How We Review.

Most claims sound convincing. We slow them down.

At Uninfluenced Labs, every review starts with a simple question:
What does the evidence actually support — and what’s being overstated?

From there, we follow a consistent process designed to separate research-backed information from marketing-driven claims.

What we look at first

Before we dig into studies, we start with the claim itself.

We ask:

  • What is being promised?

  • Who is making the claim?

  • Is the language specific, or intentionally vague?

  • What assumptions are being made?

Many claims fall apart before evidence even enters the picture. If a claim can’t be clearly defined, it can’t be properly evaluated.

The evidence we prioritize

Not all evidence carries the same weight.

We focus primarily on:

  • systematic reviews and meta-analyses

  • large human studies

  • well-designed randomized controlled trials

  • consensus statements from credible scientific bodies

Animal studies, cell studies, and mechanistic theories are considered context, not conclusions. They can be interesting, but they’re rarely enough on their own.

When evidence is limited, mixed, or inconclusive, we say so clearly.

 

What we don’t rely on

We intentionally avoid using:

  • influencer testimonials

  • anecdotal success stories

  • brand-funded marketing summaries

  • cherry-picked study excerpts

  • “emerging science” without human data

If a claim depends more on persuasion than proof, that matters.

 

How we handle uncertainty

Not every question has a clean answer.

When evidence is:

  • mixed

  • incomplete

  • still evolving

we explain why — not just that it’s unclear.

We don’t try to force conclusions where they don’t exist. Uncertainty is part of honest evaluation, and pretending otherwise only adds to the noise.

 

Conflicts of interest and independence

Uninfluenced Labs does not accept payment for positive coverage.

If affiliate links or partnerships are present, they are:

  • clearly disclosed

  • never allowed to influence conclusions

  • separated from editorial decisions

Our reviews are written to stand on their own, regardless of whether a product is popular, profitable, or trending.

 

What a review is — and isn’t

Our reviews are meant to help you:

  • understand what a claim is actually supported by

  • recognize exaggeration or gaps in evidence

  • make more informed decisions

They are not:

  • medical advice

  • personal recommendations

  • instructions on what you “should” do

We focus on clarity, not persuasion.

 

Why this process matters

Marketing moves fast. Evidence doesn’t.

By slowing things down and showing how claims hold up under scrutiny, we aim to make it easier to navigate information that’s often designed to convince, not inform.

That’s the entire point of our review process — and why we’re transparent about how it works.

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