[Bah-lkria-baztan] [Bah-alcarria] BBC - riesgos del mundo WiFi
Laura Blasco
laura en introarte.net
Mie Mayo 23 11:56:09 CEST 2007
Lunes, 21 de mayo de 2007 - 12:42 GMT
_http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/spanish/science/newsid_6676000/6676299.stm
_*
**Posibles riesgos del mundo WiFi
*BBC Mundo Ciencia
/No se conoce lo suficiente sobre los posibles efectos en la salud de la
tecnología WiFi. Esa es la advertencia del presidente de la Agencia de
Protección Sanitaria de Gran Bretaña.
/
Según William Stewart, quien dirigió la investigación del gobierno
británico sobre los efectos a la salud de los teléfonos móviles, debemos
tener la misma actitud precautoria que adoptamos ante estos últimos.
La tecnología WiFi, del inglés Wireless Fidelity o fidelidad
inalámbrica, ofrece la posibilidad de conexiones rápidas a través de
señales de radio, y no requiere cables o enchufes.
Gran Bretaña, igual que muchos otros países del mundo, ha adoptado
esta tecnología y cada vez más escuelas, universidades, y hogares se han
unido a la revolución inalámbrica.
Sin embargo, los expertos afirman que los efectos a largo plazo de
la tecnología no han sido suficientemente investigados. En particular se
mencionan los posibles riesgos a la salud de los niños que asisten a
escuelas con redes inalámbricas.
* Radiación
* La radiofrecuencia de los teléfonos móviles, las torres de
telefonía móvil y las redes WiFi emiten radiación.
Una investigación del programa de la BBC "Panorama" encontró que
los niveles de radiación en un salón de clases de una escuela en
Inglaterra eran tres veces más altos que los niveles de radiación
emitidos por una torre de telefonía celular.
Los expertos afirman, sin embargo, que incluso estos niveles en
ese salón están por debajo de los límites que se consideran seguros en
este país.
El debate sobre los efectos de la tecnología inalámbrica no es
nuevo. Siempre se ha dicho que no se debe permitir que la radiación de
una torre de telefonía móvil llegue al los patios de las escuelas.
Y ahora, mientras no se demuestre lo contrario, los expertos
afirman que debemos tomar con precaución las posibles consecuencias de
la radiación de la tecnología inalámbrica. El problema es que quizás ya
es un poco tarde, porque muchas escuelas alrededor del mundo se han
unido a la revolución inalámbrica.
En Gran Bretaña, casi 50% de las escuelas primarias y 70% de las
secundarias tienen tecnología WiFi. Además, muchos niños que ya están
rodeados de estas emisiones en la escuela, regresarán a casa donde
quizás también habrá radiación WiFi.
* Sobre la mesa
* Lo que se sabe hasta ahora es que la exposición de las emisiones
WiFi a menudo es muy pequeña, ya que los transmisores son de baja
potencia y se colocan a cierta distancia del cuerpo.
También pueden estar más cerca, por ejemplo, cuando nos colocamos
nuestra laptop en las piernas. Por eso, dicen los expertos, es mejor
alentar a los niños que usen su computadora en una mesa si van a estar
conectados a internet durante mucho tiempo.
Algunos países, sin embargo, ya han adoptado medidas precautorias
más estrictas. Los estudiantes de la Universidad Lakehead, en Ontario,
Canadá, tienen prohibido conectarse a internet en varias zonas del
campus universitario donde se ha eliminado el uso de tecnología WiFi.
Según el rector de la misma, "la radiación de microondas en el
rango de frecuencia de WiFi causa cambios de conducta, altera las
funciones cognitivas, activa la respuesta de estrés e interfiere con las
ondas cerebrales".
Las autoridades universitarias afirman que no se usarán redes
inalámbricas hasta que se demuestre que estas ondas no son dañinas para
la salud.
* Precaución
* Hasta ahora, sin embargo, no se ha logrado demostrar que la WiFi
sea perjudicial. Según el profesor Henry Lai,
_http://www.emrpolicy.org/science/forum/index.htm_, de la Universidad
Estatal de Washington, quien ha estudiado los posibles efectos a la
salud de las redes WiFi, afirma que las investigaciones hasta ahora no
han sido concluyentes.
