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The Cell Phone Industry: Big Tobacco 2.0?
CNET.com, March 8, 2005
by Molly Wood, Senior Editor
So, there's this incredibly
popular product that has widespread consumer use and a massive marketing
presence. Nearly everyone uses it, and it has very high social acceptance,
even though some people find it annoying when it's used in public. It's
highly habit-forming; people who use the product on a regular basis find
it almost impossible to live without.
Unfortunately, studies start to appear showing that the product might
be harmful to its users--even cancer-causing. The product's manufacturers
deny the presence of any danger and even spend millions of dollars trying
to discredit the research that points to problems. Then, an insider emerges,
seemingly with proof that the product could be dangerous. The industry
agrees to publish warning data about the product, but continues to maintain
that the product itself is safe for use. Lawsuits against the product's
manufacturers are filed, but all are dismissed. Industry analysts know
that any case that does succeed could start a domino effect of future
lawsuits, which keeps the industry determined to maintain that the product
is harmless, despite increasing evidence to the contrary.
Sound familiar?
Well, put down your lighter, I'm talking about cell phones. I've
already maintained that I don't like the cell phone industry's iron-clad
control over phone releases and pricing, its ever-lengthening contracts,
and the annoying habit it has of crippling Bluetooth phones so that
I can't use them the way I want to. But it takes only a few minutes
of looking into the cell phone radiation quagmire before I start
to think, man, these guys have Big Tobacco 2.0 written all over
them. Actually, I'm not the first to think of it, but a recent article
in the University of Washington alumni magazine indicates that the
behaviors aren't going away, even as the potentially damning research
continues to mount.
OK, I know the obvious differences: I'm sure cell phone manufacturers
are not deliberately making their products more addictive, for example--although
they are, of course, always offering new and improved services and ever-increasing
buckets of minutes, which can't help but encourage us to use our phones
more and more frequently. But, just as Big Tobacco did, the cell phone
industry seems bound and determined to thwart and deny any suggestion
that its product might be dangerous.
A history of bad
news
For example, in 1994, University of Washington bioengineering professors
Henry Lai and Narendra Singh found that the DNA in rats' brains was damaged
after two hours of exposure to levels of microwave radiation considered
safe by the government. When Lai and Singh published the research, a leaked
memo from Motorola's head of global strategy, Norm Sandler, talked about
ways to minimize damage by undermining their research, with Sandler writing,
"I think that we have sufficiently war-gamed the Lai/Singh issue." Ouch.
Worse, research biologist Jerry Phillips, who was paid by Motorola to
conduct similar testing, says he was able to duplicate Lai and Singh's
findings, but was then asked not to publish the research and was subsequently
shunned by the company. Motorola says it told Phillips that his findings
needed clarification, and the industry still maintains that Lai and Singh's
results have never been duplicated and can't be considered legitimate.
The biggest Russell Crowe-style insider in this case, though, is
Dr. George Carlo, who was hired by the Cellular Telecommunications
& Internet Association to head up a $28 million research program
into possible health effects from cellular phones. Unfortunately,
he now says his findings show an increased rate of brain cancer
deaths, development of tumors, and genetic damage among heavy cell
phone users. He wrote this letter of concern to the president of
AT&T Corporation and later went public with his findings after what
he considered to be neglect by the industry. He's since broken with
the industry, become a vocal critic, and coauthored a book called
Cell
Phones: Invisible Hazards in the Wireless Age--so you can
tell he's on the "cell phones could cause cancer" side of things.
Meanwhile, more studies keep coming, and they seem to be getting
worse. A study funded by the European Union reported last December
that radio waves from mobile phones do, definitively, damage DNA
and other cells in the body--and that the damage extended to the
next generation of cells. Even though mutated cells are considered
a possible cause of cancer, the UK National Radiological Protection
Board said that since the study didn't show that the damage
definitely led to disease, consumers shouldn't worry too much about
the findings.
Uh, right. In the meantime, the report recommended that children
use mobile phones only in emergency situations. You know, just in
case. How reassuring.
The cell phone industry hasn't commissioned another large-scale study--at
least not publicly--since its fateful encounter with Dr. Carlo--and why
would they? They're in a catch-22. It's a multibillion dollar industry,
and they simply can't afford to find out, definitively, that cell phones
are dangerous. Worse, just like the tobacco companies, if they start issuing
warnings and precautionary tales now, it'll look like they knew all along
that the radio waves were dangerous, opening them up to major liability
claims. They've already dodged one big, big bullet--an $800 million lawsuit
against Motorola and cell phone carriers was thrown out in 2002, with
the judge ruling that there wasn't sufficient evidence for trial. Since
then, neurologist Dr. Christopher Newman, who filed the lawsuit, has died
of brain cancer.
Listen, I use a cell phone, and I'm not trying to scare the bejesus
out of everyone. But I do use a headset when I'm talking for any
long period of time, and I carry that sucker in my purse, not my
pocket. (I know you guys don't have that luxury, but reconsider
the briefcase, OK?) And if you're shopping for a new phone, you
might want to check our cell phone radiation chart to see which
ones carry a low dose.
In a few more years, we'll either know for sure that cell phones
can cause cancer, or we'll know they can't. I just hope we don't
find out the hard way--through subpoenaed documents from cell phone
makers and carriers who've been trying to minimize their damages
and maximize their profits for more than a decade.
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