Cell Phone Group Sues San Francisco Over Radiation Law 242
crimeandpunishment writes "The wireless industry wants to put San Francisco's cell phone radiation law on hold. An industry trade group filed a lawsuit Friday trying to stop the law, which requires cell phone stores to display how much radio energy each phone emits. The group says the law, which is the first of its kind in the country, supersedes the authority of the Federal Communications Commission, and will mislead consumers into thinking one phone is safer than another."
What science is behind this? (Score:3, Insightful)
At some point you stop and realize that some of these people are out after a power trip and have no interest the public welfare. I consider myself pretty pro-consumer, usually support class actions and that kind of thing, but I look at this and have to ask 'what science is behind this?'
Seriously, I want these cell phone fearing Luddites to fail in a public way, to be exposed to the world for the scam artists that they are. Why? Because Luddites like these make normal pro-consumer people look like nut-cases by association. Just like Greenpeace has done more environmental harm than any company in history with their self righteous and reckless actions.
Makes me wish the judge could pass the following sentence in court "Luddites be gone, back to your cave and never to see civilization again"
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Just like Greenpeace has done more environmental harm than any company in history with their self righteous and reckless actions.
Citation needed. If you can make me believe that they've done more damage than Monsanto, Union Carbide, or BP, then you can probably make me believe anything. I'm willing to believe they're a bunch of idiots for the most part, but that doesn't make them more damaging. Mostly they want people to not do stuff.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't have time to find a citation at the moment, but I'll lay out the math for you. Take the pre-nuclear scare rate of building nuclear power plants. That number gives you a ratio to the power grid and power needs. Extend that ratio to what it would be today if Greenpeace hadn't killed nuclear power plants in 70's.
Now realize that instead of everyone singing kumbyah and living in caves they decided to be part of civilization instead. Now realize that their power came from coal burning power plants instead of the nuclear power plants that would have built in their place.
Realize that the average coal plant releases more radiation into the atmosphere every year than three mile island did in it's meltdown. Take the radiation, the sulfur and all the other pollutants that were put into our environment by coal power plants. Add those numbers up, add up the number of injuries, add up the wanton devastation caused by things like mountain top mining and the reclassification of streams to no longer be wetlands. The coal industry today would be dead and buried if it wasn't for Greenpeace.
Run the numbers for the last several decades, let the math speak for itself. Do the same for places like Germany where Greenpeace has done even more damage to the environment. I then challenge you to find any company anywhere in history that comes anywhere near that.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't have time to find a citation at the moment, but I'll lay out the math for you. Take the pre-nuclear scare rate of building nuclear power plants. That number gives you a ratio to the power grid and power needs. Extend that ratio to what it would be today if Greenpeace hadn't killed nuclear power plants in 70's.
False dichotomy. PV solar panels were known to repay the energy cost of their production in eight years or less in the 1970s, and vertical-axis wind turbines were used by ancient Romans to pump water uphill (with an Archimedes screw.) Meanwhile, the plants that they were railing against probably should NOT be built; they're all extremely antiquated designs which unnecessarily produce large amounts of waste. I am against building any plants that don't involve fuel reprocessing, myself. That doesn't mean I'm pro-coal. You're saying that since the evil fuckers who run the power monopolies will only consider building shitty nuke plants that it's Greenpeace's fault that we don't put any genuinely cleaner power production online and I just can't agree with you.
Run the numbers for the last several decades, let the math speak for itself.
Since your entire argument is based on a bogus premise, math isn't really the problem here.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
The only false dichotomy here is the one you just presented. Solar panels were not viable for any widespread usage back in the 70's. They are only now starting to become viable, and even then only with significant government subsidies. Look at the public subsidies for solar power in places like Germany and Spain and you'll see that their solar panels have come at a very expensive cost. I say this as someone who likely put solar panels on my own house in the next couple of years.
Solar power in most environments only supplies spot power, much like wind power. They typically do very little when the sun is down (molten salt solutions that allow for night time use are just now coming into use). In case you haven't noticed society needs power outside of those times it is sunny or windy.
