Report: High levels of toxic chemicals found in Apple, Google, Samsung, and more smartwatch bands (www.phonearena.com)
from return2ozma@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 17:16
https://lemmy.world/post/24351608

#technology

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umami_wasbi@lemmy.ml on 16 Jan 17:22 next collapse

How about typical watch bands? Without comparison, I highly doubt this is only happening on smartwatch bands.

masterofn001@lemmy.ca on 16 Jan 17:47 next collapse

If you buy a $10 “fashion watch” from the ugly shiny watch depot at your local dollar mart, odds are you’ll have wrist cancer in a month.

Only watches I own are stainless steel, with stainless, leather, or fabric straps.

NineMileTower@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 18:09 collapse

Silicone bands are not the same as fluoroelastomer, which is what the article is about. A LOT of bands on Amazon are silicone bands.

masterofn001@lemmy.ca on 16 Jan 18:23 collapse

They asked about typical watch bands.

I use what I consider typical watch bands.

I don’t worry about what elastomer or poly whatever is in these other bands.

Silicone is not without risk. And products sold on amazon aren’t exactly always as marketed.

pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4884743/

Anyway, I was commenting on typical.

NineMileTower@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 18:31 collapse

That article is not at all what you said it was. It is saying medical grade silicone is safe, not that “non-medical” silicone is not.

Generally, siloxanes (silicones) are well tolerated by the human organism, and therefore they are an integral part of innovative methods of treatment, health care and nursing. They are commonly regarded as non-toxic to humans and the environment, or toxic to a very small extend. However, there is a number of publications in which the scientists and experts question this opinion. Many authors demonstrated that the degree of polymerization and the structure affect the ability to overcome cellular barriers, including stratum corneum of the skin and absorption into the organism, migration in the living organism, ability to accumulate, degradability and toxicity. This particularly applies to low molecular weight siloxanes. It can be concluded in the summary, that an evaluation of the safety of siloxanes application should always refer to a particular compound, not a chemical group. Furthermore, the use of low molecular weight silicones should be reduced, as well as the purity of high molecular weight silicones, which may contain low molecular compounds as impurities, should be monitored. It should be emphasized that in the case of silicones for medical and pharmaceutical use, the manufactures of this group of compounds formed a special class, which they called “Medical Grade Silicones” or “Silicones for Healthcare Application.” These silicones must meet certain standards. Medical grade silicones are specially designed, produced and purified, so that to meet the highest requirements of the medical industry. The detailed toxicity data and information about “Medical Grade Silicones” and “Silicones for Healthcare Application” will be given in the next parts of this cycle.

masterofn001@lemmy.ca on 16 Jan 18:39 collapse

Congratulations on quoting the summary and skipping over

In conclusion, considering the safety of the direct application or contact by humans with siloxanes, the polycondensation reaction is preferred, due to lower contamination with low molecular weight siloxanes of cyclic structure. The literature indicates that they exhibit toxic effects, for example: cancerogenicity, modifications in proteins conformation, influence on the immune system, genotoxicity, skin irritations, intraocular pressure increase and teratogenicity

Trust the maker of that silicone strap on amazon named qxzijhnnnggqqi qzzcni all you want to produce the kind of silicone or whatever other material.

NineMileTower@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 21:09 collapse

Neither of the cited articles mentions the toxicity at all though. Also, are you sure your “typical” bands are free of heavy metals?

masterofn001@lemmy.ca on 16 Jan 23:14 collapse

You’re right, nowhere does it mention toxicity, except the entire article.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/6f932350-afb7-4db1-8b88-b63472c27a44.png">

And you’re right, I am not sure there aren’t any heavy metals in my leather and fabric straps.

And you’re also correct that the stainless straps that I do have which I bought from a jeweler I am additionally uncertain about their contents aside from the manufacturers certification.

But weren’t you talking about silicone?

NineMileTower@lemmy.world on 17 Jan 02:22 collapse

No, dude. You don’t understand what I said. You just quoted the original article. I’m saying the cited articles in the article are not be claiming toxicity at all. They are claiming presence, but not toxicity. I do not know where this study got off citing those sources when they make no claims as such.

NineMileTower@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 18:10 next collapse

From what I researched, fluoroelastomer is not silicone. Silicone bands are more common.

rhythmisaprancer@moist.catsweat.com on 17 Jan 03:39 collapse

I am wondering about this, also. I have a regular watch, with a "plastic" band. Why would PFAS be used in these bands? Ridiculous.

iconic_admin@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 17:25 next collapse

So don’t eat my watch band. Noted.

NegativeInf@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 17:39 next collapse

“This chemical can be absorbed through your skin, and it’s even worse if you’re sweating while wearing the band because it can get into your pores”

sbv@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jan 20:53 collapse

So you’re saying the lemmite can eat it?

recreationalcatheter@lemm.ee on 16 Jan 22:26 collapse

ONLY if they aren’t sweaty.

cm0002@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 17:45 collapse

You’d be surprised at what your skin just… absorbs

zephorah@lemm.ee on 16 Jan 17:47 next collapse

Ok. Don’t eat the watches.

pelespirit@sh.itjust.works on 16 Jan 17:54 next collapse

A recent study published in the journal “Environmental Science & Technology Letters” has found that many popular smartwatch bands contain high levels of toxic “forever chemicals” known as PFAS. These chemicals are used in many products, from cookware to clothing, because they make things non-stick or water-resistant. The problem is, they don’t break down in the environment and can build up in our bodies over time. This can lead to some pretty serious health problems like cancer, immune system issues, and even developmental problems in kids.

