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Wireless Networking Medicine The Courts Science

French Woman Gets €800/month For Electromagnetic-Field 'Disability' 456

An anonymous reader writes: If you were dismayed to hear Tuesday's news that a school is being sued over Wi-Fi sickness, you might be even more disappointed in a recent verdict by the French judicial system. A court based in Toulouse has awarded a disability claim of €800 (~$898) per month for three years over a 39-year-old woman's "hypersensitivity to electromagnetic waves." Robin Des Toits, an organization that campaigns for "sufferers" of this malady, was pleased: "We can no longer say that it is a psychiatric illness." (Actually, we can and will.) The woman has been living in a remote part of France's south-west mountains with no electricity around. She claims to be affected by common gadgets like cellphones.
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French Woman Gets €800/month For Electromagnetic-Field 'Disability'

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  • by MightyMartian ( 840721 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @10:49AM (#50409909) Journal

    Subject says it all. It really is time to start taking lawyers and other bottom feeders to task. Mentally ill people should be treated for their paranoia, not have it confirmed.

    • by thedonger ( 1317951 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @10:59AM (#50410015)

      Subject says it all. It really is time to start taking lawyers and other bottom feeders to task. Mentally ill people should be treated for their paranoia, not have it confirmed.

      I'm just happy to see it happen somewhere other than the US. Turns out other countries have nuts and greedy lawyers, too.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Adambomb ( 118938 )

      Wonko the Sane had it right, time to live outside the Asylum.

    • Subject says it all. It really is time to start taking lawyers and other bottom feeders to task. Mentally ill people should be treated for their paranoia, not have it confirmed.

      I have no problem with the lady getting assistance, but unfortunately the courts think they or a jury can decide what the cause is.

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        Subject says it all. It really is time to start taking lawyers and other bottom feeders to task. Mentally ill people should be treated for their paranoia, not have it confirmed.

        I have no problem with the lady getting assistance, but unfortunately the courts think they or a jury can decide what the cause is.

        Based on just the title, I had no problem with it either. My first thought was how nice it must be to live in a civilized country that treats severe mental illnesses as a legitimate disability.

    • Yep, Lawyers are a huge part of the problem.

    • by Luthair ( 847766 )
      One wonders why the individual wasn't subjected to double blind testing to determine whether she qualifies for assistance.
    • by captnjohnny1618 ( 3954863 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @11:13AM (#50410151)
      These people also "sensitive" to the following:

      data, facts, statistics, double blind studies, and science.

      ;-)
    • by jeffb (2.718) ( 1189693 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @12:05PM (#50410631)
      I have double-blind sensitivity syndrome, you insensitive clod!
  • Robin Des Toits, an organization that campaigns for "sufferers" of this malady, was pleased.

    But not probably as much as their lawyers.

  • by gsslay ( 807818 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @10:54AM (#50409961)

    I suffer from hyper-sensitivity to delusional stupidity. I'm living on the same planet as this woman and it's crippling me.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    What do you expect from a "modern" welfare state?

  • by goodmanj ( 234846 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @11:11AM (#50410129)

    See, this is why you can't give pseudoscience an inch. Every little success validates it in the eyes of its own practitioners, and legitimizes it in the eyes of the public, until society tumbles down the rabbit hole of paranoia and irrational fear of the harmless on one hand, and blind trust in actually harmful practices on the other hand.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      Ironically, what you're suggesting is decidedly anti-science -- replacing inquiry with dogmas and taboos.

      You're doing far more harm that good to your cause. You've already done more to bring about the apocalyptic scenario you described than that one French judge by outright rejecting science in the name of science.

      • What? No, I'm not saying we should discard pseudoscientific theories without inquiry. I'm saying that after we test them out and find them to be bullshit, as has been done hundreds of times for electromagnetic sensitivity, we should use these findings aggressively to make decisions rather than allowing rumor and intuition as equally valid forms of evidence.

  • by thinkwaitfast ( 4150389 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @11:11AM (#50410131)
    About 1kw/m^2 and a few hundred volts/m IIRC

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    • I am sensitive to the background radiation from the big bang will i qualify?

  • Now that they've started to gain ground, imagine the next steps: they start suing you because your Wi-Fi router is harming them, suing coffee shops and restaurants to remove Wi-Fi hotspots because of the harm it causes them, telecom companies to remove cell towers because it is harmful to them, etc. This will not end well...
    • Now that they've started to gain ground, imagine the next steps: they start suing you because your Wi-Fi router is harming them, suing coffee shops and restaurants to remove Wi-Fi hotspots because of the harm it causes them, telecom companies to remove cell towers because it is harmful to them, etc. This will not end well...

      Especially if they do get this classified as a disability and start trying to leverage Americans with Disabilities Act.

  • Particularly when combined with self-absorbed angst. Can I get a disability exemption from life? I'd like a weekly check.