Certainly nuclear power plants should reprocess fuel. Your point about plants is moot though as greenpeace has consistently managed to kill funding for new and improved designs across different nations for decades. Greenpeace has never invested a single dollar into renewable energies, (you know trying to solve these problems) instead choosing that they prefer 'direct action' and political influence. You still haven't run the math, I think your afraid of the answers you'll get.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Solar panels were not viable for any widespread usage back in the 70's (sic). They are only now starting to become viable, and even then only with significant government subsidies
Photovoltaic solar panels for power generation? Sure... Solar panels to heat/cool your home and your water? That science has been around for hundreds of years...
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
That's because Greenpeace is all about attention whoring instead of actually improving anything. I watched a few years ago as they bashed Apple constantly for their environmental policies. For as long as I can remember, Apple has been several years ahead of pretty much everybody in the industry in terms of reduction of ha
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe if you lived fifty or a hundred years earlier you might understand...
Were you alive and sentient 50 or 100 years ago? If not, then you just said that you aren't qualified to have an opinion on this matter.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps these fall outside of your knowledge, but there are advanced techniques such as reading things that were written at the time and talking to old people that can be used to bring the past to life.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
"That number gives you a ratio to the power grid and power needs. Extend that ratio to what it would be today if Greenpeace hadn't killed nuclear power plants in 70's."
Greenpeace? You're giving them way too much credit.
Greenpeace didn't kill nuclear plants in the 1970s, Three Mile Island did and Chernobyl after that. Yes, I'm well aware that Three Mile Island didn't release much radioactive material (the containment structure worked) and Chernobyl was an inherently unsafe design (and had precious little c
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't have time to find a citation at the moment, but I'll lay out the math for you.
[...]
Now realize that instead [...] Now realize that their power [...]
Realize that the average [...]
Sir, your post is simply WILD SPECULATION, nothing else. Now realize that Greenpace has been traditionally quite strong in France for example (and still is). And look how they destroyed the nuclear industry in France...
Now lets look at Germany, that started investing in green technologies decades ago. They were one of the few countries with a long term vision of becoming world leaders in these technologies as demand for them grows. Today, along with Japan, they are there, and already started to reap the be
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Google, it is your friend. Logic, you can learn it. Math, it has power, doesn't follow politics and can free your mind. Quit being a tool and open your damn mind already.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
They may not have a direct relationship to coal, but they do their damnest to sway public opinion against nuclear power using outdated facts from the 70s. The fliers they have handed out on that shiny glossy paper that definitely w
Re: (Score:2)
I'm no friend of greenpeace but pre-Chernobal the movie China syndrome [wikipedia.org] did more to kill nukes than GP, TMI, or anything else. For most of the seventies GP were fighting atmospheric testing (a GoodThingTM). Somewhere in the 80's the luddites staged a coup, by the mid 90's the original (scientificly minded) members had resigned, totally disgusted by the anti-science claptrap spewing forth from the organisation they had helped to created.
BTW: The
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
"Run the numbers for the last several decades, let the math speak for itself."
Yes, why don't we. Ever hear of WPPS? AKA Whoops? (http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&File_Id=5482). They started construction of five nuclear power plants in Washington State in 1971. They managed to complete one reactor in 1984. They defaulted on 2.25 billion in bonds in 1982. The court case was settled in 1995. From the link:
"Several factors combined to ruin construction schedules and to driv
Antenna in the sky: 1,218,000,000,000,000 Watts (Score:2)
But nuclear radiation is off-topic.
Those who are concerned about the radiation from cell phone antennas should think about the 1,218,000,000,000,000 Watts [wikipedia.org] of electromagnetic radiation the earth receives continuously from that big antenna in the sky, the Sun.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree wholeheartedly. These folks are exposed to electromagnetic radiation on all sides, every day of their lives. They get it from the power lines, their appliances, and every other powered device on the planet. Unless they live in a cave (cage), these folks are deluding themselves. Of course video's like these don't help the stupidity...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GQr6SbYpTYM&feature=related [youtube.com]
These guys were even too dumb to use a hotplate. Looks like they used a lighter instead ;)
Re: (Score:2)
Hah ;) Good point!
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
You're wrong. Shielding which is effective against high frequency electric fields can also be effective against high frequency magnetic fields. The changing magnetic field induces eddy currents in the shielding which creates opposing magnetic fields, shaping and directing the intruding magnetic field.
