FDA May Regulate Salt in Food

OpenMarket.org:  “Recently, the US Food and Drug Administration, working with the Institute of Medicine, has been considering a change in the regulatory status of salt. The FDA cannot currently restrict the amount of salt that can be added to processed foods, and the proposed change would allow them to do so.  Advocates of the proposed regulation, like former FDA commissioner David Kessler and the Center for Science in the Public Interest, argue that reducing the sodium in foods would improve people’s health and cut public health spending. Opponents argue that the evidence supporting health benefits of sodium reduction is by no means conclusive, and that attempts to reduce sodium intake could actually be harmful.”

Bloggers Mugged by Regulators – FTC to Police Book Reviews on Twitter

Wall St. Journal:  “There’s a saying that a neoconservative is a liberal who has been mugged by reality. We’ve now learned that bloggers mugged by regulators become economic libertarians.  Earlier this month, the Federal Trade Commission issued its “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising,” last updated in 1980. These rules historically regulated what celebrity endorsers can say and how advertisers can use research claims.”

Web Designer & Customer Liable for Copyright Infringement

Digital Media Law Blog:  “When a website designer and host and its customer work together to create a website which — oops! — contains unlicensed copyrighted images, who is liable for the infringement? A recent case found that the answer was ‘Both,’ holding the web designer liable for direct infringement and its customer liable for vicarious infringement.  See Corbis Corp. v. Nick Starr, d/b/a Master Maintenance, N.D. Ohio No. 3:07CV3741 (September 2, 2009)

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