San Francisco Cellphone Radiation Law Unconstitutional, Claims CTIA

San Francisco passed a new law last month that requires all retailers to display the amount of radiation a cellphone emits. Predictably, that law is now coming under fire from CTIA, the wireless industry group. CTIA has filed a lawsuit to block enforcement of the ordinance.

“The ordinance misleads consumers by creating the false impression that the FCC’s standards are insufficient and some phones are safer than others based on their radio frequency emissions,” says CTIA, which seems geared up for this battle.

CTIA has already canceled plans to hold future conferences of its ‘Enterprise and Applications’ show in the city. The event this October will be the last one CTIA will have in San Francisco in the “foreseeable future,” it has said.

The effect of radiation from cellphones on users has become a highly contentious issue. As consumers become increasingly glued to their phones, researchers, environmental organizations and cellphone industry groups are debating the question of what exactly is the impact of the radiation emitted from the phones. So far, there has been no conclusive answer.

In the U.S., the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) sets the acceptable radiation standards for cellphones. As part of the device certification process, all handset makers have to use an independent lab to test radiation emissions from the phone. The certificates and radiation levels are displayed on the FCC’s site along with the product details but they are not easily accessible to consumers.

Earlier this year, a non-profit organization called the Environmental Working Group created a database where customers can look up the Specific Absorption Rate–the rate at which energy is absorbed by a mass of tissue, a measure of radiation emitted–for their phones. San Francisco’s ordinance steps it up by requiring retailers to display this information in stores.

That doesn’t help consumers, says CTIA.

“The problem with the San Francisco ordinance is not the disclosure of wireless phone SAR values–that information is already publicly available,” says CTIA Vice President of Public Affairs John Walls in a statement. “CTIA’s objection is that displaying a phone’s SAR value at the point-of-sale suggests to the consumer that there is a meaningful safety distinction between FCC-compliant devices with different SAR levels.”

“The ordinance is not only scientifically unsupported, it violates the Supremacy Clause in Article VI of the United States Constitution and must be stricken,” says CTIA.

San Francisco city officials are fighting back.

“I am disappointed that the association representing the wireless communication  industry has decided to challenge our landmark consumer information law in court,” Gavin Newsom, mayor of San Francisco says in his statement. “This law is not an attack on the wireless industry or their products.”

See Also:

Photo: Inside a cellphone radiation testing lab (Priya Ganapati/ Wired.com)


CTIA sues San Francisco over cellphone radiation law

San Francisco may have signed cellphone radiation labels into law, but the stickers won’t stick without a fight — the Cellular Telephone Industries Association (CTIA) just filed a complain in federal district court, claiming the new law supersedes the FCC’s authority to regulate radio emissions and misleads consumers into believing some phones are safer than others. As we’ve discussed previously, the CTIA does have something of a point. Every phone that makes it to market is rigorously tested for cell phone radiation levels, and those that pass fall below a specific 1.6 watt per kilogram threshold already. But hey, we’re all for bombarding our brains with that much less radiation, as long as our calls stay connected and our text messages arrive on time. If only there were a label for that… Read the CTIA’s full complaint at our more coverage link.

CTIA sues San Francisco over cellphone radiation law originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 24 Jul 2010 16:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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House passes Cellphone Contraband Act of 2010, prisoners go back to writing letters

Oh, we know all about doin’ time. We watched both Oz and The Wire in their entirety, and have seen Let’s Go To Prison, like, eight times. For instance, we know that you only do two days in the joint: the day you go in, and the day you go out. And we know that tattoo guns are readily available (if you have access to an old walkman or Playstation).We also know that cellphones are contraband, and rightfully so: you wouldn’t want an inmate ordering a hit on someone, or running their record label from in “the stir.” That’s why we stand with the CTIA in support of S.1749, or The Cell Phone Contraband Act of 2010. Approved in April by the Senate, and passed by the house yesterday, this amendment to title 18 of the United States Code prohibits “possession or use of cellphones and similar wireless devices by Federal prisoners.” And once it’s signed into law by the President, we’re sure that the no-goodniks will stop sneaking handsets in and we can forget all that silly talk of prison cellphone jamming once and for all.

House passes Cellphone Contraband Act of 2010, prisoners go back to writing letters originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 21 Jul 2010 16:39:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cellphone radiation law to help, confuse San Francisco consumers

Oh San Francisco, you and your progressive ways. The city just passed a law — a first in the US — requiring retailers to post the Specific Absorption Rates (aka SAR, the rate at which at which energy is absorbed by the body) in no less than 11-point font right next to any cellphone being sold. Sounds good as far as consumer education goes, right? And a functioning democracy demands an educated and informed elecorate. But here’s the thing: the jury’s still out (just pick your favorite dangerous / not dangerous study to fit your belief) on the effect of radiation at levels less than the 1.6 watts per kilogram threshold set by the FCC. As such, CTIA spokesman John Walls has a point when he says that highlighting the SAR levels might confuse consumers into thinking that some cellphones are safer than others. In other words, consumer education needs to go much further than any retail-shelf placard could possibly communicate. Well, at least the law will keep us safe long enough to walk out the door and trip over a hippie.

