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Personal Cell Phone Signal Blocker:$55 — Brooklynian

Personal Cell Phone Signal Blocker:$55

Hmm..
Now this is interesting - but is it legal?

If it is, I may invest in one of these suckers. This thing would be AWESOME on the Chinatown/Washington Deluxe bus!

I heard one councilman pushing to get cell phone service on the subway - I kinda like the fact that you cannot get cell service on the subway. I love the customer reviews:
i take mine nearly everywhere, you'll never be tired of watching people wave their phones in the air trying to get a signal, or shouting "hello hello", it's also instantaneous. as soon as you turn it on the line goes dead, for a few seconds the phone will still show signal but nobody will be able to hear anything, then the signal drops. put it right next to my sat nav and that showed no signal too. (has to be virtualy ontop of it though)

Bottomline: for peace or just to menace it's worth getting one
http://dealextreme.com/details.dx/sku.4355~r.96035782

image

Create a circle of silence around yourself!
.
- Cellock-brand time-proven build quality and reliability
- Creates enough interference to block all cell phone signals around you (GSM/CDMA/DCS/PHS/3G)
- Fully metal construction - creates a solid and techie feel
- Creates a 0.5M ~ 12M (about 2 to 40 feet) radius of cell phone signal black out area
- Built-in 1500mAh battery lasts 3 to 4 hours, also works and charges on AC and Car 12V power with including adaptors
- Light (6oz) weight, fits-in-a-pocket size
.
Perfect for the following senarios:
- Class rooms and small seminar halls
- Meeting rooms and board rooms
- Private offices
- Bus and vehicles (imagine how you can finally have a good undisturbed nap)
- VIP and privacy-sensitive senarios

Comments

  • I wonder how much radiation that thing puts out, or if it's there's any risk to being around it when it's operating.
  • Can't be legal - FCC doesn't like people playin' with their waves.
  • Totally not legal, but wow! Those things have gotten a LOT cheaper in the last few years.
    The operation of transmitters designed to jam or block wireless communications is a violation of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended ("Act"). See 47 U.S.C. Sections 301, 302a, 333.
    http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=operations_2&id=cellular

    also: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/cell-phone-jammer5.htm
    and
    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=413500
  • So it sounds like it's illegal to operate it, but not to own it or to sell it.

    Interesting...

    I'd still want more info on the radiation output though.
  • daver wrote: Totally not legal, but wow! Those things have gotten a LOT cheaper in the last few years.
    The operation of transmitters designed to jam or block wireless communications is a violation of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended ("Act"). See 47 U.S.C. Sections 301, 302a, 333.
    http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=operations_2&id=cellular

    also: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/cell-phone-jammer5.htm
    and
    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=413500
    Ha!
    RE:" Illegal" activity:

    Yea, maybe I should stick to just selling weed in my neighborhood instead of getting one of these cell jammers. I wouldn't want to get in legal trouble or anything:)

    -Or I'll just get one and not operate it.

    Illegal to operate but not own or sell...what a country!!

    :wink:

    Radiation: your cell phone, power lines, bike messengers and any activity by ConEd are all more harmful to you.
  • Radiation: you forgot the microwave, whoa nelly!

    FYI, the jammers have been around for awhile now, and to the best of my knowledge exactly ZERO people have been prosecuted for them. I expect someone will make a big stink sooner or later though. They are actually legal in places in some other countries, I think France allows them in movie theatres and restaurants, for instance.
  • SevenOneEighty wrote: [quote=daver]Totally not legal, but wow! Those things have gotten a LOT cheaper in the last few years.
    The operation of transmitters designed to jam or block wireless communications is a violation of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended ("Act"). See 47 U.S.C. Sections 301, 302a, 333.
    http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=operations_2&id=cellular

    also: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/cell-phone-jammer5.htm
    and
    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=413500
    Ha!
    RE:" Illegal" activity:

    Yea, maybe I should stick to just selling weed in my neighborhood instead of getting one of these cell jammers. I wouldn't want to get in legal trouble or anything:)

    -Or I'll just get one and not operate it.

    Illegal to operate but not own or sell...what a country!!