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Friday August 28, 2015 @11:28AM (#50410289) Journal

    .... as long as the woman is getting mandatory psychological treatment.

    All available evidence on Electromagnetic sensitivity suggests that is actually a purely psychosomatic disorder, but belief is tremendously powerful thing and can produce real and measurable physiological changes in a person, causing immune reactions without any externally visible cause, change in hormone levels that should otherwise only be explainable by other external phenomonena, etc.

    Treating serious psychosomatic disorders requires the person to not just be aware that the problem is all in their own mind, but it also requires that a person be aware of some pathway to a solution to their apparent problem. I have heard it best described by one psychologist as (althouh I am paraphrasing here, this is not a direct quote) "there's nothing actually wrong with your hardware, but basically the software in your brain is misfiring and telling your body the wrong thing.". A person with a psychosomatic disorder needs to learn a skill that is not necessarily easy to come by, and that is to learn how to ignore those essentially false signals that their brain is telling their own body, and causing it to react in ways that might otherwise be attributed to some external phenomena. This is why the person needs psychiatric help.

    Simply telling an EHS sufferer that it's just all in their own head and they should be able to simply think their way out of their problem is only going to get you ignored, because their body may still be producing a real reaction to something, even if that something is only imagined.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      I wonder if it might start with false associations. Idiot boss calls during a funeral demanding numbers for the TPS report, feel a bit nauseous Idiot school principal calls complaining that 6 year old is acting like a child, feel a bit nauseous. Subconscious decides the cell phone is the problem.

    • What makes it even trickier is that in many cases it very well could be that they're responding to something related to a transmission device being turned on (e.g. the high pitched whine of a switching power supply is audible to them and gives them a headache).
  • She can keep her money as long as she is agrees to live in a bungalow with no electricity, running water or plumbing and 500km away from the power grid.

    • by marciot ( 598356 )

      She can keep her money as long as she is agrees to live in a bungalow with no electricity, running water or plumbing and 500km away from the power grid.

      Nevermind. I guess she sort of has (reading comprehension failure).

  • The judge should pick up the plaintiff and her attorney by the belt and collar and throw them out the front door with a resounding "Et rester en dehors!"

  • by kheldan ( 1460303 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @11:55AM (#50410517) Journal
    Pretend to use a cellphone in her presence. When she starts complaining of symptoms and discomfort, show her that the phone not only isn't on, that it doesn't even have a battery in it so there's no chance it could have been on.

    I did something similar to this with a friend of mine who claimed to be able to see infrared light from TV remotes. While he wasn't looking I removed the batteries from one, then called his name and when he turned around, pointed it at him and pushed buttons. He complained about how much that hurt his eyes, and how could I do that to him? Then I showed him the remote had no batteries in it. Needless to say he was somewhat embarassed. Still claims to be able to 'see' IR light though.
    • Better idea. Just put one in your pocket on vibrate and see if she notices. I'll bet her whole settlement she doesn't even notice you have the thing on in your pocket. Or, just do a double-blind test on her. It wouldn't take much money and only about a half day of time. The lawyer fees were most likely higher than the test to prove she's full of duck butter.
    • by dargaud ( 518470 )
      Exact same story here. We installed a wifi repeater in the lobby at work. The hostess started complaining about the 'microwaves hurting her'. But it wasn't even turned on yet (we were still building the rest of the system), only the LED on its power. When we finally turned it on we put a piece of black tape over the LED and told her that we'd turned it off. Everything was fine after that. Some people deserve to be slapped.
  • Send her into a Faraday cage. "sense anything, ma'am". If she says yes, experiment over. If she says now, have a cellphone or powerful RF transmitter inside an opaque box. turn it off and on.

    If her guesses whether it is on are not are no better than chance, experiment over. If they are correct...well...that would be very interesting.

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      Numerous double blind studies have conclusively shown that such sensitivity ultimately depends on what the subject *believes* to be true, regardless of whether or not it actually is. Whether she would still "sense" anything inside of the Faraday cage actually depends on whether or not she genuinely believes the Faraday cage will truly stop the signals she believes are harming her, and whether or not she believes those signals to be present.

      In other words, its all psychosomatic.... and should be treated

    • Careful. In one NIH study they did find one woman that was sensitive to the power cycling of EMF devices. She couldn't sense the device when it was already on and brought into the room, but could sense when it was turned on or off. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pu... [nih.gov]
  • She needs to think about personal security. Any one of the envious /.ers on this thread could kill her with a Pringles can and a software defined radio.
  • ... So that's the seed of her paranoia then eh.
  • by pubwvj ( 1045960 ) on Friday August 28, 2015 @01:02PM (#50411123)

    What amazes me is that the courts resort to non-scientific rulings when the case is so easily scientifically tested. Ignorance of rampant.

If you have a procedure with 10 parameters, you probably missed some.

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