SAFE WEB Act signed
This article was originally published in The Tan Sheet
Executive Summary
"I am grateful to President Bush for signing the US SAFE WEB Act into law," Federal Trade Commission Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras says in a statement Dec. 26. The act will help FTC "fight a range of practices that harm American consumers," including misleading health and safety advertising, she says. "These practices are increasingly global in nature, and the US SAFE WEB Act will improve the FTC's ability to cooperate with its foreign counterparts to combat them." FTC Deputy Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection C. Lee Peeler stressed the need for the legislation at a March 2006 House Committee on Government Reform hearing, "Dietary Supplements: A Review of Consumer Safeguards" (1"The Tan Sheet" March 13, 2006, p. 10)...
You may also be interested in...
Hoodia Firm Ordered To Halt Unsubstantiated Ads In First FTC Safe Web Claim
An international spamming enterprise marketing hoodia weight-loss and human hormone anti-aging products was the first operation targeted by the Federal Trade Commission under the new U.S. Safe Web Act
Ideal AER, Internet Legislation Outlined By CFSAN’s Brackett, FTC’s Peeler
Legislation for dietary supplement AERs should take into account that FDA needs detailed ingredient information in the reports to establish causality, according to Center for Food Safety & Applied Nutrition Director Robert Brackett, PhD
Biogen Sees Improving Momentum In Slow Leqembi Launch
Sales of the company’s new drugs have a lot of growing to do to make up for older products’ declines, but Biogen highlighted signs of strength for new launches in its Q1 report.