Revant Himatsingka — widely recognised as Food Pharmer — has been honoured with the Indian of the Year Influencer Award 2025 ...
Snopes readers regularly ask whether supplement brands like Neurocept and Burn Peak are legit. Here's how you can tell ...
In a brief to U.S. Supreme Court, the Office of the Solicitor General (SG) is calling on the Court to grant certiorari on ...
A novel lawsuit was filed last Friday (Dec. 5) by four food industry groups challenging one part of a new Texas law that ...
On December 5, 2025, four national food and beverage trade associations (the American Beverage Association, the Consumer ...
The European Commission plans to introduce a “Digital Fairness Act” aimed at addressing online consumer-protection concerns, ...
Common Foods That Could Be Secretly Sabotaging Your Health. If you have ever tried to eat “pretty healthy” yet still felt ...
A new study shows that some widely used BPA replacements can kill cells and disrupt key functions, prompting scientists to ...
In new research, parents described Australia’s Health Star Ratings as ‘misleading’, ‘not helpful’ and ‘on the wrong product’.
Foods marketed as “healthy” can be surprisingly misleading. From granola bars to gluten-free snacks, many products that sound nutritious are often high in sugar, salt, fat, or fillers. Labels and ...
Regulators have the authority to penalize false advertising. What they cannot do is enact rules so heavy that legitimate ads cannot run.
The law will define UPFs as those containing certain substances, including non-nutritive sweeteners. The law gave examples of ...