"Debe haber por lo menos unos tres mil estudios llevados a cabo
durante los pasados 20 años sobre estos efectos", afirma el experto. "Y
hasta ahora, el 50% de estos encontró algún efecto perjudicial, y el 50%
no encontró ningún efecto en absoluto", agrega.
El gobierno británico afirma que mientras las emisiones de
radiación estén por debajo de los límites que se consideran seguros, no
existen riesgos a la salud.
Pero, tal como preguntamos al profesor Lai, ¿permitirá que sus
hijos se sienten frente a una computadora inalámbrica durante todos sus
años escolares?
"No lo creo -afirma- yo limitaría su exposición a este tipo de
radiación, porque más vale ser precavidos".
_http://www.clarin.com/diario/2007/05/21/um/m-01423224.htm
_
*
*
*16:57 |
**Un estudio advierte sobre los riesgos por el uso de la tecnología WiFi
*
/Según una investigación de la BBC, las ondas de radio emitidas por este
sistema de transmisión son tres veces más potentes que las emanadas por los
teléfonos celulares y aún no está claro si pueden causar daños. Algunos
países ya adoptaron medidas precautorias.
/*
Tendencias
*La Agencia de Protección Sanitaria de Gran Bretaña advirtió que no se
conoce
lo suficiente sobre los posibles efectos que la tecnología WiFi podría
tener
en la salud. Según una investigación realizada por la BBC, las ondas de
radio emitidas por este sistema de transmisión son tres veces más potentes
que las emanadas por los teléfonos celulares.
Cada vez más locales comerciales, universidades y hogares adoptan el
sistema
inalámbrico WiFi ("Wireless Fidelity", "Fidelidad inalámbrica" en español).
En Gran Bretaña, lo utilizan casi el 50% de las escuelas primarias y el 70%
de las secundarias. Los expertos afirman que los efectos de la exposición a
esta tecnología a largo plazo no fueron suficientemente investigados y que
existen posibles riesgos para quienes se exponen a sus radiaciones.
Algunos países ya adoptaron medidas precautorias. Los estudiantes de la
Universidad Lakehead, en Canadá, tienen prohibido conectarse a Internet en
varias zonas del campus universitario. Las autoridades de ese centro
educativo afirman que no se usarán redes inalámbricas hasta que se
demuestre
que estas ondas no son dañinas para la salud.
Sin embargo, hasta el momento no se logró demostrar que la tecnología sea
perjudicial. "Debe haber por lo menos unos tres mil estudios llevados a
cabo
sobre estos efectos. Hasta ahora, el 50% encontró algún efecto
perjudicial y
el 50% no encontró ningún efecto en absoluto", explicó a la prensa el
profesor Henry Lai, de la Universidad Estatal de Washington.
Artículo
*Las redes WiFi matan a los niños
*por El equipo de The Inquirer:
_javier.pastor en vnubp.es_ _javier.pastor en vnubp.es_
Lunes 23 Abril 2007, 11:36
_http://es.theinquirer.net/2007/04/23/las_redes_wifi_matan_a_los_nin.html
_
Sir William Stewart, director de la Health Protection Agency, quiere que
se vigile a los más jóvenes y a los efectos nocivos que pueden causar
sobre ellos las redes WiFi instaladas en centros escolares.
Sir William fue anteriormente consejero científico del gobierno, y ha
presentado dos peticiones oficiales para advertir del peligro de los
teléfonos móviles.
Teme que las redes WiFi puedan causar cáncer y una senilidad prematura.
Varios gobiernos en distintas provincias de Europa están eliminando o
limitando el uso de WiFi en las clases.
Ningún estudio ha conseguido relacionar los efectos de las redes
inalámbricas en los pupilos, pero estas redes emiten una radiación
similar a las emisiones de los teléfonos móviles y las antenas de
telefonía móvil.
_
_
_http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/health_medical/article2472133.ece
_
from The Independent & The Independent on Sunday
21 May 2007 19:47 Health Medical
*Wi-Fi: Children at risk from 'electronic smog'
*
Revealed - radiation threat from new wireless computer networks
Teachers demand inquiry to protect a generation of pupils
By Geoffrey Lean, environment editor
Published: 22 April 2007
Britain's top health protection watchdog is pressing for a formal
investigation into the hazards of using wireless communication networks in
schools amid mounting concern that they may be damaging children's health,
'The Independent on Sunday' can reveal.
