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Cellphones, Wi-Fi and your brain

p2pnet.net news view:- Students at Canada’s Lakehead University have to be careful how they connect to the internet because wifi is banned on large parts of the campus.

University president Fred Gilbert, whose academic interests include wildlife management, environmental studies and natural resources science, is worried about the health impact of the 2.4Ghz radio waves used by wireless networks

Last year he decided to adopt the precautionary principle and refused to allow wifi in those areas that have what he calls ‘hard wire connectivity’ until it is proved to be safe.

Gilbert believes that ‘microwave radiation in the frequency range of WiFi has been shown to increase permeability of the blood-brain barrier, cause behavioural changes, alter cognitive functions, activate a stress response, interfere with brain waves, cell growth, cell communication, calcium ion balance, etc., and cause single and double strand DNA breaks’.

Unfortunately he is wrong, and his students are suffering as a result.

While the heating effects of high exposures to electromagnetic radiation can be damaging, the power levels of wireless connections are much lower than the microwave ovens and mobile phones which share the frequency range, and treating them in the same way is the worst sort of scaremongering.

Yet Gilbert is not alone.

In 2003 parents sued a primary school in Chicago because it had dared to provide children with easy access to computing resources over a wireless network, and there are a number of pressure groups, campaigning organisations and ill-informed individuals who believe that wireless networks pose a threat to health and want to see them closed down.

Now it seems they have been joined by the editor of the Independent on Sunday, which this weekend filled its front page with a call for research into the ‘electronic smog’ that is permeating the nation’s schools and damaging growing childrens’ brains.

An accompanying editorial with the even-handed headline ‘high-tech horrors’ called for an official inquiry, while the article outlining the perceived dangers asked ‘is the Wi-Fi revolution a health time bomb?’

The answer, of course, is ‘no’, but that will not stop the newspaper stoking up a wave of opposition to one of the most liberating technologies to have come out of the IT revolution, limiting children’s access to networked computers at schools and even blocking plans to develop municipal wireless networks in our towns and cities.

If the journalists were really concerned about the dangers of radio frequency electromagnetic radiation on the sensitive brains of the young they should be calling for the closure of TV and radio transmission towers rather than asking us to turn off our wifi laptops.

The modulated frequencies that carry Radio 4 and and ITV into our homes are just as powerful as the wireless networks, and a lot more pervasive.

And my wireless network is only carrying data when I’m online, while Radio 3 burbles all day long, possibly exciting electrons in my brain and causing headaches.

Then there is the danger from photons of visible light streaming down onto us as we work, since these carry more energy than microwaves and could surely do more damage.

Perhaps we should demand that our children work in the dark.

The fuss over wifi is the latest manifestation of a general worry about electromagnetic radiation, one whose concerns have ranged over the years from the fields around power transmission lines to the radiation emitted by computer monitors to the microwaves put out by mobile phones.

Campaigners are often supported by those who claim to be so sensitive to electromagnetic radiation that they cannot bear to have a radio turned on in the same room because the fields affect their brains, or those who claim that using a mobile phone gives them headaches.

Unfortunately studies like that of James Rubin from the Institute of Psychiatry indicate that such people are just as likely to get a headache when they believe there is a phone signal present even if it is in fact absent, and other research into electromagnetic sensitivity is equally negative.

There is no evidence that electromagnetic radiation at radio frequencies, where the energy levels are too low to dislodge electrons and affect molecular bonding, can cause health effects except by heating tissues.

While those who want to limit the use of wifi argue that they need evidence that is it safe, the problem with trying to prove that something is safe is that you can’t.

Karl Popper, the great philosopher of science, helped us to understand that science is about falsification, about setting up hypotheses and theories and proving them wrong, because you can never prove them right.

Any theory can be overturned by new evidence, and any claim that wireless networks are completely safe could be thrown out tomorrow if we find good evidence that it isn’t.

We may come up with a hitherto unsuspected mechanism that explains a previously disregarded effect, or the evidence may be statistical and require detailed investigation.

Were that to happen we should take it seriously, but it has not happened and there is no reason to believe it will. The precautionary principle, of avoiding exposure to unnecessary risk, does not apply here because there is no known mechanism by which wireless networks could cause damage.

We have a sound model of the interaction between electromagnetic radiation and organic matter that gives us little reason to believe that there will be any dangers.

For William Stewart, chairman of the Health Protection Agency and a former chief scientific adviser to the Government, to argue for an investigation on the basis of no real evidence that there is an effect, and in the absence of any plausible physical mechanism, is indefensible.

Cellphones heat the brain and could cause problems. Wifi doesn’t, and it is safe. My daughter is sitting here as I write, her new wireless laptop beside her, and I’m a lot more worried about the damage she would do if she dropped it on her foot than I am about the impact of the low power radio waves it emits.

Bill Thompson - andfinally.com
[Thompson is a UK-based writer and broadcaster. He has a weekly column on the BBC WebWise site, and contributes both on and off-line to The Guardian, The Register and The New Statesman, among others. His “inappropriately-titled ‘billblog’ “appears weekly on BBC News Online in the technology news section.]

Slashdot Slashdot it!

Also See:
wifi is banned - Cell phone, brain tumour link, March 31, 2006
general worry - Cell phones and brain damage, April 3, 2007

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4 Responses to “Cellphones, Wi-Fi and your brain”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    i’m probably alone in thinking this but saying “high exposures to electromagnetic radiation can damage health but low exposure mightn’t” is like saying “swallowing a lot of bleach will kill you but only a little mightn’t”

    you can disreguard that bit above but I think they might have a slight point. has anyone actually done a study into possible health effects after months and years of exposure.

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    If Wi-Fi and cell phones do pose any long term health risks that would be very bad for business, so they don’t…

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    Because everyone can provide connectivity with ad-hoc WiFi, there is less and less need for ISPs, which tend to violate network neutrality when supporting private interests. Same for the Internet in general - there is less and less need for radio and TV sponsored by the government and private interests.

    So, ant-WiFi and anti-Internet crusade is mounted by those interests. In case of the Internet, they censor it in the name of security of children. In case of WiFi, they invoke health as the argument.

    Enemies of the people.

  4. Reader's Write Says:

    and every poison is a drug.

    What matters is the dose.

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