Lower magnetic fields can also be shaped with high permeability materials.
Here is a helpful link which explains the issues surrounding electric/magnetic shielding in more detail.
http://www.cvel.clemson.edu/ [clemson.edu]
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it's true that it may cause people to choose one phone over another, but it's just a simple fact about the phone. The "hypocritical luddites" can have a phone that has less "radio radiation" and anyone that knows better can still buy whatever phone they like. It's the same argument used against putting GMO labels on food. If it's something the consumer wants to know about, even if misguided, who are we to tell them "it's not important". Yes it can be used to spread FUD and yes it has adverse effects, but in general giving the consumer more information about a product is a good thing for the market.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
The only problem is where do you draw the line, how much science does there need to be to justify having it at all?
None. If there's reason to believe that people would like to be able to discriminate between products containing or not containing ground up spiders then it's legitimate to require labels to let them make the choice, regardless of the health benefits or lack of health problems associated with ground up spiders. Same goes for any other aspect of a product. When there's enough interest to act is a political decision, not a scientific one.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:4, Insightful)
Think about your statement. If you have to list not only all the real, but additionally all the imagined hazards, or not just the contents, but the imagined non-contents, of a product, the packaging/labeling will have to be more mass than the product itself. At what point is this an unfair onus on the producer? Equal protection under the law implies that producers should have rights, too.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
Think about your statement.
Thanks for the suggestion but I actually thought about it before (and while) making it. (And yet I didn't reach the same conclusion as you - how could such a thing happen unless I wasn't thinking???)
If you have to list not only all the real, but additionally all the imagined hazards, or not just the contents, but the imagined non-contents, of a product, the packaging/labeling will have to be more mass than the product itself.
You don't have to list all the real or imagined hazards or contents and imagined non-contents. You have to list the particular qualities that the regulators / legislators have identified as having to be identified. As far as I can tell that's not a particularly extensive list. The real issue is what you have aga
Re: (Score:2)
This SAR value is a completely imagined hazard. Listing it only serves to confuse consumers who do not have a technical understanding of what the value means. It sets a poor precedence that it's OK to force companies to list imagined hazards on their products in addition to real hazards. The list of imagined hazards is infinite. I really don't need my new phone to have a label on it stating that 99.9999% of phones do not contain a deadly cobra.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
None. If there's reason to believe that people would like to be able to discriminate between products containing or not containing ground up spiders then it's legitimate to require labels to let them make the choice
Nonsense. If a potential customer wants to know if there are ground up spiders in a product, they can: a) write the manufacturer and ask, or b) run their own tests. If they aren't willing to do that, then they don't care enough. Requirements on labeling should only be for compelling safety needs, like warnings that special training is required to use the product in question.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
There's not enough evidence of harm to warrant a ban, but some people will have concern.
To touch on the related GMO food issue. I avoid where possible get buy GMO food because I think it leads to a healthier food ecosystem, not because I'm afraid that I'll turn into a mutant.
It is a disclosure requirement, let people (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
So, you're suggesting we should have labels specifying the number of ponies killed in the manufacture of anything, eh? After all, more information is a good thing for the market.
Face it, the RF emissions of a cell phone aren't "more information", but rather just more FUD to herd the idiots...
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:4, Insightful)
This isn't more detailed, it's just more strict, but unlike the recent pollution spat in California, there is no proof that radiation from a cell phone is harmful (as opposed to auto emissions). There is a reason that the FCC has jurisdiction here. It would make things nearly impossible for a company to sell a product at a national level if every state had different standards. Imagine if USB devices had different standards for 50 states. It would be an absolute nightmare, and not only for the vendor.
If the radiation level is far below the 'dangerous' level, then how is it even relevant unless they are measuring every bit of EM they are receiving from every electronic device they are exposed to? If the science behind a municipal decision isn't sound, but it gives the impression that it is, it can create FUD just by it's existence. In some cases, it is necessary to have standards at a federal level.
http://gov.ca.gov/press-release/8047/ [ca.gov]
In the case of auto/pollution standards stink (no pun intended) raised in California, there is an obvious public benefit to stricter standards, which California felt wasn't being met at the federal level. There are obvious health risks to exposure to those emissions, and countless studies proving that. Cell phones, on the contrary, have zero proof that they are dangerous to the public health.
