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View Full Version : Dumb People Are Allegedly Paying $350 on an “Anti-5G” USB Stick



Teh One Who Knocks
06-02-2020, 11:48 AM
Oddity Central


https://i.imgur.com/pTaNvVzl.jpg

If you’re dumb enough to pay hundreds of dollars for a simple USB stick with just 128Mb of storage in hoping that it will protect you from the “devastating effects” of 5G, then you deserve to be scammed.

Here at OC we’ve always refrained from judging people for their actions, but we draw the line at paying for anti-5G products. Just the other day I was reading a story about some guy in Seattle making hundreds of dollars by selling anti-5G lotion to people dumb enough to believe it actually worked. It was most likely fake news thought up by some The Onion copycat, but today I woke up to this little gem – a real anti-5G product called a “5GBioShield”, which reportedly sells for a whopping $350. If you shell that kind of money to protect yourself from thin air, you really are dumb!

The 5GBioShield landed on the radar of the UK’s Trading Standards Institute after it was recommended by a member of Glastonbury Town Council’s 5G Advisory Committee, which has called for an inquiry into 5G. According to the company selling it on the UK market, 5GBioShield “is the result of the most advanced technology currently available for balancing and prevention of the devastating effects caused by non-natural electric waves, particularly (but not limited to) 5G, for all biological life forms.”

Described as a USB key, the tiny device allegedly “provides protection for your home and family, thanks to the wearable holographic nano-layer catalyser, which can be worn or placed near to a smartphone or any other electrical, radiation or EMF [electromagnetic field] emitting device.”

So how does this super-advanced device protect you? Well, you just have to buy it and enjoy it’s protection. “It is always ON and working—that’s why we used quantum nano-layer technology,” the company selling it claims, adding that plugging it into a USB port only expands the field effect from 4m radius to 20m +.”

https://i.imgur.com/efjABP4l.jpg

“The 5GBioShield makes it possible, thanks to a uniquely applied process of quantum nano-layer technology, to balance the imbalanced electric oscillations arising from all electric fog induced by all devices such as: laptops, cordless phones, wlan, tablets,” and also “brings balance into the field at the atomic and cellular level restoring balanced effects to all harmful (ionized and non-ionized) radiation.”

That sounds like such mumbo-jumbo, but to less tech-savvy people who happen to be into conspiracy theories, it sounds advanced enough to actually work. Sadly, as the Trading Standards investigation recently revealed, they are getting scammed.

“We consider it to be a scam,” Stephen Knight, operations director for London Trading Standards told the BBC. “People who are vulnerable need protection from this kind of unscrupulous trading.”

https://i.imgur.com/cyabtKyl.jpg

Experts at Pen Test Partners, a UK company that specializes in taking apart electronic products to spot security vulnerabilities, recently analyzed one of the 5GBioShield sticks sold by BioShield Distribution, and found that apart from a small, round sticker, it virtually identical to a ‘crystal’ USB key available from various suppliers in China for just $6 apiece.

As for the inner working of the 5GBioShield, there was no quantum nano-layer technology visible anywhere, just an LED light, like on the regular 128Mb USB sticks from China.

Anna Grochowalska, one of the two directors of BioShield Distribution, told the BBC that her company was the sole global distributor of the 5GBioShield, but it it did not own or build the product. Still, she defended the company, saying that the comparison of its $350 device to a $6 USB stick was unjust, as it didn’t take into account the exact production costs and intellectual property rights for the 5GBioShield. She also refused to reveal any technical information revealing the product…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ckY-CP0fvtY

You can still buy 5GBioShield (https://5gbioshield.com/) on its official website, but I’d rather you just gave me that $350 instead…

lost in melb.
06-05-2020, 02:52 PM
Warranties Disclaimer
BioShield Distribution Ltd disclaims any and all responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, completeness, legality, reliability, or operability or availability of information or material in the website.

:lol:

Teh One Who Knocks
06-05-2020, 06:40 PM
:lol:So.....did you buy one? :-k

RBP
06-05-2020, 07:30 PM
Wow. I really need to be less scrupulous. Gotta make dat chedda, yo.

Teh One Who Knocks
06-05-2020, 07:31 PM
Wow. I really need to be less scrupulous. Gotta make dat chedda, yo.You needs to get PAID playa :tup:

RBP
06-05-2020, 07:44 PM
You needs to get PAID playa :tup:

Fuck bitches, get money.

DemonGeminiX
06-05-2020, 11:55 PM
Invisible toilet paper. It doesn't even feel like it's there! Just make sure to wash your hands after using. :tup:

lost in melb.
06-06-2020, 12:50 AM
So.....did you buy one? :-k

Yes, for you! You owe me $370 [-(

perrhaps
06-06-2020, 09:20 AM
So.....did you buy one? :-k

I acted NOW, and got a second one FREE by only paying $150.00 additional shipping.

Godfather
06-06-2020, 07:05 PM
Fuck bitches, get money.

I think we can run with this :lol: 5G blocking underwear and baseball hats might sell :-k

RBP
06-06-2020, 07:20 PM
I think we can run with this :lol: 5G blocking underwear and baseball hats might sell :-k

We need slogans.

"Use your brain. Protect your boys." :-k

On a more serious note, there is some science behind the concerns. Not that this silliness is an answer...

http://www.5gappeal.eu/
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/we-have-no-reason-to-believe-5g-is-safe/

Godfather
06-06-2020, 07:42 PM
We need slogans.

"Use your brain. Protect your boys." :-k

On a more serious note, there is some science behind the concerns. Not that this silliness is an answer...

http://www.5gappeal.eu/
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/we-have-no-reason-to-believe-5g-is-safe/

Agreed, there's some concern. Needs more study it seems like.

I saw this study and had to dig it up from a while back.


The National Toxicology Program also published final results of its decade-long study on rats, which found a link between exposure to high levels of 2G and 3G cellphone radiation and cancerous heart tumors in male rats. The study also found that the exposed rats outlived other rats that hadn't been exposed to any radiation.

https://www.niehs.nih.gov/news/newsroom/releases/2018/november1/index.cfm

Radiation and cancerous tumors but they lived longer?! Excuse me :lol: I feel like we have no clue what any of this stuff is going to do to us sometimes

Godfather
06-07-2020, 07:02 AM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N7dchMUJLOI

lost in melb.
06-07-2020, 08:36 AM
We need slogans.

"Use your brain. Protect your boys." :-k

On a more serious note, there is some science behind the concerns. Not that this silliness is an answer...

http://www.5gappeal.eu/
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/we-have-no-reason-to-believe-5g-is-safe/

Agreed. It's super high energy radiation and the towers are much much closer to our houses and at a much higher power so they can penetrate into our buildings.

The only studies that they do look at conversion of this radiation into heat, but I would maintain that the human nervous system, physiology and cell biology is susceptible to all sorts of interference

lost in melb.
06-07-2020, 08:37 AM
Agreed, there's some concern. Needs more study it seems like.

I saw this study and had to dig it up from a while back.



https://www.niehs.nih.gov/news/newsroom/releases/2018/november1/index.cfm

Radiation and cancerous tumors but they lived longer?! Excuse me :lol: I feel like we have no clue what any of this stuff is going to do to us sometimes

Wow :shock: