There's an alarming amount of research that shows cell phones may not be as benign as we thought.
A new book, discussed in The New York Times last weekend, sees an alarming trend in the way and frequency with which we use our cell phones. "The 737 minutes that we talk on cell phones, on average, according to the C.T.I.A., monthly makes today's typical user indistguishable from the heavy user of ten years ago," writes Randall Strauss.
Possible biological effects from wireless communication were found in 67 percent of studies without funding from the cell phone industry (28 percent from studies with industry funding), which Henry Lai, a research professor at the University of Washington, says is not trivial.
And while it's unlikely that the negative effects of cell phones are anywhere close to those of smoking, it does raise the question: Will our grandchildren look at us talking on our cell phones the moment our plane touches down, or while sitting in the doctors office, with the same mix of nostalgia and moral superiority that we feel toward those dated characters on Mad Men?
Image (cc) via Flickr user Kanaka Menehune