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Miami Herald
2 days ago
- Health
- Miami Herald
Ice Cream Recalled Nationwide As Warning Issued Over Products
Tropicale Foods, based in Ontario, California, announced on Friday a voluntary recall of select Helados Mexico and La Michoacana ice cream products. The decision followed a label audit which revealed that although the products list "cream," they do not explicitly declare "milk"—that could endanger those allergic to milk. Newsweek contacted the company for comment on Sunday via email outside of usual working hours. Milk is a major allergen under federal labeling laws, and its accidental presence in products poses a risk to consumers with allergies or severe sensitivities. Undeclared ingredients can trigger life-threatening reactions, making accurate labeling a critical public health requirement. The company announcement, published on the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)'s website on Saturday, states: "Tropicale Foods of Ontario, CA is recalling certain Helados Mexico and La Michoacana products with specific best by dates, as detailed below because these products contain undeclared milk. "Though these products include 'cream' in the product ingredient lists, the common name 'milk' is not declared. People who have an allergy or severe sensitivity to milk run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume these products." Affected items include single-flavor offerings (such as Coconut, Strawberry, Bubble Gum, Cookies and Cream, Mango), as well as multi-packs (6‑pack, 12‑pack, 16‑pack varieties). The recalled products are as follows: Photos of the affected products are available on the FDA website. The recall covers a wide range of "best by" dates from May 2026 through July 2027. Distribution spanned retail locations nationwide across the U.S. As of the FDA announcement, one consumer illness has been reported. Consumers with affected items who are allergic or sensitive to milk are advised not to consume the products and to properly dispose of them. Food Allergy Research and Education (FARE) states on its website: "When a person with a milk allergy is exposed to milk, proteins in the milk bind to specific antibodies made by the person's immune system. This triggers the person's immune defenses, leading to reaction symptoms that can be mild or very severe." Consumers who have the affected product should dispose of and not consume this product if allergic or sensitive to milk, and consult medical advice if symptoms arise. Anyone with queries may contact the company at 909-563-3090 between 8 am and 5 pm Pacific, Monday to Friday. The FDA will continue oversight and monitor any additional consumer reports or updates. Related Articles Is the FDA Doing Enough About Food Additives?Nationwide Ritz Cracker Recall Update as FDA Issues Risk WarningCanned Fruit Recall Sparks Nationwide Warning to CustomersFDA Issues Highest Risk Warning for Tofu Recall 2025 NEWSWEEK DIGITAL LLC.


Newsweek
3 days ago
- Health
- Newsweek
Ice Cream Recalled Nationwide As Warning Issued Over Products
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Tropicale Foods, based in Ontario, California, announced on Friday a voluntary recall of select Helados Mexico and La Michoacana ice cream products. The decision followed a label audit which revealed that although the products list "cream," they do not explicitly declare "milk"—that could endanger those allergic to milk. Newsweek contacted the company for comment on Sunday via email outside of usual working hours. Why It Matters Milk is a major allergen under federal labeling laws, and its accidental presence in products poses a risk to consumers with allergies or severe sensitivities. Undeclared ingredients can trigger life-threatening reactions, making accurate labeling a critical public health requirement. A gelato store at the Caesars Forum Shops is viewed on May 29, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada. A gelato store at the Caesars Forum Shops is viewed on May 29, 2025 in Las Vegas, to Know The company announcement, published on the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)'s website on Saturday, states: "Tropicale Foods of Ontario, CA is recalling certain Helados Mexico and La Michoacana products with specific best by dates, as detailed below because these products contain undeclared milk. "Though these products include 'cream' in the product ingredient lists, the common name 'milk' is not declared. People who have an allergy or severe sensitivity to milk run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reaction if they consume these products." Affected items include single-flavor offerings (such as Coconut, Strawberry, Bubble Gum, Cookies and Cream, Mango), as well as multi-packs (6‑pack, 12‑pack, 16‑pack varieties). The recalled products are as follows: Description BBD LaMichoacana COCONUT (Single) 10/3/2026-5/3/2027 LaMichoacana STRAWBERRY (Single) 10/1/2026-5/16/2027 LaMichoacana BUBBLE GUM (Single) 4/7/2027-4/19/2027 LaMichoacana COOKIES AND CREAM (Single) 4/9/2027-4/11/2027 LaMichoacana MANGO (Single) 2/3/2027-4/8/2027 LaMichoacana 6 -PACK COCONUT 11/25/2026-4/12/2027 LaMichoacana 6-PACK STRAWBERRY 6/3/2026-6/17/2027 LaMichoacana 16-PACK VARIETY CREAM 3/14/2027 and 3/16/2027 LaMichoacana 12-PACK MINI VARIETY CREAM 9/9/2026 -4/12/2027 LaMichoacana 