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the same argument used against putting GMO labels on food. If it's something the consumer wants to know about, even if misguided, who are we to tell them "it's not important". Yes it can be used to spread FUD and yes it has adverse effects, but in general giving the consumer more information about a product is a good thing for the market.
Only if the information is not misleading, or misrepresenting the facts. In this case it seems very clear to me that putting labels on cell phones that tell people the emissions levels of the phone is extremely misleading. It conveys the idea that radio emissions are somehow harmful, which they aren't. Consumers in general are very poorly informed, and DON'T know anything about the actual studies which have shown no even correlation between cell phones and disease. So this idea that's out their that people can "make their own decision!" is just plain wrong, since the vast vast majority of consumers don't have the required knowledge or background to start making those informed decisions.
Remember, information and labels exist in a context, not an information vacuum. How many products tell you about how they have "more fiber" or "less sodium" or simply the required nutrition labels? All those labels are regulated by the FDA and have to have some scientific backing for health effects. The point being, people have come to expect that labeling the product itself has backing, ESPECIALLY if it's a government mandate like in SF.
Bullocks! (Score:3, Interesting)
Bullocks! Customers do have a right to this information! Companies can use the label to educate by just showing a comparison of how much radiation a person gets from:
If Companies cannot spin this, it is their own damn fault. Not the consumers. Information wants to be FREEEEEEE and this is an excellent way to *start* educating the public. With the precedent that Phillip-Morris set of hiding infor
Re: (Score:2)
Information wants to be FREEEEEEE and this is an excellent way to *start* educating the public.
Its like making the automobile manufacturers foot the bill to educate the public on the real and imaginary dangers of smoking (they have that lighter!)
Re:What science is behind this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Even worse, this is an area where there is a significant faction convinced that the truth is being covered up, much like the tobacco companies successfully did for years with the relationship between smoking and cancer. The prior success of this strategy by powerful corporate interests means that people have a justifiable lack of faith in the published science.
So give people the information, let them make their own decisions, and if they don't get cancer while the rest of us do, they can say I told you so, and the rest of us can feel like the idiot smokers with lung cancer did. Or not. Whichever outcome happens, the labeling seems like a minimally intrusive requirement.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Except that it really is a bunch of FUD. The problem is that people latch on to the word "radiation," decide that they know everything, and then stop listening. Paranoid visions of Chernobyl have nothing to do with cell phones. If we can reasonably assume that the general public isn't sufficiently educated to understand the difference, then we wouldn't be responsible to start putting radiation labels on things when we know it will be misinterpreted over and over.
This keeps cropping up in a legal context for
Re: (Score:2)
An educated consumer might even use the amount of radiation output by a cell phone to buy one with higher output, because a stronger transmitter may mean fewer dropped calls.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually an educated consumer is bad for the market as it functions today. Just like it's bad for today's politician who depends on deceit and FUD to win the election. There's a reason they're making all those cutbacks in education.
Re: (Score:2)
A few years ago there was the scare about monosodium glutamate (MSG). In my country some food companies started writing on the packaging "does not contain MSG!". A few consumer advocacy groups made them stop it because it misled the public. This message made people think that other brands has MSG and that MSG is harmful, when in fact there was no evidence to that affect.
The problem with warnings like that is that people tend to use them as facts to support their false beliefs. It is already hard enough to c
Re: (Score:2)
When a gov sends out agents with limpet mines and then the US and UK say very little to condemn the act
As for the SAR numbers, they are usually in the fine print or website, booklets ect.
If its a safe product and the numbers are in the open why not just allow consumers to select a phone after seeing a SAR value?
What other data could be a
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I absolutely agree with what you've written about Greenpeace. Coal and oil power plants should be a tiny minority by now: almost all of the electrical energy used throughout the world should come from nuclear power stations. But alas it is not so. Greenpeace could have lobbied for nuclear power, but it didn't. It did its damndest to stop it.
