Professor James C. Lin Calls for Rethinking “Flawed” Wireless Radiation Safety Standards

ICBE-EMF - 28july2025 New Peer-Reviewed Study By Professor James C. Lin Calls for Rethinking “Flawed” Wireless Radiation Safety Standards Amid Growing Scientific Evidence of Health Effects A new review article by Professor James C. Lin, published in Frontiers in Public Health, documents numerous problems with government wireless radiation exposure limits, such as those of the … Continue reading Professor James C. Lin Calls for Rethinking “Flawed” Wireless Radiation Safety Standards

ElektrosmogReport – Issue July 2025

A Newsletter Independent of Industry and Government. One of the longest-running newsletters on the health and environmental impact of electromagnetic fields and radiation - the ElektrosmogReport - is now available in English. Diagnose:Funk, the publisher, is translating the German-language original and making it available.. Both versions come out quarterly. D:F is a consumer and environmental … Continue reading ElektrosmogReport – Issue July 2025

The Growing Risk of Space Debris: How Satellite Proliferation Is Polluting Low-Earth Orbit

CircleID - Doug Dawson 11june2025. Low-orbit space is growing increasingly crowded. Starlink has over 7,100 satellites in orbit and has plans to grow to 30,000. Project Kuiper has plans for a constellation of 3,232 satellites. One Web’s first-generation constellation has 648 satellites, with plans to grow to over 6,300 satellites. The Thousand Sails (Qianfan) constellation … Continue reading The Growing Risk of Space Debris: How Satellite Proliferation Is Polluting Low-Earth Orbit

Are we killing the bees? – revisiting a lecture from 2014

Einar Flydal - 08may2025. (Post Translation from Norwegian) The other day I found out that someone had uploaded a lecture I gave to my colleagues at NTNU (Telematics Norwegian University of Science and Technology) in 2014, on the website Research Gate. It was a kind of "farewell lecture" I gave when I had finally decided … Continue reading Are we killing the bees? – revisiting a lecture from 2014