Look at the (amusing) images on the website [5gbioshield.com]
They are not jamming anything. They are careful to note they are SHIELDING you from 5G. By way of a "wearable holographic nano-layer catalyser"...
That also expands depending on environment, again refer to images.:-)
Now you are argue about how much shielding a USB stick on your person might offer, as opposed to a full body aluminum suit. But it's not like they are doing anything illegal, just preying on the stupid and ignorant - a time honored profession.
A quick read suggests that they didn't claim anything that was false (I didn't check all their claims). It's pretty easy to honestly say something like "protects from all know harmful effects of 5G radiation" because there are no known harmful effects. It claims to work without using electricity. It claims to have been developed and certified by a particular scientist, which I didn't verify.
"The 5GBioShield makes it possible, thanks to a uniquely applied process of quantum nano-layer technology, to balance the imbalanced electric oscillations arising from all electric fog induced by all devices such as: laptops, cordless phones, wlan, tablets, etc.," the company says, adding that the USB stick "brings balance into the field at the atomic and cellular level restoring balanced effects to all harmful (ionized and non-ionized) radiation."
The USB stick apparently doesn't need to be plugged in to anything to work its magic. "It is always ON and working—that's why we used quantum nano-layer technology," the company says in an FAQ.
But the device allegedly produces a wider field of protection when it is plugged in. To answer the question of whether the stick needs to be "charged regularly," the FAQ says, "No—the input charge only expands the field effect from 4m radius to 20m + radius when plugged into an USB wall charger or a computer."
How many false claims just in these few paragraphs? You have to squint REALLY hard through solicitor-smeared glasses to claim this isn't outright fraud. It's a cheap 128MB USB stick with a small plastic crystal molded on the end, topped with a small sticker.
Marketers are very good at skirting the letter of the law when it comes to claims. Famous example, "New and Improved Foo", well they shrunk the fine print so they could expand it, that's new and an improvement for the makers of foo. If you were stupid enough to read that foo itself had improved, well we can't help that. As the other poster said, it really does protect against all known harmful effects of 5G radiation. It's just the buyers mistake in taking it the way that it appears instead of how it is. There's tons of marketers weasel words/phrases, legal the truth, but totally misleading.
I'm getting so many good ideas from this. Perhaps a Gaia frequency enhancer USB stick that you design to generate a magnetic field at quartz frequency. Just like the earth's natural protective, heling field....only stronger!! All true.
Jamming Radio Signals is Illegal (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not a jammer, it's a shield (Score:2)
Look at the (amusing) images on the website [5gbioshield.com]
They are not jamming anything. They are careful to note they are SHIELDING you from 5G. By way of a "wearable holographic nano-layer catalyser"...
That also expands depending on environment, again refer to images. :-)
Now you are argue about how much shielding a USB stick on your person might offer, as opposed to a full body aluminum suit. But it's not like they are doing anything illegal, just preying on the stupid and ignorant - a time honored profession.
Re: (Score:2)
Not doing anything illegal? We apparently have very different definitions for that term. They're making easily disproved, fraudulent claims.
Re: It's not a jammer, it's a shield (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
"The 5GBioShield makes it possible, thanks to a uniquely applied process of quantum nano-layer technology, to balance the imbalanced electric oscillations arising from all electric fog induced by all devices such as: laptops, cordless phones, wlan, tablets, etc.," the company says, adding that the USB stick "brings balance into the field at the atomic and cellular level restoring balanced effects to all harmful (ionized and non-ionized) radiation."
The USB stick apparently doesn't need to be plugged in to anything to work its magic. "It is always ON and working—that's why we used quantum nano-layer technology," the company says in an FAQ.
But the device allegedly produces a wider field of protection when it is plugged in. To answer the question of whether the stick needs to be "charged regularly," the FAQ says, "No—the input charge only expands the field effect from 4m radius to 20m + radius when plugged into an USB wall charger or a computer."
How many false claims just in these few paragraphs? You have to squint REALLY hard through solicitor-smeared glasses to claim this isn't outright fraud. It's a cheap 128MB USB stick with a small plastic crystal molded on the end, topped with a small sticker.
Re: It's not a jammer, it's a shield (Score:2)
Marketers are very good at skirting the letter of the law when it comes to claims. Famous example, "New and Improved Foo", well they shrunk the fine print so they could expand it, that's new and an improvement for the makers of foo. If you were stupid enough to read that foo itself had improved, well we can't help that.
As the other poster said, it really does protect against all known harmful effects of 5G radiation. It's just the buyers mistake in taking it the way that it appears instead of how it is.
There's tons of marketers weasel words/phrases, legal the truth, but totally misleading.
Re: (Score:2)
I'm getting so many good ideas from this. Perhaps a Gaia frequency enhancer USB stick that you design to generate a magnetic field at quartz frequency. Just like the earth's natural protective, heling field....only stronger!! All true.
Re: (Score:2)
And, 10X better. (Just don't say better then what).