On a related matter, I was dismayed to discover that the UK's Green Party are still fanatically anti-nuclear, in a way that many environmentalists have ceased to be, s
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
There's really no science behind it at all. This isn't about science, it's about ignorance and fear. It's nothing new, really.
In a very real sense all these crazy "OMG CELL PHONES! POWER LINES! VACCINE!" hysterics reflects the high rate of change in our society and peoples inability to keep up with it all. The average person has NO idea what the electro-magnetic spectrum is or about the nature of knowledge. The cliche's tossed about are along the lines of "well.. they just don't know everything about t
Re: (Score:2)
When the cell phone radiation turns your family and neighbors into flesh-eating zombies, those Luddites will be laughing their asses off in your face. Until you eat THEIR faces.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No. He couldn't. There is none. There is, however, peer reviewed, collaborated, research disproving the hypothesis that radiation from cellphones causes cancer.
Re: (Score:2)
Certain is there is any health risk to using cell phones it is rather small, but who are to to decide what information people should have? Let them decide, and act accordingly.
Absolutely. Likewise, the risk that some god somewhere might find your cellphone personally offensive and condemn you to the pits of hell is rather small, but who are we to decide what information people should have? I demand that every cellphone carry a sticker stating "WARNING: This phone may cause third degree burns and eternal damnation."
Makes sense (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Acetaldehyde, acrylamide, acrylonitril, abortion, agent orange, alar, alcohol, air pollution, aldrin, alfatoxin, arsenic, arsine, asbestos, asphalt fumes, atrazine, AZT, baby food, barbequed meat, benzene, benzidine, benzopyrene, beryllium, beta-carotene, betel nuts, birth control pills, bottled water, bracken, bread, breasts, brooms, bus stations, calcium channel blockers, cadmium, candles, captan, carbon black, carbon tetrachloride, careers for women, ca
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Did you even look at this graph before posting it?
How much *ENERGY* the phone radiate? (Score:2, Insightful)
They are trying to say the phones have to have a label about how much energy they radiate? What, are the stores supposed to have some magical ability to integrate over all time including the future the amount of POWER the phone puts out?
OR, can the phone sellers say the phone emits zero energy, arguing that at the time the sticker was applied, the phone was off and thus integrating over the time to apply the sticker the phone emitted no RF.
And are they defining the bandwidth over which this is being reporte
Re: (Score:2)
I'll answer in the form of three abbreviations.
FFS, RTFA: SAR [wikipedia.org].
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:How much *ENERGY* the phone radiate? (Score:4, Funny)
Exactly what I do. I carry around one of those demo units from the store that has no electronics in it. I can open it in public and look cool and hip, and never have to recharge it or get exposed to artificial unnatural radiation (the natural kind can't hurt me, or so I've read on many reputable internet sites, for example that timecube one).
OK, I see their point (Score:2)
Then demand that the sentence "...levels of radiation indicated do not necessarily mean one phone is safer than the other" be placed somewhere in the shop.
I usually see something similar on TV where some statement to the effect that "the opinions expressed during the program are not necessarily the opinions of the broadcaster" feature prominently after each commercial break.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, like the "no verified therapeutic claims" you see on quack-medicine advertisements.
You know the one written in dark gray on a black background in a 6 point font at the very bottom of the screen that flashes up for like 0.25 seconds ?
Oh noes! Radiation! (Score:5, Insightful)
I was at the Home Depot today and saw you can buy a device which emits TWO HUNDRED AND FIFTY WATTS of ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION! Oooga boooga! The radiation is gonna git ya!
Link to the monstrosity in question: Home Depot Death Ray [homedepot.com]
It's worse than you think (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
OT:
Those HDDRs are pretty decent worklights. The body is made of aluminum (not some zinc-ish smegalloy), as we found out when we TIG welded a cracked one.
Re: (Score:2)
Exquise me? (yeah, not excuse, exquise). Heat in vacuum of space can only be really dissipated through electromagnetic radiation.
Re: (Score:2)
First, the filament is physically touching parts of the bulb. Second, modern incandescent bulbs are filled with argon and nitrogen to displace the oxygen rather than evacuating it. AFAIK, most bulbs haven't been vacuum tubes since the teens or maybe the twenties (almost a hundred years ago).
