Phonegate Canada: Court authorizes class action against Apple and Samsung

Equipe Phonegate - 27 Sep 2022 In a judgment rendered on September 22, 2022, the seven plaintiffs, Tracey Ariel, Claire O’Brien, Erika Patton, Zoe Patton, Alex Tasciyan, Mathew Nucciarone and Vito Decicco, have been given a win by Judge Christian Immer. They will therefore be allowed to launch a class action against the manufacturers of … Continue reading Phonegate Canada: Court authorizes class action against Apple and Samsung

Phonegate collaboration – info request regarding SAR

Europeans for Safe Connections - 21sep2022 In cooperation with Dr. Marc Arazi, Phonegate Alert, Europeans for Safe Connections has written a letter to local telecom regulators. We ask if any test on specific absorption rate (SAR) of electromagnetic radiation from mobile phones, tablets and connected objects on bodies has been carried out. If tests have … Continue reading Phonegate collaboration – info request regarding SAR

EHS and its associated symptoms are caused by non-ionizing artificial electromagnetic fields

Equipe Phonegate - 26july2022 EHS and its associated symptoms are caused by non-ionizing artificial electromagnetic fields. Prof. Dominique Belpomme and Dr. Sc. Philippe Irigaray, both members of ECERI (the European Cancer and Environment Research Institute), and founding members of A.R.I.E.M. have just published a new article in the international journal Environmental Research that sheds new … Continue reading EHS and its associated symptoms are caused by non-ionizing artificial electromagnetic fields

Canada: 9 out of 10 cell phones exceed regulatory limits in real use

Equipe Phonegate - 05july2022 In March 2022 after two years of waiting, the Canadian agency, Innovation, Science and Economic Development (ISED) sent to our contact, Sharon Noble, the list of test results of 90 smartphones whose SAR (Specific Absorption Rate) had been monitored between 2015 and 2021. The SAR is an indicator supposed to protect … Continue reading Canada: 9 out of 10 cell phones exceed regulatory limits in real use