Yeah, the amount of carcinogens we take in on a regular basis is shocking. Remember when bromine used to be a handwash in labs, because it was a great non-polar solvent? That quickly ceased when we found out it caused melanoma.Jamboxdotcom said:This. Also, everything causes cancer. It would be easier to compile a list of things that are not carcinogenic than to list all things that are. Just use common sense, the dosage makes the poison, and all that.Vault101 said:well we dont know for SURE
You know what else can give you cancer? Salt. Stick that in your pipe and smoke it (and also probably get cancer from that as well)Dulcinea said:The results were hardly conclusive. All they managed to work out is it 'might' be able to cause cancer. Know what else is on that list of 'might cause cancer'? Coffee.
Take it with a grain of salt.
Then there's this: [link]http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2010/01/100106193217.htm[/link]GonzoGamer said:It?s only a microwave transmitter/receiver. How can that be unhealthy, right?
Now before the reactionary bunch start flipping out on me because they refuse to believe they have brain cancer, relax, you probably don?t. Nobody is saying we all have to get rid of our phones. They?re just saying that you shouldn?t hold it directly against your head for whole conversations. Use an earpiece, speakerphone, or text.
Yet, we see that the CTIA (the united PR group for phone carriers-based in the US of course) is still trying to deny it because they?re afraid that people might use a few less mins. Or maybe they?re worried that the government will make them provide a free earpiece with every phone they sell.
We?re not angry that they?ve been lying to us the whole time. We?ve known for years. It?s pretty obvious when you look at how these devises work.
What I?m worried about are the less obvious dangers we?re exposed to.
The things we don?t know about.
So my first question is: did this announcement come as any kind of surprise to you?
And what other things are we exposed to that you think might have hidden dangers?
The WHO announcement doesn't really tell us anything new; the evidence that cell phones might cause cancer is still very slim; and even if cell phones do cause cancer, the risk to you isn't particularly large.
This.Dulcinea said:The results were hardly conclusive. All they managed to work out is it 'might' be able to cause cancer. Know what else is on that list of 'might cause cancer'? Coffee.
Take it with a grain of salt.
every thing does indeed causes cancer, a few years ago there was a study that showed orange juice causes cancer, its juice ffs.TiefBlau said:1. "EVERYTHING CAUSES CANCER LOL"
No, it doesn't.
2. "CELL PHONES USE MICROWAVES LMAO"
No, they don't. Well, kinda. They emit electromagnetic waves that are close in wavelength to microwaves. Automatically assuming that this will do damage is like assuming that infrared or visible light will do damage, because those are electromagnetic waves too. Granted, they're closer in frequency, so that strengthens the risk in dealing with it.
3. "Studies are inconclusive. Rofl."
Eh, yeah, I guess you can say that. You could also say that the large corporations have a lot more to say. I'm not an expert on the subject, so I'm not gonna try to pretend I know. But the risk is certainly out there.
Valid alternative? Bluetooth technology, to some extent. The microwaves emitted my a bluetooth headset is much, much smaller than that of the cell phone itself. As a result, it's much safer to hold against your skull, I guess.