    :wink:

    Radiation: your cell phone, power lines, bike messengers and any activity by ConEd are all more harmful to you.
    Radiation falls with the 3rd power of the distance, and cell phone transmitters tend to be unidirectional, so they point away from the buildings they're mounted on. I'm not in immediate proximity to power lines and other common sources of radiation. The jammer presumably is higher powered than a cellphone, so it might pose a greater risk. Believe me, I'm not an alarmist at all. I just wonder what the output of the device is, and whether there's any data on their safety (or whether that's even necessary, depending on their output). The data currently seems to suggest that cellphones themselves are not a risk.
  • daver wrote: FYI, the jammers have been around for awhile now, and to the best of my knowledge exactly ZERO people have been prosecuted for them. I expect someone will make a big stink sooner or later though. They are actually legal in places in some other countries, I think France allows them in movie theatres and restaurants, for instance.
    I can see how they'd have very useful applications, but I can also see a big lawsuit when emergency calls don't connect...
  • Just what I was thinking, WhyFi. I would love to see cellphone signals blocked at theaters (especially opera houses - I've been to several operas where somebody's phone rang in the middle of an aria, and I wanted to KILL them), but we all want to have doctors on call when we need them. Just set your phone to vibrate, people! Is that too much to ask? :)
  • Carnivore wrote: [quote=SevenOneEighty][quote=daver]Totally not legal, but wow! Those things have gotten a LOT cheaper in the last few years.
    The operation of transmitters designed to jam or block wireless communications is a violation of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended ("Act"). See 47 U.S.C. Sections 301, 302a, 333.
    http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=operations_2&id=cellular

    also: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/cell-phone-jammer5.htm
    and
    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=413500
    Ha!
    RE:" Illegal" activity:

    Yea, maybe I should stick to just selling weed in my neighborhood instead of getting one of these cell jammers. I wouldn't want to get in legal trouble or anything:)

    -Or I'll just get one and not operate it.

    Illegal to operate but not own or sell...what a country!!

    :wink:

    Radiation: your cell phone, power lines, bike messengers and any activity by ConEd are all more harmful to you.
    Radiation falls with the 3rd power of the distance, and cell phone transmitters tend to be unidirectional, so they point away from the buildings they're mounted on. I'm not in immediate proximity to power lines and other common sources of radiation. The jammer presumably is higher powered than a cellphone, so it might pose a greater risk. Believe me, I'm not an alarmist at all. I just wonder what the output of the device is, and whether there's any data on their safety (or whether that's even necessary, depending on their output). The data currently seems to suggest that cellphones themselves are not a risk.

    So you're telling me I risk radiation exposure if I block the annoying girl behind me on the Chinatown bus having an inane, loud, 2hr conversation with her boyfriend in DC about the Jersey turnpike.....?

    Definitely WORTH it!!
    Hey, I can always get a portable Geiger counter to go with it!

    the jammer only has an effective distance of 20-40 ft max...and runs on a battery like the cell phone. I really don't know how it works but does it need necessarily to be more powerful to block the cell signal...or does it just create interference to block the signal...and how powerful could it be running on a cell-like battery...? I understand there are larger jammers used professionally or in military that are powerful too.

    P.S. You are in personal, imminent danger from ConED right now - you just don't know it. :D
  • And maybe without the blocker, that girl having the 2-hour conversation on the bus is in personal, imminent danger from us. ;)
  • Carnivore wrote:
    Radiation falls with the 3rd power of the distance
    Back when I went to school, it was 2nd power for electromagnetic radiation (and 4th power for magnetic fields). If it's reached the 3rd power already, that's some serious inflation of space-time in the meantime.
  • doctorj wrote: [quote=Carnivore]
    Radiation falls with the 3rd power of the distance
    Back when I went to school, it was 2nd power for electromagnetic radiation (and 4th power for magnetic fields). If it's reached the 3rd power already, that's some serious inflation of space-time in the meantime.
    D'Oh!

    As usual, you are correct, J. My bad. :oops:
  • doctorj wrote: [quote=Carnivore]
    Radiation falls with the 3rd power of the distance
    Back when I went to school, it was 2nd power for electromagnetic radiation (and 4th power for magnetic fields). If it's reached the 3rd power already, that's some serious inflation of space-time in the meantime.

    meep. :shock: :shock: :shock: :shock:

    are we all about to go .... :shaking2: :shaking2: :shaking2: :shaking2: :shaking2:
  • http://tinyurl.com/25kkfb
    November 4, 2007
    Devices Enforce Cellular Silence, Sweet but Illegal
    By MATT RICHTEL

    SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 2 — One afternoon in early September, an architect boarded his commuter train and became a cellphone vigilante. He sat down next to a 20-something woman who he said was “blabbing away” into her phone.