P.S. The image above is from the “Get a Safer Phone” (note the wording) rankings provided by the Environmental Working Group.

Cellphone radiation law to help, confuse San Francisco consumers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Jun 2010 05:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Cellphones purportedly used more now for data, Gossip Girl blasts than calls

Ever notice how easy it is to find mobile plans with unlimited minutes these days? Yeah, it’s because they’re about as valuable as pea coats in the dead of summer. With more and more consumers disconnecting their landlines in favor of using their cellie for everything, the art of communicating via voice is also becoming lost. According to “government and industry data” cited in a New York Times report, the growth in voice minutes used by consumers has “stagnated,” with 2009 being the first year ever in which the “amount of data in text, email messages, streaming video, music and other services on mobile devices [in the US] surpassed the amount of voice data in cellphone calls.” Dan Hesse, Sprint’s head honcho, even chimed in with this nugget: “Originally, talking was the only cellphone application; now it’s less than half of the traffic on mobile networks.” We also learned that the average length of a mobile call was just 1.81 minutes in 2009, a drop from the 2.27 minutes per call seen in 2008, with many individuals feeling that other communication methods (email, SMS, Facebook, Twitter, etc.) were far less invasive of someone’s time, being that they could respond to those messages at their convenience. Of course, on the Upper East Side (where all the richies use Verizon dumbphones, apparently), we get the impression that yakking away about a cornucopia of drama is still the hotness.

Cellphones purportedly used more now for data, Gossip Girl blasts than calls originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 May 2010 18:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Novatel NovaDrive cloud-based unlimited storage preview

Hold onto your hats, it seems Novatel, maker of some of the finest 3G / WiFi devices has decided to stretch its legs from connectivity into the realm of data storage. Not only is the cloud-based storage accessible through their software for Windows or Apple, but they’re thoughfully built a nice mobile site so your cellphone can get in on the fun. Other notables include the ability to mail files to your file server, easy online collaboration for a team, and you can even send folks links to files who don’t have access to your server and track when and if they download it. NovaDrive also touts “unlimited” storage — though, we’d bet they’ll drop the fair use hammer quick if you go too wild — for roughly $50 a year for the personal version and $150 for the team fileserver version. Not too shabby if online storage is your thing, and even if it isn’t, Novadrive has a 30-day demo that won’t cost you one red cent, so feel free to give it a whirl.

Novatel NovaDrive cloud-based unlimited storage preview originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Mar 2010 12:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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CTIA Wireless 2010 draws to a close

Ah, Las Vegas… we hardly knew ye! Okay, that’s categorically untrue — CTIA Wireless 2010 actually marks our third official visit to Sin City in as many months, which means it’s nothing short of a miracle that we’re not lying in a ditch somewhere in the sun-scorched outskirts of town, penniless and near death. As always, the show brought us a fair bit of mobile news; sure, Sprint’s HTC EVO 4G stole the show, but that’s just scratching the surface of the pocketable wizardry we saw this week. Don’t believe us? Let’s dig back through the archives:

Liveblogs
Live from CTIA 2010’s day one keynote with Ralph de la Vega and J. K. Shin!
Live from Sprint’s CTIA 2010 press event
Live from CTIA 2010’s day two keynote with Dan Hesse

Hands-ons
LG Cosmos hands-on
LG Remarq hands-on
Motorola i1 first hands-on!
AT&T’s Palm Pixi Plus and Pre Plus hands-on
HTC EVO 4G is Sprint’s Android-powered knight in superphone armor, we go hands-on
Samsung Galaxy S hands-on with video
HTC EVO 4G vs. HD2 and Desire… fight!
Motorola i1 video tour
Verizon vs. AT&T: Pre Plus edition
Dell Aero first hands-on!
SanDisk 32GB microSDHC vs. SanDisk 4GB microSDHC… fight!
Ventev EcoCharge whacks vampire draw, charges two devices for the price of one
iWonder Android tablet fixes major bug: the logo is right-side-up
Cell-Mate headset heads-on
Vitality GlowCap hands-on
OpenPeak’s OpenTablet 7 hands-on: Moorestown has found a friend
Netcomm MyZone hands-on
Spracht Aura EQ (the really real version) hands-on
LG Air Sync hands-on
Bitbop hands-on: is this the Hulu of mobile?
Qualcomm MSM7x30 development unit hands-on

