Lightsaber Laser Can Blind People, Cause Fires

WickedLasers has released a new laser that can blind instantly, cause cancer if it touches skin, and could possibly set things on fire.

Sometimes the responsible and careful progression of technology just has to take a backset to the “what the hell” approach of developing things just because you can. Such seems to be the case with the WickedLaser S3 Spyder Arctic laser, a blue light laser that might be just a few years (and a couple million dollars of research money) away from becoming a long-overdue laser rifle that many of us have been waiting for ever since we were kids. Possible Jedi applications could be a realistic goal as well. It even kind of looks like a lightsaber.

The S3 Spyder uses the world’s first 445nm direct blue diode portable laser, with an ultra high power 1W beam. If those words mean nothing to you, to put it in perspective, this laser can easily generate more than 1000-times the light that sunlight delivers to your skin. In other words, if you held it on someone for long enough, they would probably catch fire. Seriously. It would take some time, but it is doable. If they were lucky, the victim/test subject might just escape with a nasty burn and a potential battle with cancer waiting for them down the road. This laser is powerful enough that it could instantly blind you if you looked right at it. Even wearing protective glasses and just glimpsing the direct beam could cost you the color green for 4-6 months.

The S3 Spyder is 4000-percent brighter than WikedLaser’s previous model, the Sonar, and it costs a mere $200 once you sign the lengthy and spine chilling form that confirms that you have read the company’s page long warnings. According to the website, “This laser possesses the most burning capabilities of any portable laser in existence. That’s why it’s also the most dangerous laser ever created.”

So what is this beast for? What highly technical procedures is this laser recommended for- a laser so powerful that given the right circumstances it could literally kill someone?

Fun.

After all, who can’t think of a few awesome things to do with a laser that is 1000-times more powerful than sunlight. It is recommended for people with product familiarity in using Class 4 lasers, although anyone can purchase one online.

But before you run off to buy your prototype imperial blaster though, be sure to read the warnings page, which offers such helpful tips as not to point it at an aircraft, and never use it to play with your pets. Because you might make them explode (the explode part wasn’t actually in the warnings, but it was inferred).

The laser might not be ready for the Death Star just yet, but proceed with caution, and for the love of God, keep your kids away from this at all costs.  Unless of course they are super villains, then this will make the perfect Christmas gift!