On average, only about 10% of an incandescent bulb's energy is emitted as visible light.
Re: (Score:2)
Oh, on rereading the GP post, I see what you're saying now. You meant that the emission is infrared. That's true for some of it. Not sure what portion.
Re:Oh noes! Radiation! (Score:4, Insightful)
In any case, consumer choice and information is a good thing.
It's a good thing when the information is relevant, sure. It's a bad thing when you're misleading people. Next you'll be wanting warning about autism placed on all vaccines. Sorry, but when your "information" is only there as a way of furthering the agenda of insane conspiracy theorists, it's definitely not a "Good Thing".
Re: (Score:2)
Straw man much?
An almost reasonable analogy would be wanting to make available, say, how much mercury is in each dose of vaccine. Like a SAR value, that would be a simple, neutral statemen
I just want to watch the video (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I just want to watch the video (Score:4, Informative)
Where someone tries to explain the difference between ionizing and non-ionizing radiation and specific absorption rate
Fire a gun at a tree. What happens to the tree? Your bullet chips a little bit off. If you just do it once, well, the tree can deal with it. Do it quickly enough and you'll start to leave bullets wedged in the tree and the tree will wind up all knotted and twisted in that area. Get out the machine gun and you'll cut the tree in half and kill the tree. This is similar to your body and ionising radiation.
Now replace the gun with a tennis racquet and lay your best serve on that tree. What happens to the tree? Nothing. Get your best auto-ball-server-machine and pummel that tree for a week. It might end up a little bruised, but if you stop, it'll be as good as new in a week and that's about it. This is similar to your body and non-ionising radiation.
Why isn't there an App for that? (Score:5, Funny)
cellphone laws (Score:5, Interesting)
A law requiring all cellphones to have a warning label:
"use of this device while driving a motor vehicle is dangerous, and against the law in most states"
Or something, since cellphones have killed more people that way than by the radiation they emit.
Re: (Score:2)
Not most.
Only SEVEN states have a primary cell phone driving ban for licensed adult drivers, and only ONE has a secondary ban.
You might not be aware of it, but life does exist outside California. There are cities and towns and people live in them. Many of us even drive cars. Something new every day, eh?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Why? Because if you use it while you're driving, it might explode or something? Otherwise, the cell phones don't kill anybody. The drivers are the ones that kill other people.
Total energy, hmm? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
bring it on (Score:5, Funny)
i'm eager to hear hipsters arguing over who has fewer bars.
We've seen this before with electric blankets (Score:2)
The cell phone radiation scare reminds me so much of the AC power line scare of 15 years ago, which got to the point where people were seriously questioning whether electric blankets would give them cancer. Back at the height of that scare, my friends and I half-jokingly came up with the idea of marketing an electric blanket AC-to-DC rectifier. We had the TV commercial all figured out; the late night TV salesman would pass a field strength meter tuned to 60 Hz over a blanket, and show how the evil cancer-
Backwards. (Score:2)
> ...will mislead consumers into thinking one phone is safer than another.
No, it will mislead consumers into thinking one phone is more dangerous than another when there is, in fact, no danger at all from any of them.
Why the lawsuit? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why exactly is telling people MORE about the product they are buying a bad thing?
Sure just writing how many watts each phone emits might not reveal the whole picture, but the manufacturer can always include the frequency of the emissions and any other relevant information in the product description. It's not like the law prevents you from revealing anything except the power.
The manufacturer could also try to *gasp* educate the public - You have a study that shows the frequency of your phones emissions is not harmful while another phone will cause you to grow an extra ear within the next 2 years? Publish it, include it in your add campaign,... It might actually give you a bigger market share.
I don't see why any court should limit the amount of information customers have about products they are buying.
Re: (Score:2)
The manufacturer could also try to *gasp* educate the public - You have a study that shows the frequency of your phones emissions is not harmful while another phone will cause you to grow an extra ear within the next 2 years? Publish it, include it in your add campaign,... It might actually give you a bigger market share.
Because it's irrelevant. Keep in mind that we have neither a threat to health nor a public interested in the issue. I see no potential to increase market share nor further some other interest of the cell phone company and IMHO it provides an avenue for lawsuits (could be misinterpreted as proof that the cell phone maker knew EM radiation was a potential danger). In such circumstances, we're just increasing the cost of cell phones.
