
In response, Google has decided to remove the feature in its entirety. Rather than just making it easier for users to opt-out of having the calorie-burning information displayed, the tech behemoth has acquiesced to the demands of the offended -- even though giving that information could have actually helped people. While there may have been some "strong user feedback" as Google says, the truth is sometimes painful. Some have even gone so far as to say that the cupcake calorie counter was "unscientific" -- but that claim has no legs to stand on.
To many people, calories are just a number -- it can be hard to visualize how many calories are in food as well as exercise. Putting a face (or in this case, a cupcake) on the number of calories you're burning can be extremely helpful. In fact, studies have shown people respond better and make better choices when calorie numbers are equated to something else -- such as cupcakes. Shirley Cramer, chief executive of the Royal Society for Public Health, explained recently, "People find symbols much easier to understand than numerical information, and activity equivalent calorie labels are easy to understand, particularly for lower socioeconomic groups who often lack nutritional knowledge and health literacy."
Heaven forbid anyone under any circumstances actually becomes aware of how little exercise they're actually doing, right? The fact that people overestimate the number of calories they burn during exercise has also been well-documented. In one study, researchers found that normal-weight men and women overestimated their calorie expenditure during exercise by between 300 and 400 percent -- that is a huge difference.
Increasing awareness of how many calories you're actually burning, combined with more awareness of what's in your food, could in fact help people to exert greater control over their own health.
But instead of empowering people to make healthy lifestyle choices to support their well-being, Google has caved in to the hive-minded plague of offended social media crusaders. [Related: Learn more about the importance of a healthy lifestyle at Prevention.news.]
Sources for this article include:
DailyMail.co.uk
BBC.com
Immunologist: Pfizer, Moderna vaccines could cause long-term chronic illness
By News Editors // Share
By Arsenio Toledo // Share
YouTube deletes pro-life news site’s channel for coronavirus ‘misinformation’
By News Editors // Share
Google’s monopoly power allows it to weaponize data against its political opposition
By Ethan Huff // Share
Brain's electrical noise may explain communication struggles in autistic youths
By isabelle // Share
Pentagon to Study COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate Impact with Independent Panel
By morganverity // Share
PJM Auction Falls 6.8 Gigawatts Short of Reliability Target Amid Data Center Demand Surge
By edisonreed // Share
FTC Intensifies Enforcement of "Made in USA" Label Rules
By sterlingashworth // Share
Meta Accused of Using AI to Select Employees With Medical Conditions for Layoffs
By chasecodewell // Share
Israel's Deputy Foreign Minister Resigns Over Haredi Draft Law
By garrisonvance // Share