Sir William Stewart, the chairman of the Health Protection Agency, wants
pupils to be monitored for ill effects from the networks - known as Wi-Fi -
which emit radiation and are being installed in classrooms across the
nation.
Sir William - who is a former chief scientific adviser to the Government,
and has chaired two official inquiries into the hazards of mobile phones -
is adding his weight to growing pressure for a similar examination of
Wi-Fi,
which some scientists fear could cause cancer and premature senility.
Wi-Fi - described by the Department of Education and Skills as a "magical"
system that means computers do not have to be connected to telephone
lines -
is rapidly being taken up inschools, with estimates that more than half of
primary schools - and four-fifths of secondary schools - have installed it .
But several European provincial governments have already taken action to
ban, or limit, its use in the classroom, and Stowe School has partially
removed it after a teacher became ill.
This week the Professional Association of Teachers, which represents 35,000
staff across the country, will write to Alan Johnson, Secretary of State
for
Education, to demand an official inquiry. Virtually no studies have been
carried out into Wi-Fi's effects on pupils, but it gives off radiation
similar to emissions from mobile phones and phone masts.
Recent research has linked radiation from mobiles to cancer and to brain
damage. And many studies have found disturbing symptoms in people near
masts.
Professor Olle Johansson, _http://www.feb.se/ARTICLES/OlleJ.html
_
of Sweden's prestigious Karolinska Institute, who is deeply concerned about
the spread of Wi-Fi, says there are "thousands" of articles in scientific
literature demonstrating "adverse health effects". He adds: "Do we not know
enough already to say, 'Stop!'?"
For the past 16 months, the provincial government of Salzburg in Austria
has
been advising schools not to install Wi-Fi, and is considering a ban. Dr
Gerd Oberfeld, its head of environmental health and medicine, calls the
technology "dangerous".
Sir William - who takes a stronger position on the issue than his agency -
was not available for comment yesterday, but two members of an expert group
that he chairs on the hazards of radiation spoke of his concern.
Mike Bell, chairman of the Electromagnetic Radiation Research Trust, says
that he has been "very supportive of having Wi-Fi examined and doing
something about it". And Alasdair Philips,
_http://www.powerwatch.org.uk/docs/aboutus.asp
_
director of Powerwatch, an information service, said that he was pressing
for monitoring of the health of pupils exposed to Wi-Fi.
Labour MP Ian Gibson, who was interviewed with Sir William for a
forthcoming
television programme, last week said that he backed proposals for an
inquiry.
21 May 2007 19:48 Leading Articles
_http://comment.independent.co.uk/leading_articles/article2472074.ece
_
Leading article:
*Hi-tech horrors
*Published: 22 April 2007
The technologies we grow to love most have a way of exacting a toll once we
become dependent on them. They change our lives and then come back to
demand
their price. Take the internal combustion engine, which has allowed us
to be
comfortably mobile, but killed many millions in accidents and from
pollution. Or indeed the burning of fossil fuels, which has driven
prosperity for more than two centuries, but now threatens to destroy
through
uncontrolled global warming the very civilisation it has created. Mobile
phones are our latest love affair - over 50 million are in use in Britain -
and for these too there may well be a reckoning. Evidence is beginning to
accumulate that the radiation they emit may cause cancer and so damage the
brains of today's young people that they become senile while still in the
prime of life. Two official reports by Sir William Stewart - chairman of
the
official Health Protection Agency and a former government chief scientist -
have warned against the dangers, only to be effectively ignored by the
Government.
The measures he proposed were moderate and sensible, but were treated with
unforgivable contempt. He wanted ministers to circulate a leaflet detailing
the potential dangers to every home; they restricted distribution so much
that it was hard to get. He asked for information on the widely varying
radiation levels of different phones to be put on the handsets and the
packaging, so that customers could choose to buy low-radiation models for
themselves or their children; ministers pledged to do so, and broke their
promise. He recommended that erecting mobile phone masts near schools
should
be banned unless parents agreed; the Government simply refused. Above all,
he insisted that children should be discouraged from using mobiles and that
industry should be stopped from promoting them to the young; nothing
happened and their use became almost universal.