Because it is a bullshit scare tactic (Score:3, Insightful)
They know people will see "Radiation" and say "Oh shit it is going to kill me!" As the city council well demonstrated, people do not have a good understanding of different kinds of radiation. It will lead to consumer paranoia, perhaps lower sales, and worst of all bogus lawsuits. The hypochondriac types will feel sick, and blame the phones (this happens all the time with WiFi) and they'll want to sue.
Also there's a good possibility the label will be required to be done in a scary manner. So not something li
Re: (Score:2)
You can imagine the scene
Apple store flunky "Sorry Mr Fry you icorrectly answered the question on the inverse square law, Security please escort Mr. Fry out he is leaving”
Why fight it? (Score:2)
Why fight it? People just might seek out the phones with the strongest transmission numbers in effort to get better connections. :)
We may need a new rating (Score:2)
Just like nutrition info on food products (Score:2)
It should not be hard for the cell phone companies to come up with a method similar to the nutrition info you find on all food products. It's broken down in easy to understand terms. We all know junk-food is junk-food, but like anything else, there is a gradient which represents the degree of "bad". You can comparison shop and find out which can of tomato soup is going to be better for your health. Seems to me we should be able to compare products in the same way.
Sounds to me like the phone companies ar
Why not? (Score:3, Interesting)
Honestly, I want to know the power output of my phone - and the selectivity and sensitivity of the receiver as well.
At least with this law, consumers will have some indication of which phones are the most likely to drop calls. By measuring the emitted radiation (as opposed to the power put into the antenna), you get a better idea of how far from a cell tower you can be and still make calls.
Sure, maybe it does cause cancer; too bad there isn't any good scientific study showing such. If there was, Californians would have a lot bigger problems than warning labels.
Re:It's non-ionizing and harmless (Score:5, Interesting)
There's some evidence that high frequency noise or high frequency RF has biological effects even if it's non-ionizing. For example:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electronic_pest_control [wikipedia.org]
"A 2002 study by Genesis Laboratories Inc. does lend some credence to the ability of electronic repellent devices to repel certain pests in controlled environments. Preliminary study of white-footed mice behavior in the test apparatus demonstrated a significant preference for the non-activated chamber among both sexes."
Also, how do you think your microwave oven works? It uses dielectric heating to rapidly vibrate (and thereby heat) the water molecules in food. Guess what - dielectric heating works on you too, and there is no cut-off range; even low frequency RF has some dielectric heating effect on the water and some body tissues.
And dielectric heating can cause cataracts.
Just throwing some actual facts into this discussion.
Re: (Score:2)
You know what is going to heat up the tissue in your head a hell of a lot more than a cellphone? Stepping outside on a hot summer day.
OMG CANCER
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, how do you think your microwave oven works? It uses dielectric heating to rapidly vibrate (and thereby heat) the water molecules in food. Guess what - dielectric heating works on you too, and there is no cut-off range; even low frequency RF has some dielectric heating effect on the water and some body tissues. Just throwing some actual facts into this discussion. ...
Just throwing some actual facts into this discussion.
Right on man! Btw, did you know that your oven - you know, the normal kind that cooks food - emits infrared radiation? And your lighbulbs also emit infrared radiation? And there's no cutoff range; even low amounts of infrared radiation have some effects on water and some body tissues. You don't want to get cooked like a roast, do ya? Might wanna think about tossing out those bulbs.
Re: (Score:2)
but lower radiation also means safer to use
Is is wetter under water, if you're there when it rains?
Is it shorter to New York, than it is by a plane?
Between myself and I, I wonder who's the dumber
Is it hotter down south, than it is in the summer?
I'm a nut, I'm a nut ... I'm a nut
My live don't ever get in a rut, whoop-whoop-whoop-whoop
The head on my shoulders is sorta loose
And I ain't got the sense God gave a goose
Lord, I ain't crazy, but
etc. etc.
As there is no scientific evidence that the radiation emitted f
Re: (Score:2)
Could you clarify for me exactly what that sentence is trying to say?