    “She was using the word ‘like’ all the time. She sounded like a Valley Girl,” said the architect, Andrew, who declined to give his last name because what he did next was illegal.

    Andrew reached into his shirt pocket and pushed a button on a black device the size of a cigarette pack. It sent out a powerful radio signal that cut off the chatterer’s cellphone transmission — and any others in a 30-foot radius.

    “She kept talking into her phone for about 30 seconds before she realized there was no one listening on the other end,” he said. His reaction when he first discovered he could wield such power? “Oh, holy moly! Deliverance.”

    As cellphone use has skyrocketed, making it hard to avoid hearing half a conversation in many public places, a small but growing band of rebels is turning to a blunt countermeasure: the cellphone jammer, a gadget that renders nearby mobile devices impotent.

    The technology is not new, but overseas exporters of jammers say demand is rising and they are sending hundreds of them a month into the United States — prompting scrutiny from federal regulators and new concern last week from the cellphone industry. The buyers include owners of cafes and hair salons, hoteliers, public speakers, theater operators, bus drivers and, increasingly, commuters on public transportation.

    The development is creating a battle for control of the airspace within earshot. And the damage is collateral. Insensitive talkers impose their racket on the defenseless, while jammers punish not just the offender, but also more discreet chatterers.

    “If anything characterizes the 21st century, it’s our inability to restrain ourselves for the benefit of other people,” said James Katz, director of the Center for Mobile Communication Studies at Rutgers University. “The cellphone talker thinks his rights go above that of people around him, and the jammer thinks his are the more important rights.”

    The jamming technology works by sending out a radio signal so powerful that phones are overwhelmed and cannot communicate with cell towers. The range varies from several feet to several yards, and the devices cost from $50 to several hundred dollars. Larger models can be left on to create a no-call zone.

    Using the jammers is illegal in the United States. The radio frequencies used by cellphone carriers are protected, just like those used by television and radio broadcasters.

    The Federal Communication Commission says people who use cellphone jammers could be fined up to $11,000 for a first offense. Its enforcement bureau has prosecuted a handful of American companies for distributing the gadgets — and it also pursues their users.

    Investigators from the F.C.C. and Verizon Wireless visited an upscale restaurant in Maryland over the last year, the restaurant owner said. The owner, who declined to be named, said he bought a powerful jammer for $1,000 because he was tired of his employees focusing on their phones rather than customers.

    “I told them: put away your phones, put away your phones, put away your phones,” he said. They ignored him.

    The owner said the F.C.C. investigator hung around for a week, using special equipment designed to detect jammers. But the owner had turned his off.

    The Verizon investigator was similarly unsuccessful. “He went to everyone in town and gave them his number and said if they were having trouble, they should call him right away,” the owner said. He said he has since stopped using the jammer.

    Of course, it would be harder to detect the use of smaller battery-operated jammers like those used by disgruntled commuters.

    An F.C.C. spokesman, Clyde Ensslin, declined to comment on the issue or the case in Maryland.

    Cellphone carriers pay tens of billions of dollars to lease frequencies from the government with an understanding that others will not interfere with their signals. And there are other costs on top of that. Verizon Wireless, for example, spends $6.5 billion a year to build and maintain its network.

    “It’s counterintuitive that when the demand is clear and strong from wireless consumers for improved cell coverage, that these kinds of devices are finding a market,” said Jeffrey Nelson, a Verizon spokesman. The carriers also raise a public safety issue: jammers could be used by criminals to stop people from communicating in an emergency.

    In evidence of the intensifying debate over the devices, CTIA, the main cellular phone industry association, asked the F.C.C. on Friday to maintain the illegality of jamming and to continue to pursue violators. It said the move was a response to requests by two companies for permission to use jammers in specific situations, like in jails.

    Individuals using jammers express some guilt about their sabotage, but some clearly have a prankster side, along with some mean-spirited cellphone schadenfreude. “Just watching those dumb teens at the mall get their calls dropped is worth it. Can you hear me now? NO! Good,” the purchaser of a jammer wrote last month in a review on a Web site called DealExtreme.

    Gary, a therapist in Ohio who also declined to give his last name, citing the illegality of the devices, says jamming is necessary to do his job effectively. He runs group therapy sessions for sufferers of eating disorders. In one session, a woman’s confession was rudely interrupted.