Now, as we report today, he is privately airing new concerns - about the
rapid spread of Wi-Fi technology, particularly in schools. The radiation
emitted by the networks is far less than from mobiles, and it is not
delivered so close to the head. But it is constant, and involuntary. People
who are particularly, and dangerously, sensitive to the radiation will not
be able to escape it. Nor will those who might choose not to take the
gamble
with their health. And as the technology is rolled out to cover whole
cities, any refuge will become next to impossible.
The inconvenient truth is that we are conducting a massive experiment on
ourselves and particularly on our children. We are surrounding ourselves
with an ever-thickening electronic soup the like of which living cells have
not encountered during their billions of years of evolution. Of course, all
may be well; we may be immune to any ill-effects. But there is enough
evidence accumulating to make it seem unlikely that we will be so lucky. As
we exclusively reported last week, other members of the animal kingdom -
bees - may be even more affected.
We need to stop and think. Weshould be officially monitoring the effects on
the children we expose to the radiation in classrooms. We also need another
official inquiry - as authoritative as the Stewart reports on mobile
phones - before the technology is deployed further. And this time,
ministers
must implement what it recommends.
_http://www.powerwatch.org.uk/docs/aboutus.asp_ Alasdair Philips
*Powerwatch - About Us
*[Back to Home Page] [About Us] [Mission and Aims] [Vision and Purpose]
[Staff]
Powerwatch has been researching the links between electromagnetic fields
(EMFs) and health risks for about 17 years, and is completely
independent of
government and industry. We gather information from around the world about
EMFs, in order to help the lay person understand this complex issue. We
have
designed a number of instruments so that the general public can find out
what they are exposed to, and have written numerous publications on the
latest research, what is understood and what is not known, and what you can
do to minimise any high fields you may be regularly exposed to. These, and
high quality EMF shielding material (including paint), are sold by EMFields.
Powerwatch was formed in 1988 to fight a proposal for a large new
electricity substation in Norfolk, England, UK. This was on a greenfield
site and was to be built to free up an existing one on a valuable
industrial
site. The original driving force behind it was Neil Mayhew,
_http://www.greenhealthwatch.com/GOODS/BOOKSCDS/BookLivingWithElecBOEMFLIVELECPHIL.htm
_a road safety engineer working for Norfolk County Council. The issues
included electromagnetic effects on health, appropriate power use and
energy
efficiency. Powerwatch was commended by the Inspector for its professional
and appropriate input to the Inquiry.
Around the same time, Alasdair Philips was Newsletter Editor for a group
called Electronics and Computing for Peace. He and colleagues had been
investigating the claimed (mis-)use of non-lethal electromagnetic
weapons by
the military, one particular example being the 'zapping' of the women peace
protestors at Greenham Common ~ a RAF base being used by the American
military as a Cruise Missile base. When they visited the Greenham Airbase
they measured microwave beams, amplitude modulated at extremely low
frequencies, aimed directly at the women. Interestingly, this was confirmed
to Alasdair by senior Home Office officials at a Mobile Phones and Health
Effects conference held in Whitehall, London, in 1996.
As well as building up a database of both Russian and American military
electromagnetic weaponry literature, it soon became clear that low
frequency
electric and magnetic fields from power lines and electrical appliances
were
also suspect of being able to cause, or at least promote, adverse health
effects, especially childhood leukaemia.
In 1990 ECP amalgamated with other groups to form Scientists for Global
Responsibility (SGR), and Alasdair Philips moved most of his non-ionising
electromagnetic field work to Powerwatch, although staying a member of SGR.
Until the summer of 1998 Powerwatch was a membership organisation open to
members of the general public. Although we had about 600 members, most of
them just wanted news and advice and it was not proving possible to find
the
time and resources to run it properly. It was decided to transfer existing
membership subscriptions into subscriptions to the ElectroMagnetic Hazard
and Therapy Quarterly Newsletter.
Since then Powerwatch has been an association of skilled people,
Directed by
Alasdair Philips, maintaining this web site and providing a consultancy
service on a commercial basis to businesses and to the general public, and
providing technical input to local Councils and Government.
Alasdair Philips in qualified in both Electrical and Electronic Engineering
and in Agricultural Engineering. Since 1986 he has built up a considerable
knowledge of EMF bioeffects, and is one of the leading 'alternative' voices
on the subject in the UK. Powerwatch is used as a forum for a small
group of
knowledgeable engineers and scientists who are concerned about the
consequences of irradiated 'blue world' we are creating.
--
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