“But H20 is a chemical!” /s

Soulifix@kbin.melroy.org on 16 Jan 18:15 next collapse

OH. MY. Oh, I'm not shocked.

avidamoeba@lemmy.ca on 16 Jan 18:15 next collapse

Source: pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.estlett.4c00907

Sunshine@lemmy.ca on 16 Jan 19:11 next collapse

What about the Pinetime?

dance_ninja@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 19:17 next collapse

Brands tested:

  • Apple
  • Apple/Nike
  • CASETiFY
  • Fitbit
  • Google
  • KingofKings
  • Modal
  • Samsung
  • Tighesen
  • Vanjua
nyan@lemmy.cafe on 16 Jan 21:25 next collapse

Missing from the article: actual amounts of PFAS found in the bands, what percentage of it can be absorbed through skin contact, how that compares to other sources the average person might run into, and how much you have to absorb before biological damage emerges out of the statistical noise. The information may be in the original paper, but I’m disinclined to search for it there. Without those numbers, this is meaningless.

hywoid@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 22:34 next collapse

This is just a news article. Also even though they had those informations in the article I won’t trust some journalist about the answers of your big questions and I suggest you the same.

nyan@lemmy.cafe on 17 Jan 00:11 collapse

One of two things is the case:

  1. The numbers are in the paper, and the person who wrote the article could have transcribed them but is too lazy.

  2. The numbers are not in the paper, in which case I would class the article as inflammatory and irresponsible.

.

Do I trust the journalist? Not in the sense you mean, but I expect them to act responsibly and make a minimum effort.

HaiZhung@feddit.org on 17 Jan 12:38 collapse

From the paper:

The very high concentrations of PFHxA readily extractable from the surfaces of fluoroelastomer watch bands, together with the current limited knowledge on the dermal absorption of PFHxA, demonstrate the need for more comprehensive exposure studies of PFHxA.

So it sounds more like it’s unclear for now. But probably best to about these bands either way.

LodeMike@lemmy.today on 18 Jan 13:31 collapse

“Very high”

pewgar_seemsimandroid@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 16 Jan 22:08 next collapse

what about zswatch?

Benjaben@lemmy.world on 16 Jan 22:43 next collapse

Problems pointed out by commenters aside, I am under the impression that there is very little oversight about this kind of stuff anymore.

For one thing - unless they’ve changed recently, Amazon “bins” alike products from multiple suppliers, meaning if a bad actor is introducing counterfeits (or just less stringently tested, for more fungible products) - Amazon doesn’t even know who they got them from, by the time that’s discovered.

But for another thing, the absolutely incredible volume of products - how on earth is anyone making sure these random-character-generated “brands” are safe?

I lack much in the way of direct evidence, cuz I’ve got shit to do and this isn’t my life’s focus - but it seems apparent that there cannot possibly be the kind of consumer safety testing that we want going on. And if that’s true, it’s only a matter of time before the smart capitalists realize no one is watching and they can make stuff even cheaper (I think they already have), and then how long before we as a society discover all the harm that’s done as a result?

I’d love to be wrong about this, but like so many tech innovations, I have a feeling we’re going to find out later there were huge harms done before we learned how to rein them in. The speed, volume, and price we’ve grown used to with Amazon seems to preclude consumer safety.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 17 Jan 00:04 next collapse

What about Garmin?

idefix@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jan 07:02 collapse

Same question: super weird to leave them out…

pastermil@sh.itjust.works on 17 Jan 13:26 collapse

Probably means no.

Passerby6497@lemmy.world on 17 Jan 00:18 next collapse

I’m not surprised at all. My wife and I only use 3rd party metal bands because the factory bands gave us both chemical burns.

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 17 Jan 02:38 next collapse

WTF lol

Monument@lemmy.sdf.org on 17 Jan 04:19 collapse

I’m sorry this is going to be such a shit comment, but I worked with a guy that had a fitness watch of some stripe.

He was a heavier guy and well, that plasticy band was pressed tight against his skin. One day he came in with this nasty looking ring of red and peeling skin around his wrist. Said he got a rash from the watch. (It’s very possible it was an allergic reaction to something in the band.)

This is a shit comment because I don’t know the brand, and I’m totally saying “trust me, bro.” But like, trust me, bro, it apparently happens?

JWBananas@lemmy.world on 17 Jan 06:20 next collapse

Can confirm. Fitbit Charge 6 band did that to me until I replaced it with this style:

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4274cebf-476a-4ab9-916b-15d8cfdf1407.jpeg">

OhVenus_Baby@lemmy.ml on 17 Jan 12:02 collapse

No I have seen it happen first hand. To myself and a family member I totally believe it. I had to try several bands to find one that doesn’t cause me issues similar to that but not as severe. This is wild it isn’t more regulated or something.

9tr6gyp3@lemmy.world on 17 Jan 07:08 collapse

Yea i know that silicon is a rough material, so I went with a woven cloth band that uses velcro to fasten the strap. Anything is better than that silicon crap.

BigPotato@lemmy.world on 18 Jan 14:03 collapse

About a decade ago I had a Fitbit and wearing it caused my wrist to break out in a rash. I sent a picture of said wrist to Customer Support and they gave me a full refund on it.

Now, I’ve not had a watch cause me to break out like that since and I’ve also never owned any of the other brands on this list… Now you got me wondering.