The Anti‑Radiation Phone Case Market Runs on Percentages. RF Safe Refuses to Sell One.
Independent Voices
RF Safe
Jan 16, 2026
RF Safe critiques the anti-radiation phone case market for relying on headline percentage-blocking claims that may reflect tests of shielding material rather than real-world phone behavior in a case on a live network. The article argues that poorly designed or misused shielding cases can interfere with a phone’s…
Why RF Safe’s TruthCase Refuses the “99% Blocking” Game — and Why That’s the Point
Independent Voices
RF Safe
Jan 16, 2026
RF Safe argues that “anti-radiation” phone case marketing based on universal “99% blocking” claims is misleading because real-world phone emissions vary with signal conditions, orientation, and how a case affects the antenna. The post positions RF Safe’s TruthCase/QuantaCase as more credible specifically because it…
Best Anti‑Radiation Phone Case 2026: Why QuantaCase (RF Safe) Is the Stand‑Out Choice
Resources
RF Safe
Jan 3, 2026
RF Safe argues that many “anti-radiation” phone cases use misleading marketing (e.g., fabric-swatch tests, vague “FCC tested” claims) and that some designs may cause phones to increase transmit power if they interfere with antennas. The article provides a checklist of red flags (magnets/metal plates, detachable…
This piece does not argue that radiofrequency (RF) electromagnetic fields “cause” any single disease.
Independent Voices
RF Safe
Dec 16, 2025
An RF Safe commentary argues that persistent, pulsed “non-native” RF electromagnetic noise can disrupt biological “timing coherence,” leading to downstream “fidelity losses,” particularly in electrically active tissues. It also emphasizes that smartphones are adaptive RF systems that change transmit power and…
TruthCase™ by RF SAFE QuantaCase
Resources
RF Safe
Nov 27, 2025
RF Safe promotes its TruthCase™ (QuantaCase®) phone case as a "training tool" and "physics-first" product intended to reduce RF exposure through correct phone orientation and design, while criticizing many "anti-radiation" cases as potentially increasing exposure by detuning antennas. The post also argues that…