    “She was talking about sexual abuse,” Gary said. “Someone’s cellphone went off and they carried on a conversation.”

    “There’s no etiquette,” he said. “It’s a pandemic.”

    Gary said phone calls interrupted therapy all the time, despite a no-phones policy. Four months ago, he paid $200 for a jammer, which he placed surreptitiously on one side of the room. He tells patients that if they are expecting an emergency call, they should give out the front desk’s number. He has not told them about the jammer.

    Gary bought his jammer from a Web site based in London called PhoneJammer.com. Victor McCormack, the site’s operator, says he ships roughly 400 jammers a month into the United States, up from 300 a year ago. Orders for holiday gifts, he said, have exceeded 2,000.

    Kumaar Thakkar, who lives in Mumbai, India, and sells jammers online, said he exported 20 a month to the United States, twice as many as a year ago. Clients, he said, include owners of cafes and hair salons, and a New York school bus driver named Dan.

    “The kids think they are sneaky by hiding low in the seats and using their phones,” Dan wrote in an e-mail message to Mr. Thakkar thanking him for selling the jammer. “Now the kids can’t figure out why their phones don’t work, but can’t ask because they will get in trouble! It’s fun to watch them try to get a signal.”

    Andrew, the San Francisco-area architect, said using his jammer was initially fun, and then became a practical way to get some quiet on the train. Now he uses it more judiciously.

    “At this point, just knowing I have the power to cut somebody off is satisfaction enough,” he said.
  • I would love to have one of those to use with those "customers" who think our store is their own personal office. Yes please, let your small child run rampant around the store while you conduct srs bsnss on speaker phone for 15 minutes! Oh, and leave without buying anything.
  • This wouldn't be necessary if people only had some sense. My dad has ZERO cell phone sense. I've called him while he was in the middle of a meeting and he picked up! When I found out he was in a middle of a meeting, I would hang up on him because I'm pretty sure that anything that's going on at the meeting is PROBABLY more important than anything I might have to say and unless it's a dire emergency, what I have to say can wait.

    Whether we like it or not, cell phones are coming to the subway. This is being hastened by the fact that there is almost ZERO maintenance being done to the pay phones in the subways (or above ground for that matter.) Right now, there is NO way to communicate in an emergency because it isn't uncommon to not find a single working payphone in a subway station. I think this lack of neglect is purposeful on Verizon's part.

    True story: I had a friend who was working with a high-functioning schizophrenic man. He was pretty functional, holding down a job, etc., except that every once in a while, the voices would come and he would feel compelled to argue with them. He was lucid enough to know that this wasn't terrifically normal behavior. So my friend suggested that he get a cell phone, so that whenever he felt compelled to argue with the voices in his head, he would look totally normal. So this worked great for a while. Then one day, he was on the subway when the voices started working on him again. He took out his cellphone and began to argue when he noticed that the entire car was staring at him. He closed the cell phone and said, "I bet you're all wondering what I'm doing."

    A woman near him said, "No, we just want to know who your provider is because we want your plan." :lol:

    So if you use a jammer, and someone on a cell phone is still talking, he's CRAZY!!! :shock:

    I'm not in favor of the jammer because sometimes I need to get a hold of someone quickly in an emergency and it's not the jammer's right to determine whether it is an emergency. I generally only use my cell phone in public for emergencies and the few times I've had regular conversations in public (especially on public transportation) I've tried to be discreet, sitting away from other people, etc. And when it comes to attending performances and movies, just turn your phones OFF people. And if you forget, just shut it off then and DON'T ANSWER. A little common sense would save everyone a lot of grief.

    A couple of weeks ago, I was in a performance where I was using my cellphone as a prop. I forgot to turn my cellphone off :oops: so they called me while I was shouting my opening monologue into it. I don't know who called, but they sure got an earful as I didn't break character.

    "Hey! I'm not the babysitter!! You told me you didn't have kids!! I'm a guy! Why are you calling me Nancy???!!!"

    :lol::lol::lol::lol:
  • lilbangladesh wrote: True story: I had a friend who was working with a high-functioning schizophrenic man. He was pretty functional, holding down a job, etc., except that every once in a while, the voices would come and he would feel compelled to argue with them. He was lucid enough to know that this wasn't terrifically normal behavior. So my friend suggested that he get a cell phone, so that whenever he felt compelled to argue with the voices in his head, he would look totally normal. So this worked great for a while. Then one day, he was on the subway when the voices started working on him again. He took out his cellphone and began to argue when he noticed that the entire car was staring at him. He closed the cell phone and said, "I bet you're all wondering what I'm doing."