6-PACK ROMPOPE 4/24/2027-7/14/2027 Helados Mexico 12-PACK MINI VARIETY CREAM 5/29/2026-06/24/2027 Helados Mexico 12-PACK MINI CHOCOLATEDIP VARIETY CREAM 12/17/2026-6/15/2027 Helados Mexico 12-PACK DLR MINI VARIETYCREAM 12/31/2026-5/2/2027 Helados Mexico 12-PACK DLR MINICHOCOLATE DIP VARIETY CREAM 1/14/2027-6/18/2027 Photos of the affected products are available on the FDA website. The recall covers a wide range of "best by" dates from May 2026 through July 2027. Distribution spanned retail locations nationwide across the U.S. As of the FDA announcement, one consumer illness has been reported. Consumers with affected items who are allergic or sensitive to milk are advised not to consume the products and to properly dispose of them. What People Are Saying Food Allergy Research and Education (FARE) states on its website: "When a person with a milk allergy is exposed to milk, proteins in the milk bind to specific antibodies made by the person's immune system. This triggers the person's immune defenses, leading to reaction symptoms that can be mild or very severe." What Happens Next Consumers who have the affected product should dispose of and not consume this product if allergic or sensitive to milk, and consult medical advice if symptoms arise. Anyone with queries may contact the company at 909-563-3090 between 8 am and 5 pm Pacific, Monday to Friday. The FDA will continue oversight and monitor any additional consumer reports or updates.
Yahoo
21-07-2025
- Health
- Yahoo
Ice cream recall: Bars sold in 23 states including Alabama pose listeria risk
More than 100,000 ice cream bars produced by Rich's Ice Cream, including ones sold in Alabama, have been recalled over concerns of potential listeria contamination. The Food and Drug Administration Authority (FDA) announced July 17 that Florida-based Rich's Ice Cream Co. is recalling select products due to potential listeria monocytogenes contamination. The recall, which impacts lot number 24351 through lot 25156 was initiated on June 27, according to the FDA notice and is classified as Class II with a total of 110,292 cases potentially affected. A Class II recall is "a situation in which use of, or exposure to, a violative product may cause temporary or medically reversible adverse health consequences or where the probability of serious adverse health consequences is remote," the FDA website states. USA TODAY was unable to reach Rich's Ice Cream for comment on July 21. Which Rich Ice Cream products are included in the recall? See list The affected products, sold in multiple states, according to the FDA advisory, include: Chocolate Crunch Cake Bars Strawberry Shortcake Bars, Rich Bars Crumbled Cookie Bars Orange Cream Bars Fudge Frenzy Bars Cotton Candy Twirl Bars Savagely Sour Blue Raspberry Bars Savagely Sour Cherry Bars Cool Watermelon Bars The frozen treats were individually packaged in plastic bags and sold in master cases. In Alabama: First Watch plans for dozens of new restaurants in 2025. Here's what to know in Alabama Which states are impacted by the recall? See list The affected products were distributed across 23 states, according to the FDA notice, including: Arizona Alabama Ohio California Pennsylvania Georgia New York New Jersey Florida Texas Virginia Illinois Missouri Massachusetts Tennessee Iowa South Carolina Oregon Oklahoma Nevada Louisiana Wisconsin Nebraska They were also sold in Nassau, the capital of The Bahamas. More: Waffle House drops egg surcharge: Are egg prices going down? What to know in Alabama What should you do if you purchased the affected products? FDA and Rich Ice Cream Co. have not yet specified what remedies are available for customers. Rich Ice Cream Co. did not immediately reply to USA TODAY's request for a statement and more information on the recall. Customers, meanwhile, can visit Rich Ice Cream Co.'s website for more information and to contact the company. Listeria poisoning symptoms Listeriosis, or listeria poisoning, is a foodborne bacterial infection most commonly caused by the bacterium listeria monocytogenes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is considered a serious condition and can be dangerous or life-threatening, especially to older adults, people with weak immune systems, and pregnant women. Listeria is the third leading cause of death from foodborne illness in the U.S., according to the CDC. The agency estimates that the disease impacts 1,600 Americans each year, with approximately 260 people dying from those infections. Symptoms include, per the CDC: Fever Muscle aches Headache Stiff neck Confusion Loss of balance Convulsions Diarrhea Other gastrointestinal symptoms Miscarriage, stillbirth, premature delivery and/or life-threatening infection of newborn infants Death People in higher-risk categories who experience flu-like symptoms within two months after eating contaminated food should seek medical care. Contributing: Natalie Neysa Alund, USA TODAY Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at sshafiq@ and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rich's Ice Cream recalls 100,000 ice cream bars, including in Alabama Solve the daily Crossword


India Today
09-07-2025
- Business
- India Today
OpenAI locks down: ChatGPT-maker adding biometric checks to guard AI secrets from spies, report says
OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is stepping up its internal security in a big way, following fears that rivals, especially foreign ones, may be trying to steal its technology. According to a report by the Financial Times, OpenAI has introduced new security rules and systems, including fingerprint scans for office access and tight controls on who can see or talk about its most sensitive work. The move comes after OpenAI accused Chinese AI firm DeepSeek of copying its AI technology through unauthorised model distillation techniques. advertisementOpenAI has reportedly introduced biometric access controls, like fingerprint scanners -- for certain areas of its offices. Data centres have also seen tighter security, and the company has brought in cybersecurity experts with defence backgrounds to help secure its operations. To add to this, the company has reportedly also started to isolate its most valuable technologies on computers that are never connected to the internet. It is apparently also operating under a 'deny-by-default' internet policy, which means no systems or software can connect to outside networks unless specifically approved. In addition to that, OpenAI has rolled out strict new 'information tenting' policies, which are designed to keep projects highly compartmentalised. For example, during the development of OpenAI's o1 model, which was codenamed 'Strawberry', only select employees were allowed to discuss the project, and only in private areas. Others working nearby were kept completely in the dark, and even casual office conversations were restricted. One employee told the Financial Times, 'You either had everything or nothing.' Earlier this year, DeepSeek shocked the industry by releasing a powerful AI model that rivalled the likes of ChatGPT and Gemini – except, it was built at less than half the cost of these Google and OpenAI models. As the Chinese model began to pick up popularity, OpenAI shared its claims saying that DeepSeek may have used 'distillation' techniques – where a smaller AI model is trained to copy the behaviour of a larger, more advanced one – to recreate its technology at a fraction of the cost. OpenAI shared these claims earlier this year. The company eventually said that it has evidence that DeepSeek copied its technology. Though DeepSeek did not respond to the accusation, the incident reportedly sparked serious changes at OpenAI. Notably, distillation is a common machine learning practice, but OpenAI says it violates its terms of service when done using ChatGPT's outputs. It is a bit like copying a famous artist's painting, brushstroke for brushstroke, without permission. Do you note the irony?While these changes began quietly last year, they reportedly accelerated after DeepSeek's release in January caused alarm in tech circles and raised concerns about how a lesser-known company could build such capable AI models so quickly.- Ends


Time of India
08-07-2025
- Business
- Time of India
Fingerprint scans, military experts and more: How and why ChatGPT-maker OpenAI is tightening security at the company
ChatGPT-maker OpenAI has overhauled its security operations to protect its valuable intellectual property from corporate espionage , a report has said. These enhanced measures come amid claims of the artificial intelligence (AI) giant being targeted by Chinese rivals like DeepSeek that garnered significant attention in early 2025 for its high-performing and cost-effective AI models, particularly its chatbot (DeepSeek-V3) and reasoning model (DeepSeek-R1). Citing sources close to the organisation, a report by The Financial Times claims that OpenAI began bolstering its security last year, the urgency intensified after Chinese AI startup DeepSeek released a rival model in January. Why OpenAI is tightening security of its data OpenAI claimed that DeepSeek had improperly copied its models using a technique known as "distillation" to create their AI system – an incident 'prompted OpenAI to be much more rigorous,' said one person close to its security team. The company is said to be 'aggressively' expanding its security personnel and practices, including its cybersecurity teams. How OpenAI is tightening security The company has implemented stricter controls on sensitive information and enhanced staff vetting in recent months. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like La mejor alarma arrasa en España, no vas a creer este precio Securitas Alarma Más información Undo Stricter policies, known as information "tenting," have been in place at their San Francisco offices since last summer. These policies significantly reduce the number of people who can access crucial information about technologies like algorithms and new products. For instance, during the development of their "Strawberry" (codenamed o1) model, staff had to confirm that other employees were part of the "Strawberry tent" before discussing the project in communal areas. Last October, the company hired Dane Stuckey as its new chief information security officer, who works alongside Matt Knight, OpenAI's vice-president of security products. Knight has been developing ways to leverage OpenAI's large language models to enhance its defenses against cyberattacks. Retired US Army General Paul Nakasone has also been appointed to OpenAI's board last year to help oversee its cybersecurity defenses. AI Masterclass for Students. Upskill Young Ones Today!– Join Now