right, that's what i found. an explanation of how it was tested. the red highlight in nostr:nprofile1qqsdywzvftrz86ulzkhyevewu75mq0szq2qz65hj890ja68kgvc4r2spz4mhxue69uhhyetvv9ujumrwv96jumn9wshsz9nhwden5te0wahhgtnwdaehgu3wwpshyare9uqsuamnwvaz7tmwdaejumr0dshs9gtat4 's post is not from that text from Apple. his post very misleadingly and deliberately makes it seem that the red-highlighted text appears somewhere in the printed booklet pictured. which it does not.

there's no reason for him to be dishonest and misleading when there ard actual sources (like the ones we found) that he could cite directly.

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Dishonest?

Here. Read it.

https://regulatoryinfo.apple.com/rfexposure/iphone3,1

“Carry iPhone at least 15mm away from your body.”

Word for word.

Funny thing though: newer iPhones don’t say that anymore.

The warning just… vanished.

Why?

Not because phones got safer

but because regulators moved the goalposts.

SAR test protocol changed from IEC 62209-1/2 → IEC 62209-1528

Go figure what’s really happening.

nostr:nevent1qqsfejvv2lw6frxma08xtw4c2d7j4xgrzgngw0erz3c0arahwgs3uagppemhxue69uh5qmn0wvhxcmmv25530k

It's saying the same thing though. They specifically state 10mm of separation.

Newer devices are 5mm.

The apple watch page specifically states "when placing apple watch near your face, keep at least 10mm of separation..."

What exactly is misleading?

The bottom line is the manufacturers themselves include these warnings, and they do so for good reason.