    A woman near him said, "No, we just want to know who your provider is because we want your plan." :lol:
    Great story.
  • didn't read any replies yet.

    this would be a pranksters dream. a punks with idle hands fun time.

    think about them walking about and using this every where.
  • DO WANT.
  • Just once I'd like to hear an interesting cell phone conversation. Like someone planning a hit or a heist or world domination.
  • caseopele wrote: Just once I'd like to hear an interesting cell phone conversation. Like someone planning a hit or a heist or world domination.
    I don't think you can get that close to Dick Cheney because of the secret service...
  • SevenOneEighty wrote: [quote=caseopele]Just once I'd like to hear an interesting cell phone conversation. Like someone planning a hit or a heist or world domination.
    I don't think you can get that close to Dick Cheney because of the secret service...

    Nice! That made me giggle. :lol:
  • They'd be calling from home on a secure line, silly!

    Let's see, recently I had been stressing over the writer's strike with my best friend over the phone.

    But I suppose that would only be interesting to anyone in the entertainment industry.
  • 7:27 PM - "F" Train to 7th Avenue, Park Slope

    Entering Smith/9th station...out pop the cell phones...

    "I'm like 8-10 minutes from McDonald's. Will you wait for me or go ahead?"

    "But I'm about 10 minutes away, will you order?"

    "OK, but I'm about 8 minutes away, will you wait for me?

    "OK, I can do that."

    Would I use a hidden zapper on these conversations? Oh, yeah I would! I'm going to order one now!
  • I see this being used by criminals to isolate their victims after a crime... big problem in our nabe.

    Not feeling it.

    Plus it's much more fun to say 'hey asshole turn off your phone'
  • Carnivore wrote: [quote=SevenOneEighty][quote=daver]Totally not legal, but wow! Those things have gotten a LOT cheaper in the last few years.
    The operation of transmitters designed to jam or block wireless communications is a violation of the Communications Act of 1934, as amended ("Act"). See 47 U.S.C. Sections 301, 302a, 333.
    http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=operations_2&id=cellular

    also: http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/cell-phone-jammer5.htm
    and
    http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=413500
    Ha!
    RE:" Illegal" activity:

    Yea, maybe I should stick to just selling weed in my neighborhood instead of getting one of these cell jammers. I wouldn't want to get in legal trouble or anything:)

    -Or I'll just get one and not operate it.

    Illegal to operate but not own or sell...what a country!!

    :wink:

    Radiation: your cell phone, power lines, bike messengers and any activity by ConEd are all more harmful to you.
    Radiation falls with the 3rd power of the distance, and cell phone transmitters tend to be unidirectional, so they point away from the buildings they're mounted on. I'm not in immediate proximity to power lines and other common sources of radiation. The jammer presumably is higher powered than a cellphone, so it might pose a greater risk. Believe me, I'm not an alarmist at all. I just wonder what the output of the device is, and whether there's any data on their safety (or whether that's even necessary, depending on their output). The data currently seems to suggest that cellphones themselves are not a risk.



    So make up your mind already:

    Are cell phones themselves dangerous or not....?

    http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=071207145613.hnkq6bin&show_article=1

    Israeli study says regular mobile use increases tumour risk
    Dec 7 09:56 AM US/Eastern

    Regular use of mobile telephones increases the risk of developing tumours, a new scientific study by Israeli researchers and published in the American Journal of Epidemiology revealed on Friday.

    An extract of the report seen by Israel's Yedoit Aharonot newspaper put the risk of developing a parotid gland tumour nearly 50 percent higher for frequent mobile phone users -- more than 22 hours a month.

    The risk was still higher if users clamped the phone to the same ear, did not use hands-free devices or were in rural areas.

    "Analysis restricted to regular users or to conditions that may yield higher levels of exposure (eg heavy use in rural areas) showed consistently elevated risks," said an abstract of the report in the US journal made available to AFP.

    The study included 402 benign and 58 malignant incident cases of parotid gland tumour diagnosed in Israel at age 18 years or more, in 2001-2003.

