How Cribnosh identifies important information about meals, creators, promotions, family features, safety notices, and automated assistance.
Last updated: 21 May 2026
This page explains the labels and markings that may appear in Cribnosh or alongside Cribnosh listings. Labels are used to help people understand the nature of food listings, creator information, commercial placements, family ordering states, support actions, and safety notices.
A label is not a substitute for reading the full meal description, allergen information, creator profile, order details, or applicable terms before making a decision.
Meal listings may include labels for allergens, dietary preferences, ingredients, cuisine, portion style, preparation notes, storage guidance, reheating guidance, and availability. Food information is supplied by creators and may be reviewed or supplemented by Cribnosh where appropriate.
Creator profiles or listings may show markings for creator role, onboarding status, compliance review, identity or business checks, kitchen or safety evidence, and temporary restrictions where a creator cannot currently sell.
If Cribnosh displays paid placements, sponsored offers, promoted creators, ads, affiliate links, or paid partnerships, we aim to mark them with clear terms such as Sponsored, Ad, Promoted, Paid partnership, or similar wording.
Shared or group ordering experiences may include labels showing organiser status, participant status, payment status, invite state, blocked order reasons, and adult responsibility for payment, delivery, and suitability.
Where recommendations, meal insights, search assistance, summaries, images, or support content are generated or materially assisted by automated systems, Cribnosh may mark those experiences as AI-assisted or provide contextual wording nearby.
Cribnosh may add warnings or notices for unavailable items, allergy-sensitive meals, delivery limitations, account restrictions, reported content, moderation outcomes, refunds, cancellations, or support actions.
Labels should be visible close to the relevant meal, creator, order, recommendation, advertisement, or support message.
Labels should use plain language where possible and avoid suggesting a guarantee unless Cribnosh has actually verified the underlying claim.
Dietary, allergy, safety, and compliance labels are intended to support informed decisions. They do not replace a user's responsibility to review meal details before ordering or consuming food.
If a label is missing, unclear, or appears inaccurate, users can report it for review.
If you believe a label, marking, ad disclosure, dietary tag, allergen note, creator status, or AI-assisted indication is missing or inaccurate, contact Cribnosh support with the listing, screen, order, or creator profile involved.
For more context, review our Terms, Privacy Policy, Data Protection, and Age Suitability pages.
Send the relevant listing, order, profile, or screenshot details to Cribnosh support.
How Cribnosh identifies important information about meals, creators, promotions, family features, safety notices, and automated assistance.
Last updated: 21 May 2026
This page explains the labels and markings that may appear in Cribnosh or alongside Cribnosh listings. Labels are used to help people understand the nature of food listings, creator information, commercial placements, family ordering states, support actions, and safety notices.
A label is not a substitute for reading the full meal description, allergen information, creator profile, order details, or applicable terms before making a decision.
Meal listings may include labels for allergens, dietary preferences, ingredients, cuisine, portion style, preparation notes, storage guidance, reheating guidance, and availability. Food information is supplied by creators and may be reviewed or supplemented by Cribnosh where appropriate.
Creator profiles or listings may show markings for creator role, onboarding status, compliance review, identity or business checks, kitchen or safety evidence, and temporary restrictions where a creator cannot currently sell.
If Cribnosh displays paid placements, sponsored offers, promoted creators, ads, affiliate links, or paid partnerships, we aim to mark them with clear terms such as Sponsored, Ad, Promoted, Paid partnership, or similar wording.
Shared or group ordering experiences may include labels showing organiser status, participant status, payment status, invite state, blocked order reasons, and adult responsibility for payment, delivery, and suitability.
Where recommendations, meal insights, search assistance, summaries, images, or support content are generated or materially assisted by automated systems, Cribnosh may mark those experiences as AI-assisted or provide contextual wording nearby.
Cribnosh may add warnings or notices for unavailable items, allergy-sensitive meals, delivery limitations, account restrictions, reported content, moderation outcomes, refunds, cancellations, or support actions.
Labels should be visible close to the relevant meal, creator, order, recommendation, advertisement, or support message.
Labels should use plain language where possible and avoid suggesting a guarantee unless Cribnosh has actually verified the underlying claim.
Dietary, allergy, safety, and compliance labels are intended to support informed decisions. They do not replace a user's responsibility to review meal details before ordering or consuming food.
If a label is missing, unclear, or appears inaccurate, users can report it for review.
If you believe a label, marking, ad disclosure, dietary tag, allergen note, creator status, or AI-assisted indication is missing or inaccurate, contact Cribnosh support with the listing, screen, order, or creator profile involved.
For more context, review our Terms, Privacy Policy, Data Protection, and Age Suitability pages.
Send the relevant listing, order, profile, or screenshot details to Cribnosh support.