Food companies are failing to disclose allergens, putting peoples’ health at risk
In 2023, 154 foods were recalled because of unlabeled allergens. How can people protect their health and avoid foods that could trigger dangerous allergies?
Get the information, tools and resources it takes to protect yourself in today’s ever-changing marketplace.
These days we all need to be smart consumers. We need access to the information and resources it takes to avoid the latest scams, stop identity thieves, spot rip offs and keep unsafe food and toxic products out of our shopping carts. PIRG’s consumer watchdog team does the research, publicizes issues through the media, produces consumer guides, and sends out consumer alerts so we all have the tools to make smart, safe, informed choices.
In 2023, 154 foods were recalled because of unlabeled allergens. How can people protect their health and avoid foods that could trigger dangerous allergies?
Our guide provides tips for avoiding price-gouging and a how-to for reporting bad actors.
Once a toy has an internet connection, it suddenly has the capability to 1) gather a lot of information and 2) send it somewhere.
Advertising firms are collecting data on our children with the help of apps designed to hold their attention using the same techniques as slot machines.
When we use free websites and apps, there's often cookies and other tracking technologies in the background harvesting huge amounts of data about who we are and what we do online. Virtually no laws rein in the companies behind these cookies, nor how they use and sell the info they collect.
Here are some suggestions to consider before your next trip
Consumer Watchdog, PIRG
Senior Director, Federal Consumer Program, PIRG