    The research was led by Dr Siegal Sadetzki, a cancer and radiation expert at the Chaim Sheba Medical Centre in Israel and as part of a World Health Organisation project.
    I mean, I keep hearing that they are not, and now this...?
  • 7:6e98a26797 wrote: Eur J Epidemiol. 2007;22(9):647-64. Epub 2007 Jul 18.
    The INTERPHONE study: design, epidemiological methods, and description of the study population.
    Cardis E, Richardson L, Deltour I, Armstrong B, Feychting M, Johansen C, Kilkenny M, McKinney P, Modan B, Sadetzki S, Schüz J, Swerdlow A, Vrijheid M, Auvinen A, Berg G, Blettner M, Bowman J, Brown J, Chetrit A, Christensen HC, Cook A, Hepworth S, Giles G, Hours M, Iavarone I, Jarus-Hakak A, Klaeboe L, Krewski D, Lagorio S, Lönn S, Mann S, McBride M, Muir K, Nadon L, Parent ME, Pearce N, Salminen T, Schoemaker M, Schlehofer B, Siemiatycki J, Taki M, Takebayashi T, Tynes T, van Tongeren M, Vecchia P, Wiart J, Woodward A, Yamaguchi N.

    International Agency for Research on Cancer, 150 Cours Albert Thomas, 69372, Lyon, Cedex 08, France. [email protected]

    The very rapid worldwide increase in mobile phone use in the last decade has generated considerable interest in the possible health effects of exposure to radio frequency (RF) fields. A multinational case-control study, INTERPHONE, was set-up to investigate whether mobile phone use increases the risk of cancer and, more specifically, whether the RF fields emitted by mobile phones are carcinogenic. The study focused on tumours arising in the tissues most exposed to RF fields from mobile phones: glioma, meningioma, acoustic neurinoma and parotid gland tumours. In addition to a detailed history of mobile phone use, information was collected on a number of known and potential risk factors for these tumours. The study was conducted in 13 countries. Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Israel, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden, and the UK using a common core protocol. This paper describes the study design and methods and the main characteristics of the study population. INTERPHONE is the largest case-control study to date investigating risks related to mobile phone use and to other potential risk factors for the tumours of interest and includes 2,765 glioma, 2,425 meningioma, 1,121 acoustic neurinoma, 109 malignant parotid gland tumour cases and 7,658 controls. Particular attention was paid to estimating the amount and direction of potential recall and participation biases and their impact on the study results.[/size]
    Could mobile phones cause tumors? Possibly, but this data doesn't convince me. To really do the study right, they'd need to get a large cohort of people with varying degrees of mobile phone use and follow them over time to see who goes on to have tumors. Looking back to see who used phones among people with tumors and comparing them to people without tumors is an inherently flawed method of determining risk. In fact, it's simply inaccurate to even talk about relative risk with a retrospective case-control study design (the design used in the study). If anything, they should be talking in terms of odds ratios. Even in the abstract, the authors acknowledge the inherent problems with this kind of study design, notably recall bias. If you interview people with parotid tumors (incidentally parotid tumors are not brain tumors, they are tumors of the salivary glands located in front of the ear), do you think they may be more likely to remember details about their mobile phone use than people without tumors? Who do you think would be more likely to overestimate how often they used them? Do you think that maybe someone who's convinced that their tumor was related to their mobile phone use might be more likely to consent to participate in this study? You just can't get accurate data this way.
    Here is the full text of the article, if anyone is interested in reading it.
  • Hmm.. I used to use those ear phone thingies, but they were a pain in the butt to use and the jack on my phone would usually break at some point making use impossible. Plus, there's the usually problem, especially if you're long-haired, with people looking at you thinking you're crazy because you're talking into the air.

    I won't wear those stupid Bluetooth thingbobs. I think it defeats the purpose of "protection" from tumors (since the whole point is to protect your head from electromagnetic radiation), Bluetooth is notoriously insecure, and they look REALLY dumb! (Hi! I'm a self-important yuppie! And to show how important I am, I'm going to wear this idiotic thing on my head because I can't be away from my phone for a second!)

    I wonder if those idiots answer their Bluetooth thingbob while on the can. My biggest pet peeve is people who don't leave their phones OUTSIDE the bathroom and let it go to voicemail. I really don't wanna hear your business while you're talking to me. Really. I'll be happy to leave a message and you can get back to me when you're no longer indisposed.
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