• AmbitiousProcess (they/them)@piefed.social
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    2 hours ago

    No source linked by the article, no visible press releases that don’t just pretend to be a real press release while citing the articles, no official blog posts, and the only official sounding mention of this that comes from a more direct source is a coalition on linkedin saying a person at a sub-group of the broader project was gonna talk with them about it.

    No stats, no numbers, just “they found it” in the headphones.

    You could find a chemical well under the safe limit in drinking water, and say “we found x in your water” and make a big scare of it when it’s not a big deal.

    While I have no doubt BPA and its counterparts could be used in manufacturing of headphones, without any actual data, this is literally no better than when your uncle at Thanksgiving starts yapping about how the government found some data one time and that means you should never drink tap water again.

  • oyzmo@piefed.social
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    3 hours ago

    Clickbait! This is nothing news since the report isn’t publicly available. This is just the media working to keep you scared and reading.

  • scoobford@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    3 hours ago

    This seems like a nothing burger. Plenty of things you shouldn’t ingest like BPA, plastic, and solder are perfectly benign when used to construct consumer electronics.

    I’d be more interested to hear they found something that leeches through the skin being used to create the body of the headphones.

    • thehatfox@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      BPAs have been shown to absorbed through the skin. Headphones are increasingly worn for long, continuous periods. Unlike other plastic objects which are handled for shorter periods.

      I’m not entirely convinced of the danger myself (tinnitus seems a bigger worry for headphone use to me), but I thought it was a matter worthy of further discussion.

    • vext01@lemmy.sdf.org
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      3 hours ago

      I did wonder this myself. Can it enter the body via normal usage? And if so, in what dose? Enough for us to care?

      I don’t make a habit of putting headphones in my mouth, but young children do things like that.