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Ex-Nasa engineer builds ‘glitter-bomb trap’ to shame package thieves

TECH

Ex-Nasa engineer builds ‘glitter-bomb trap’ to shame package thieves
TECH

TECH

Ex-Nasa engineer builds ‘glitter-bomb trap’ to shame package thieves

2018-12-20 11:11 Last Updated At:11:12

YouTuber Mark Rober spent months building the device to cover thieves in glitter and fart spray if they took a parcel from his porch.

A former Nasa engineer has built a high-tech anti-theft device to horrify thieves who steal Christmas packages from outside people’s homes.

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Video screencap

Video screencap

Video screencap

Frustrated after a parcel was stolen from his porch in California, YouTuber Mark Rober spent months building a bait trap which would cover thieves in glitter, stink spray and shame when they opened it.

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Video screencap

“Someone stole a package from me. Police wouldn’t do anything about it so I spent the last six months engineering up some vigilante justice.

“Revenge is a dish best served fabulously,” he wrote in a Facebook post sharing the video.

The footage has been viewed nearly 25 million times on YouTube since he shared it on Monday.

Hidden inside the box for a smart speaker is an accelerometer – so the device knows when it is jostled or shaken – and a GPS monitor to prime the trap if it is moved from outside Mr Rober’s home.

Four smartphones were installed to film the action from every angle, along with a can of “fart spray”, which goes off every five seconds, and “a pound of the world’s finest glitter” to be thrown everywhere after the lid is lifted off.

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Video screencap

“I just felt like something needs to be done to take a stand against dishonest punks like this,” said Mr Rober, who worked at the American space agency for nine years and has more than four million followers on YouTube for his bizarre and amusing inventions.

“If anyone was going to make a revenge bait package and engineer the crap out of it, it was going to be me.”

By way of a warning to more observant criminals, he addressed the package to “Harry and Marv” – the villainous burglars in classic Christmas film Home Alone – sent by “Kevin McCallister”, Macaulay Culkin’s prankster hero in the film.

The results did not disappoint.

After getting an alert that the package had been taken, Mr Rober traced it to a nearby car park where he found it dumped on the ground, open and surrounded by traces of glitter.

“This is like recovering the black box from a crashed airplane,” he said.

The recovered footage showed a young man open the package only to be covered in a cloud of glitter.

He swiftly discards it in a fit of sweary, incredulous anger.

Mr Rober loaned the trap to a friend who had also been a victim of package thefts, catching a further four thieves in the process.

“Get that shit out of here, you shouldn’t even have grabbed that shit,” says one man to his friend as they contemplate what to do with a car full of glitter and fart spray.

“The moral of the story is don’t take other people’s stuff,” concluded Mr Rober.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Flu is rising rapidly across the U.S., driven by a new variant of the virus — and cases are expected to keep growing with holiday travel.

That variant, known as “subclade K,” led to early outbreaks in the United Kingdom, Japan and Canada. In the U.S., flu typically begins its winter march in December. On Tuesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported high or very high levels of illness in more than half the states.

The CDC estimated there have been at least 7.5 million illnesses, 81,000 hospitalizations and 3,100 deaths from flu so far this season. That includes at least eight child deaths — and is based on data as of Dec. 20, before major holiday gatherings.

Some states are particularly hard-hit. New York’s health department said the week ending Dec. 20 marked the most flu cases the state had recorded in a single week since 2004: 71,000.

It’s far too soon to know if this flu season will be as severe as last winter’s.

But it’s not too late to get a flu shot, which health experts say can still prevent severe illness even if someone gets infected. While this year's vaccine isn't a perfect match to the subclade K strain, a preliminary analysis from the U.K. found it offered at least partial protection, lowering people's risk of hospitalization.

According to the CDC, only about 42% of adults and children have gotten a flu vaccination so far this year.

The flu virus is a shape-shifter, constantly mutating, and it comes in multiple forms. There are two subtypes of Type A flu, and subclade K is a mutated version of one of them, named H3N2. That H3N2 strain is always harsh, especially for older adults.

Subclade K’s mutations aren’t enough of a change to be considered an entirely new kind of flu.

But they’re different enough to evade some of the protection from this year’s vaccine, said Andrew Pekosz, a virus expert at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The CDC said it’s too soon to know how severe this season will be.

Flu seasons dominated by any version of H3N2 tend to be bad, with more infections overall and more people becoming seriously ill. But Hopkins’ Pekosz cautioned it will take time to tease apart whether this subclade K version simply spreads more easily or also is more dangerous.

That question aside, the CDC notes there are some prescription medicines to treat flu — usually recommended for people at high risk of complications. But they generally need to be started a day or two after symptoms begin.

The CDC and major medical societies all recommend a flu vaccine for just about everyone age 6 months and older. Despite lots of recent misinformation and confusion about vaccines, the flu recommendations haven’t changed.

Flu is particularly dangerous for people 65 and older, pregnant women, young children and people of any age who have chronic health problems, including asthma, diabetes, heart disease and weak immune systems.

The vaccines are brewed to protect against three influenza strains. Despite concern over that new H3N2 variant, they appear to be a good match against H1N1 and Type B flu that may also circulate this year, Pekosz said.

There are shots for all ages, as well as the nasal spray FluMist for ages 2 to 49. For the first time this year, some people may be eligible to vaccinate themselves with FluMist at home.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

FILE - A certified medical assistant holds a syringe for a flu vaccine at a clinic in Seattle, on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)

FILE - A certified medical assistant holds a syringe for a flu vaccine at a clinic in Seattle, on Wednesday, Sept. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)

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