unless it's in smoke detectors so you can sue someone if they fail (if you survive the fire) as these two pos brands are 'recommended for smoke detectors'
I have reasonable luck and better run with cheapies like Toshiba and Camelion and save a bundle
I even use Energizer Lithium 6F22 on smoke detectors, just for the hope that they can last longer
and I don't have to be waken up so frequently in the midnight by the chirps which I sometime can't even locate. Last time a smoke detector battery failed, I swapped 4 smoke detectors before pinpoint the exact one that chirped.
Toshiba, I don't think they sell to individuals, I think they are OEM only. At least I've never bought a single Toshiba separately.
In China we have a saying: once bitten by a snake, being afraid of ropes for life. I'm not broken enough not to afford lithium batteries, and I will stay away from alkaline for now.
I'll bet serious money there are fine dust particles or bits of insects and their deposits settled in those chirpers,
especially detectors near carpets and rugs, exterior entry doors and properties located near the sea or dusty dry areas
give them a careful blowout on all sides with a hair dryer on cold setting to clear out the sensor chamber/s or whatever it's called,
fit new batteries, check that BOTH the 9 volt connections are tight,
one may be a loose slacker and contribute to random chirping as the voltage decreases over time,
refit, do a test (hold your ears) and see what happens
This has worked for me EVERY TIME with different suspect detectors, new and vintage, 240 volt powered combos and cheapie battery ones,
all work flawlessly FOR ME (Disclaimer City) and family and friends
and frustrated clients in business premises that don't favor an expensive hard wired multiple swap out of detectors if they don't have to
FWIW my final pre-walk away testing involves burning something nearby to trigger the detector/s,
not just pressing the test button and knocking on wood
My phone calender reminds me to do battery swap outs twice a year, but usually once is enough unless the weather has been extreme
My multimeters score the old batteries which usually read 8.5 to 9 volts under load, good enough for a meter
Occasionally you can come across a NEW bad battery that leaks or crusts up after a few months,
sometimes the entire batch may be affected if bought at the same time
and very old suspect detectors past 10 years that fail the above, should be replaced anyway with an affordable reputable brand or store rebadge,
not a cheap no-name