, the S9 narrows the aperture to avoid overexposure. Indoors at night, it automatically opens the aperture to let in more light. After you snap, the S9 deploys improved signal processing to reduce image noise and produce fine detail in almost every picture. The camera app even has a “food” mode that slightly boosts saturation to make colors warmer and the food look more tempting.

The Galaxy S9’s front camera is 8 megapixels with autofocus capability. The S9 shoots 4K video at 60 frames per second, as well as slow-motion video and super slow-mo.

Display

Samsung Infinity Display

The S9’s edge-to-edge screen is like a little infinity pool in your palm. The 5.8-inch OLED display renders vibrant colors and sharp images. Peak brightness has been stepped up to 605 nits, which is 10 percent brighter than the Samsung Note 8’s 540 nits. Turn on the auto brightness function and contrast increases when you’re outside so you can see what’s on your screen even in full sun. DisplayMate called the S9 screen “the best-performing smartphone display” it’s ever tested, citing its higher color accuracy, increased brightness and improved visibility outdoors.

Security

Last year’s Galaxy S8 placed the fingerprint sensor on the back of the phone to the right of the camera lens, rather than at the center. This bothered some users accustomed to a centered sensor because they kept pressing their finger to the camera lens by mistake. The S9 moves the sensor to the center and solves that glitch.

You can also open your homescreen via the phone’s novel combination of face recognition and iris scan. If face recognition needs help, iris scan steps in to verify you—and vice versa. This means your phone can ID you even in low light. Or you can open the S9 the old-fashioned way, with a tap, pattern, PIN or password.

If you use your S9 for work, you’ll appreciate Samsung Knox, a security feature that keeps personal and work data apart. This means you don’t have to carry a separate, secure “work” phone with you wherever you go.

Design

The Galaxy S9 is built to fit comfortably in one hand. It features curved glass on the front and back, which makes it easy to hold. But if you do drop it, Samsung built the S9 with improved impact protection. The body transfers 20 percent less shock to the glass display if it hits the ground.

The S9 comes with IP68 water and dust resistance: the 6 means it’s dust-tight and the 8 means it’s protected against submersion in 1.5 meters of water for 30 minutes. (In case you’re wondering, the IP stands for International Protection Rating.)

The Galaxy S9 has a headphone jack, which is an increasingly rare feature in a flagship smartphone these days. For listening without headphones, it has a pair of impressively loud stereo speakers—one top, one bottom—tuned by AKG Harman and enhanced with Dolby Atmos surround sound.

Hardware

The Galaxy S9 is equipped with the brand-new Qualcomm Snapdragon 845, which is one of the fastest mobile chips on the market. That means better performance—fluid gaming, quick multitasking and no more waiting around while an app launches or a website loads.

The S9 battery offers all-day life and support for fast charging and wireless charging, although you have to buy separate chargers for both those functions.

For storage, the phone comes with 64GB built in. For more storage, there is a microSD card slot that gives you up to 400GB of expandable storage.

 

If you’re a current CREDO Mobile member, sign into Member Services and order the new Samsung S9.

New CREDO Mobile customers shop here.

Download Protest Posters for March for Our Lives

On Saturday, March 24, students from across the country will be leading the March for Our Lives. They, their families and their communities will take to the streets in Washington, D.C. and cities across the U.S. to demand gun control and directly challenge the NRA.

If you plan to join the protest march—or just want to show your support—we have March for Our Lives protest posters available for download here.

Since the Parkland shooting, the NRA has been under relentless scrutiny. Corporate partners have been abandoning the NRA in droves. And people all over the country have been publicizing and criticizing the amount of money their representatives have taken from the NRA. The March for Our Lives will be a powerful chance to build on this momentum.

For years, CREDO members have taken action to stand up to the NRA and advocate for gun control. Since Parkland, more than 280,000 people have signed our petition telling Republicans that they have to offer more than thoughts and prayers in the face of our gun violence epidemic. And we’ll be joining the March for Our Lives to amplify those demands and continue to challenge the NRA.

We hope you’ll join us—and bring your March for Our Lives poster. See you there!

Download Your Free Poster

March for Our Lives protest poster – stop the NRA

Download Stop the NRA (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – gun control

Download Our lives aren’t for sale (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – anti NRA

Download Gun control now (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – America needs gun control

Download This is not okay (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives poster

Download This is killing us (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – Americans for gun control

Download Not.One.More (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – gun violence protest

Download Demand Action (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – NRA protest

Download Bullets are not school supplies (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – ban assault weapons

Download Against Assault Weapons (PDF) – 11×17 in.

March for Our Lives protest poster – end gun violence

Download For Gun Control (PDF) – 11×17 in.

Stop the NRA - March For Our Lives Free Posters

Download Another against the NRA (PDF) – 11×17 in.

Stop Funding NRA - March for Our Lives Free Posters

Download Stop taking NRA $ (PDF) – 11×17 in.

 

Want your favorite posters from the March for Our Lives to be featured on our blog? Tag @credomobile on your Instagram post or @CREDO on your Facebook post for the chance to showcase your resistance!

Tuesday Tip: Why your cell phone won’t ring—and how to fix it


Have you ever glanced at your phone screen and seen that you’ve a missed call—or three or seven? Argh! How did this happen? You didn’t even hear your phone ring. In fact, you’re quite sure it didn’t ring.

Before you trek back to the store to seek help from a phone genius, check the silent switch. Certain smartphone models have a small silent switch located on the top left side, just above the volume up/down buttons. It’s there so you can quickly turn off the ringer (and other alerts) and put your phone in vibrate-only mode—when you’re in a restaurant, say, or watching a film.

But it’s all too easy to move the switch to the off position by accident and miss incoming calls.

Here’s how it works. When the switch is pushed down, away from the screen, your phone is in silent mode and the switch shows orange. Onscreen, you’ll briefly see a bell icon with a line through it . When in silent mode, the alarms you set in the Clock app will still sound and calls from Favorite contacts will still ring. When the silent switch is up, toward the screen, the ringer is on. Onscreen, you’ll briefly see a bell icon .

So keep your eyes on the switch and your ears open. You’ll never miss a call by accident again.

How Mercy Corps is building a more just world in 2018


The global order is changing, and 2018 represents a critical juncture. Mercy Corps’ CEO Neal Keny-Guyer addresses conflict, climate change and other issues that are affecting families around the world:

You’ve noted that we’re living in a time of unprecedented confluence of complex crises around the world – in places like Syria, Yemen and the Horn of Africa. Are these distinct events, or are they linked by larger forces?

The big force that’s laying the foundation for many of the crises we see today is conflict. As the World Bank has said, conflict is the number one driver of extreme poverty in the world. Twenty million people are at risk of famine because of conflict.

There’s no algorithm we could write that would magically reduce conflict. At Mercy Corps, we take great pride in the fact that we focus on the root causes. We’ve seen time and time again that you can bring people together from different tribes, religious backgrounds and sects, and if you can engage the leaders – and particularly the women and young people – you can make progress.

What you can’t do is put your head in the sand and believe these problems are magically going to go away. We are living through one of the great inflection points of our times. For the last 250 to 300 years, the locus of economic and political power has been centered in the West. That’s shifting. The global order is changing.

How has the thinking evolved around the role of conflict and violence in hunger?

During my lifetime, one of the great success stories has been the reduction in the number of people who go to bed hungry. The Green Revolution, gender equality, and investments in seeds, science and markets have made a huge difference.