It's officially proven to not be safe. It's just that the official safe level lies around a daily consumption of slighly less than 5 liters of diet soda. I've not done some major checks but your link is including plenty of excessive dosage studies for example (aka what happens if we give 100 times above the recommended maximum?).
Of course those studies will say that it's bad.
It's depressive enough at it is without any conspiracy theories. The truth is that FDA and similar organisations can't keep up with proper checking of chemicals, so it becomes a "good enough" situation, where chemicals comes out before they're studied properly for long term, small dosage situations. In particular that cumulative effects between diffferent chemicals also occurs, but aren't really researched by the companies.
One major reason on why bromine compounds are so popular (they were even more popular, but a lot of uses are banned nowadays) is because bromine is a poisonous waste product. That poison effect seems to stick around, even in the compounds. If you don't recognize it, it's used in most flame retardants, among other uses.
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