News
Official: Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus for AT&T ‘in the coming months’
Dell Aero is AT&T’s second Android phone
LG Remarq combines QWERTY, not being mean to the environment in one package for Sprint
Motorola makes i1 official, melds Android and push-to-talk this summer on Sprint
BlueAnt intros rugged T1 Bluetooth headset, sophisticated Android app
Samsung announces Galaxy S Android smartphone
Dell Inspiron Mini 10 with T-Mobile webConnect launches tomorrow, $199.99 on contract
HTC EVO 4G is Sprint’s Android-powered knight in superphone armor, we go hands-on
Dell Inspiron Mini 10 shipping April 1st with integrated Clear WiMAX
T-Mobile USA reiterates that ‘breadth’ of 3G footprint will get HSPA+ this year
Samsung trots out Modus Bluetooth headset, complete with dual mics and multipoint
MetroPCS bringing LTE to Las Vegas this year, Samsung doing infrastructure and first LTE handset: the SCH-r900
AT&T announces deals with OpenPeak, Zeebo, American Security Logistics
Verizon launching V Cast Apps on March 29th, RIM devices get first dibs
AT&T 3G MicroCell starting nationwide roll-out in mid-April
Verizon talks commercial LTE deployment details: data devices first, smartphones in ‘1H 2011’
Verizon to blanket ‘one third’ of America with LTE this year, double coverage in 15 months
Verizon ‘wrapping up’ Boston and Seattle trials, ‘friendly user’ ones coming this summer
Verizon Wireless: ‘all’ 4G WWAN devices will support 3G, too
Clearwire CEO mentions that WiMAX could join LTE as one, Verizon Wireless CTO says no way
Lenovo adds Sprint 3G, 4G support across ThinkPad line
Skiff partners with Samsung to deliver e-stuff, someday
Samsung debuts U820 QWERTY slider at CTIA, no one notices

Scoops
Motorola’s Android-powered i1 launching at CTIA
Samsung to announce Galaxy S smartphone, content initiatives this week

And on that note, we depart Vegas with a heavy heart — but not all’s lost! CTIA Wireless’ sister event in Fall, CTIA Wireless IT & Entertainment, will be in action in early October in lovely San Francisco — and naturally, we’ll be there. Now if you’ll excuse us, just one more hand of blackjack before we head for the airport.

CTIA Wireless 2010 draws to a close originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Mar 2010 23:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Bitbop hands-on: is this the Hulu of mobile?

Fox Mobile unveiled its Bitbop venture this week that promises to provide a wealth of TV and movie entertainment from a variety of top-tier studios, and if you can get past the fact that you’re actually going to have to pay for this content, it’s shaping up to be a pretty promising system when it launches later this year. There’s no live programming — just a database of show episodes and movies that you have your choice of either streaming or downloading for later consumption over 3G or WiFi — which makes it a little bit like using an on-demand service from your cable company. Bitbop was only demoing the BlackBerry version of its app at CTIA this week, but it looks like there’ll be iPhone and Android versions on the way; at any rate, video quality looked plenty good on the Bold’s 480 x 320 display. Initially, there’ll be just one plan — $9.99 a month for access to shows, while movies will be pay-per-view exclusively — but we got the impression that the company is leaving the door open for other payment models down the road. Great, just what we needed: another really cool way to kill productivity. At least we’ll be able to catch up on Gossip Girl in the process, we suppose! Follow the break for video.

Continue reading Bitbop hands-on: is this the Hulu of mobile?

Bitbop hands-on: is this the Hulu of mobile? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Mar 2010 20:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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LG Air Sync hands-on

We got a peek today at the new “3-way” synchronization service from LG that the company is calling Air Sync; it’s only available on the GD880 Mini right now in the UK, but they’re looking to expand it across Europe and Asia before too long and — if we’re lucky — North America eventually. So what is it, exactly? Basically, it’s a synchronization service for text clipping, photos, videos, contacts, and the like that integrates with your PC using a downloadable client. After it’s installed, you get a few new context menu items that let you fast-track content to your phone via the cloud, and we were pretty amazed at just how quickly the transfers consistently happened — within a few seconds, a dialog pops up on LG’s demo Mini notifying you that the goods have been received. It sounds like LG will be looking at deploying this with a subscription model in most markets, so don’t expect gratis awesomeness — but if you transfer tons of pictures from your desktop to your mobile, this might be the way to go. Follow the break for video.

Continue reading LG Air Sync hands-on

LG Air Sync hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Mar 2010 19:50:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Spracht Aura EQ (the really real version) hands-on

We got a glimpse at Spracht’s new Aura EQ Bluetooth headset back at CES this year, but in reality, we sort of didn’t — what was being shown back then didn’t constitute final ID, turns out. The company’s back at it here at CTIA showing something closer to what you’ll be seeing on store shelves later this half — though they only had one, and it wasn’t in final retail packaging — so we took a minute to check it out. It’s using the same tricky earbud that we saw before, but the front of the unit has changed significantly — gone are the matte ridges, replaced with a glossy black surface broken up by a few bumps that represent the range of the capacitive volume slider. If “understated” is the look you’re going for, the Aura EQ is generally going to do the trick — and even if you like something a little more edgy, it’s got those funky points on the front and rear. Quite the crowd pleaser, eh?

Spracht Aura EQ (the really real version) hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 25 Mar 2010 19:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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