Peel-on protection from cell phone radiation

A product from Israel deflects cell phone radiation from your body and claims to reduce electromagnetic exposure by 98 percent.

Iphone 311 (photo credit: digital.newzgeek.com)
Iphone 311
(photo credit: digital.newzgeek.com)
 Does radiation from cell phones cause cancer? The jury is still out, with a recently released 10-year study organized by the World Health Organization saying no, and advocacy groups arguing that the research methodology was flawed.
Regardless of the controversy, a small Israeli startup isn't taking any chances. In July, Wise Environment began selling a do-it-yourself kit to protect iPhone (http://www.apple.com/iphone/) owners from radiation. The company claims that its product, dubbed Cell La Vie, reduces electromagnetic exposure from the phone by 98 percent.

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The Wise Environment founders are on a mission. "Parents are driving their young kids to use cell phones, to keep in contact," explains Ronny Gorlicki, Wise Environment's vice president of business development. "But at the same time, they want to protect them from future problems," even if it's not certain that those problems really exist.
At only NIS 179 ($47), Gorlicki feels his product is a worthwhile investment "to defuse the question of what will happen 30 years down the road."
Starting with the iPhone
Cell La Vie can be a bit daunting to install - it's not a one-click software app, but a physical product - a thin film you apply to the front, back and sides of your iPhone with adhesive. The Cell La Vie kit also includes a spray and pump to make sure your phone is totally clean before you get started. "People are reticent in the beginning, fearful that they'll screw things up," Gorlicki tells ISRAEL21c. "But it's no problem to take it off and do it again. We'll even send a replacement if necessary."
Once affixed, the film acts to redirect radiation away from the body. "Inside the phone is an antenna," Gorlicki explains. "The signal goes in all directions. We had to figure out how we can cover up the points where the radiation would penetrate the phone in the direction of the body while maintaining the quality of the transmission."
Wise has so far focused only on the iPhone because of the extensive media buzz surrounding the device. "Even people who haven't bought it are talking about it," Gorlicki says, noting the "huge awareness in the market of 'green' in general and phone radiation in particular. We hear from people 'I'd held back from buying an iPhone from concern about radiation. Now I just made the order because of your product.' "
Since every phone has its antenna in a different place, Wise will have to develop separate films for every type of phone - and for every version. For example, Cell La Vie doesn't yet work with the iPhone 4, which has an entirely different type of antenna (one that has caused users no end of frustration due to inadvertently dropped calls).
Wise is also focusing initially on smart phones. "They're the ones with the higher price tag," Gorlicki explains, "So people are more ready to invest in safeguarding themselves from radiation." Smart phones, ironically, can increase their radiation levels as they detect signal strength. The lower the strength, the more the phone has to work to maintain a minimum quality of service, and as a result the radiation increases.

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No instant gratification
Wise Environment has other radiation-protection products in the pipeline (including one that may actually reduce radiation, not just guard against it) but is progressing slowly. That's in no small part because the company is entirely bootstrapped; it's relying now on sales from its iPhone product, which is available in Israel at iDigital's Apple Stores and the stationary chain Kravitz, to finance future production. Gorlicki is optimistic and says sales are going well, pointing out that "There have already been reorders."
However, given the company's scarce cash situation, sales beyond Israel will have to rely on distributors. Gorlicki doesn't anticipate opening a US or European office in the near future. And even if the patent pending Cell La Vie is as successful as anticipated, Gorlicki says that raising venture capital money will be tough.
He likens the Cell La Vie product to a mezuzah: "You don't know if it has prevented some hardships or brought good things to you," he quips. "There's no immediate gratification in that sense." He says that the problem is with the VCs, who want to see immediate results.
This is not Gorlicki's first outing with a product that doesn't deliver satisfaction on first use. In a previous position at Wizcom, he was in charge of marketing the 'Quicktionary' - a digital pen that you run over printed text to translate it into multiple languages. "There was a real learning curve," Gorlicki recounts, "You had to hold the pen correctly, to start and end it in the right place."

Completely made in Israel
Cell La Vie is not alone in the market; one of its better-funded competitors is Pong Research, which has been reviewed widely, including in Wired Magazine and The New York Times. But Pong, by its own estimates, only reduces radiation by 60 percent and only from the front of the phone, Gorlicki points out. Both Pong and Wise have had their results verified, in Cell La Vie's case at MET Labs, a California testing and certification company.
Gorlicki is proud that his product is entirely made in Israel and hopes that even as production ramps up in the future, the company will be able to resist the pressure to export manufacturing to China or another less-expensive location.
He says he would be delighted to cooperate with Tawkon, a company whose product indicates to smart phone users when their radiation levels are too high. They would be a good match because Tawkon detects the radiation, he explains, while Cell La Vie actually does something about it.
Regarding the WHO study, Gorlicki draws attention to the fact that the research was in part funded by the phone companies themselves. The study followed thousands of phone users in 13 countries to see whether people who had brain tumors reported spending more time on cell phones during the previous decade than other people did. The researchers reported that they couldn't find any cancer correlation with cell phone use.
The study's main purpose, Gorlicki claims, was to give federal agencies a benchmark of when radiation levels are too high. If the companies stay within those levels, they're considered 'kosher.' But, he tells ISRAEL21c, "we really don't know how much and how long it would take for someone to reach proportions so high that he or she will get cancer." Researchers are now considering a new, even longer study of up to 20 years.
Not to mention that cell phone usage has increased dramatically and phones have advanced technologically in the 10 years since the study was started. What might have been considered 'average' use in 2000 would pale in comparison with teenage cell phone use in 2010.

Secondhand radiation a possible danger
Perhaps the ideal scenario for Cell La Vie would be cooperation with, or acquisition by a cell phone manufacturer or operator. But Gorlicki isn't optimistic: "They don't want to have anything to do with it,' he says, explaining that involvement could be construed as an admission that cell phone use might not be 100% safe.
Even with Cell La Vie's protective film in place, cell phones still pose a danger - to your neighbor. Gorlicki compares phone radiation to secondhand smoke. "You could be getting secondhand radiation from the guy sitting next to you in a restaurant talking on his cell phone," he warns. Will there eventually be cell phone-free environments, he wonders.
Beyond being potentially dangerous to bystanders, Gorlicki reminds us that cell phone use requires "good hygiene." Even if you're using a corded headset, you don't want to stuff your phone in your pocket while you talk. The phone still emits the same amount of radiation. Holding it away from your body or placing it on a table is the safest bet.
Gorlicki is doing his best to live in his own 'wise' environment - the company's headquarters are in his home just off of the HaBonim beach south of Haifa, in northern Israel. "I wake up and take the dogs on a walk near the shore," he says. "What a way to start the day when you're working for an environmentally conscious company."