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Norwegian Tinfoil Hats (Metal Mesh to Reduce Mobile Radiation)

punychicken

Gone But Not Forgotten
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Hat to combat cell phone health worries

Story on CNN detailing a company that is cashing in on the publics (alleged) fears of radiation.

OSLO, Norway (Reuters) - A Norwegian-based group launched a novel baseball-style cap this week to shield users of mobile telephones from radio emissions that some people fear can trigger cancers.

The "Mobile Cap," going on sale for 385 Norwegian crowns ($53) each, includes a light metal tissue that channels almost 100 percent of radio waves away from the head while allowing sound to pass through.

"The cap has a layer of woven silver," Walter Kraus, head of the Handy-Fashions group that produces the headwear, said. "It's no heavier than a normal cap." The blue or black peaked caps have flaps that fold down over the ear.

Some people worry that radio emissions from mobile telephones can cause brain tumors or other cancers. But international studies of possible dangers have produced often conflicting evidence.
The scientific evidence

A recent study by Australian researchers over three years found that radio emissions from mobile phones did not trigger tumors in mice, and so probably did not do so in humans either.

That followed another Australian study on mice five years ago that said cellular phones could foster tumor growth.

Swedish researchers said that long-term users of first-generation mobiles faced an 80 percent greater risk than non-users of developing brain tumors. But a Danish study last year of 400,000 mobile phone users found no greater cancer risk.
Filtering out emissions

Professor Peter Pauli of the University of the German Armed Forces said that materials of fine woven metal like silver, copper or steel could filter out about 95 percent of emissions from a mobile phone.

"Similar tissues are used to shield sensitive items in rockets and explosives," he said. In military equipment, the metal helps prevent sudden radio bursts from detonating a charge and so could also deflect radiation from the head.

I smell a new line in Fortwear!
 
Scuse me if it sounds dumb, but if tooth fillings can recieve radio transmissions, wouldn't this head gear do the same.
 
Freak out the next kid you see with orthodonita - explain this theory in just enough detail to make their eyes big and round.

They won't sleep that night, I guarantee.
 
I can picture the adverts now....

o 0 ("...Norwegian Tinfoil Hats; They go well with your Spats; They're the latest craze; They block cosmic rays; Norwegian Tinfoil Hats...")

...but what are the chances of that happening?
 
The adverts......

Nooooooooooooooooo!!!!!!!

Now I have dancing Norweigan Tinfoil Hats in my head.

Cujo
(time for my injection)
 
About six years ago, I read an article in one of the British broadsheets which said that all the major mobile phone manufacturers had already patented 'advanced' radiation guards for their phones - right from the start - for potential future production. The article mentioned the use of some woven metallic material in the guards and hinted that the mobile phone giants looked set to wait and only start production if/when all the health findings came to light.

Being a true Luddite (says he on the internet) and non-mobile phone user, I am out of touch with the latest mobile trends, and wondered if these guards do exist ? And if so, does anyone use them ?
 
A Tinfoil Hat on Every Head

A Tinfoil Hat on Every Head
By Joanna Glasner

Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,69640,00.html

02:00 AM Nov. 30, 2005 PT

When seeking the source of a mysterious malaise, few people would think to blame ions trapped in their mattress coils or cyclotronic resonance from the electrical system.

But if they did, they'd find products already on the market to allay their symptoms.

Targeting Americans concerned about exposure to mobile phone and electrical infrastructure, online retailers are selling a growing selection of protective gear. Listings include radiation-blocking boxers, radio curtain shields and pendants for removing electromagnetic frequencies.

"It seems that as our environment becomes more electrified, and we have more wired and wireless devices ... people are becoming more sensitized," said Emil DeToffol, president of online retailer LessEMF in Albany, New York.

DeToffol says sales of protective gear are up. Top sellers include meters for measuring magnetic fields and radio frequencies as well as clothes that shield wearers from electric, radio and microwave emissions.

Gear for frequency-sensitive individuals isn't a new idea. The concept of the tinfoil hat dates back decades. Equipment to reduce radiation from mobile phones has been around almost as long as mobile phones themselves.

But the proliferation of cellular antennae and electricity-sucking gadgetry is heightening concern among those who profess to suffer from electrical sensitivity, an illness triggered by exposure to frequencies emitted by various manmade technologies.

While some scientists believe the ailment's roots are more psychological than biological, retailers are finding a lucrative niche.

"Most people don't realize they're sleeping on a system that attracts EMF," said Rick Cabados, founder of the retailer HealthStores.com and its subsidiary, BlockEMF, which sells EMF Bed Shields, among other protective gear. Cabados says springs inside mattresses attract stray ions emitted from electrical outlets.

Other products purport to mitigate the effects of cyclotronic resonance, a process BlockEMF contends transfers energy from electrical wiring into the nervous systems of people within a home.

New inventions are also in the works. In September, two California men won a patent on a device that could be incorporated in a baseball cap to block radiation from a wireless antenna. Last year, a Taipei inventor patented an electromagnetic-waveproof bra cup.

But Ruth Douglas Miller, chair of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society's Committee on Man and Radiation, says scientific evidence does not support claims that signals emitted by everyday devices are harmful.

"The signals for everything from AM radio up to cell phones and microwaves are really really small," Miller said, noting that electromagnetic energy from natural sources, such as the sun, is much stronger.

Miller's committee maintains studies on electromagnetic hypersensitivity to date have been "overwhelmingly unsuccessful" in linking reported symptoms to electric or magnetic field exposure. The group also warns that many devices on the market falsely claim to reduce RF exposure from cell phones. The Federal Trade Commission has brought charges against some device makers.

DeToffol says he too has seen EMF-blocking products on the market that warrant skepticism. Key warning signs, he said, include questionable scientific explanations of how the product works and marketing that relies on subjective claims.

"That's a real tipoff -- when you see lots of testimonials," he said.
 
When tinfoil hats are not enough.

The impending arrival of 5G has thrust the debate about the health risks of cell phones back to the forefront.

But for the subjects of Claudia Gori’s photographs, who suffer from electromagnetic hypersensitivity (EHS), it’s not a debate—it’s their lives. Gori first learned about the condition from the Werner Herzog documentary Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World, and decided to seek out EHS sufferers in her native Italy. “The people I met began to have symptoms when they started using a lot of electronic devices, especially after Wi-Fi was developed,” Gori says. “They started to feel disturbed by their computer screens or smartphones.”

According to the World Health Organization, a few individuals per million suffer from EHS, with higher rates in Sweden, Germany, and Denmark. Symptoms range from tingling and burning sensations to fatigue, concentration difficulties, nausea, and digestive disturbances. Because no causal link has been scientifically established between these symptoms and the electromagnetic fields emitted by electronic devices, the WHO has said that “EHS is not a medical diagnosis, nor is it clear that it represents a single medical problem.”

Since EHS isn't recognized as an illness, most sufferers are self-diagnosed. The widespread skepticism about their condition is often the hardest part, Gori says. “Some of them lose their families and friends, because nobody believes them. People say they’re crazy or depressed, that they have psychological problems. The way people talk about EHS is very painful to them.” Many EHS sufferers have to quit their jobs because they can’t use a computer, further isolating them from society. Some, like EHS sufferer Chuck McGill on Better Call Saul, have transformed their homes into makeshift Faraday cages to keep out electromagnetic waves.

https://www.wired.com/story/the-disputed-diagnosis-forcing-people-into-faraday-cages/
 
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