Showing 75 comments

  1. Jodie Williams at 4:33pm 7th October 2011 a famous quote "If your 20 and not a liberal, you've got no heart. But if your 40 and not a conservitive, you've got no brains!" stupid liberals!
  2. man up at 10:00pm 24th December 2010 NANCYS
  3. Darth Simon at 8:53am 6th December 2010 Whatever you do, Don't point it at Alderan!
  4. Dazzler laser geek at 9:05am 8th September 2010 These lasers are lethal and the sell are purely irresponsible. Non-lethal laser dazzlers are not designed to hurt or blind, coz the power density can be adjusted and controlled within certain distances. I would rather spend more dollars on a portable laser dazzlers at JETLASERS for illuminating purposes.
  5. evo 9 at 12:12am 8th September 2010 I own a 125mW green laser, I realize that it is much less powerful than a 1W laser. Regardless, the laser is going to be safe if properly used. I set up my telescope and use my laser briefly to point out stars with friends.
  6. d dink at 8:58pm 1st September 2010 Soooooo where am I buying this for supposdily under $200 I found it for $299 but I don't think I'm dropping that much on this toysooo
  7. senex at 2:13pm 27th August 2010 Lasers don't have a unique signatures , expect some future crimes to be impossible to solve. Will game hunters employ this? How many people will read all these comments and get stupid ideas? Crazy world.
    1. HurrrDurrr at 8:19pm 31st August 2010 Actually every laser diode has a unique wavelength. Some police helicopters now have equipment to measure the wavelength of a beam in the sky and match it to the laser.
  8. Chad at 5:26am 3rd August 2010 @Chris Novy. No it should not be banned at all. If someone uses it to hurt another person or animal, then they should be held accountable for that act. This is the difference between someone who believes in Freedom and Liberty, like our nations founders, or todays progressives (like you Chris) who continue to make 100s of new laws each year, at a cost of billions to taxpayers, until all of us are breaking the law in one way or another. How many laws were on books 30 years ago Chris? How many are there now? Are we really any better off now? Will your children be better of in 50 years from now living in a world with 10,000 more laws then today? Your children may just wake up one day living in an America spelled like "Amerika"; a George Orwell's 1984 nightmare that no one can wake up from. I can tell by reading the posts here today, that we are more than half way there now. I hope The USA and the rest of the world wake up soon, before it's too late. God help us all!
    1. John at 5:19pm 3rd August 2010 How do you expect to make someone accountable if they did it from a mile away? And this laser has a 100mile reach. I don't think you're considering the nuances of it. A completely silent, low-powered, portable device, that can reach miles away and cause blindness/burns. How do you think that compares to a gun?
      1. mike at 5:37pm 24th August 2010 John I think you have been on the death star for too long,it can blind yes if it gets into your eyes but from mile away hows that then how do i shine it into someones eyes from miles away unless by diffusion of light,and no it cannot burn passed a few feet and you would have to keep it focused in place like a magnifying glass,utter nonsenses
  9. Ben...cont. at 6:49pm 16th July 2010 I ordered one a while back. Apparently they started shipping yesterday. Anyway, I might just buy one or two more as it seems like there are plenty of jackasses out there that apparently want our oh-so-responsible legislators to be my babysitter. This would be a perfect issue for some empty suit politician to jump all over. Banning something that looks dangerous and menacing that has never really been used to hurt anyone. This reminds me of the moral panic that drove the 1958 US Switchblade ban. A device that is not disproportionately used in crime, or for nefarious purposes is banned simply because it has a property that an enterprising politician can convince idiots is intrinsically evil. I own several switchblades too. You may ask: "Why do you need them? What use are they?" Need is irrelevant. So is usefulness. I like swithblades, guns, silencers, lasers...etc because they are cool. They make me happy. I don't know why, and I don't care. This is The USA, and in this country, you are supposed to be free to do what you please, with what you please, as long as it doesn't interfere with others doing the same.
    1. Chris Novy at 5:22am 31st July 2010 This laser is amazing. OK, as a geek (and owner of a low-powered 473nm blue laser pointer) I "get it". That said.... The real danger here is that laser light, like a rifle bullet, travels a long distance. So even though someone may be aiming the beam in a "safe" direction with respect to themselves the emitted light may be striking (and damaging) targets well downrange. Most people know better than to fire a rifle anywhere around people but with a laser that thought process may be lacking --despite all the warning labels placed on the product. And even an accidental back scatter --say striking a license plate or other reflective object-- can send the beam straight back at you. And I'm talking about responsible people here. The thought of kids"using one of these in the same manner as people who shoot paint balls from moving cars at pedestrians and cyclists "for fun" frightens me. We already have numerous incidents with people temporarily blinding pilots of low-flying aircraft with relatively low power green lasers. This laser could result in a catastrophic accident --killing hundreds. I understand this laser won't set someone's house on fire a block away --this 1W laser obviously isn't that powerful-- but at 1W and this wavelength it's still easy to damage eyes and skin perhaps miles away. The fact that you invoke the 2nd Amendment betrays your mindset --that this *is* a weapon, not a toy. Fortunately the 2nd Amendment has limitations and not every weapon is considered protected territory. I for one certainly don't want you owning a hydrogen bomb --even it it does make you happy. Finally, as an animal lover I'm *very* concerned with the thought of these getting into the hands of those who might use them to blind or burn birds, squirrels, cats, and dogs. I volunteer at a shelter and the amount of abuse we see is sickening. We don't need to give people another tool to do their dirty work. Lasers are quiet, fast, and easy to aim --virtually ensuring the user will always win and the animal will always lose. Bottom line...this product *is* a weapon yet it's clearly being marketed as a toy. This is just asking for trouble. It must be banned. ..Chris..
  10. Ben at 6:48pm 16th July 2010 Thank you Cricket for a voice of reason in this whole thing. I have several very powerful lasers from Wicked, and have never blinded or injured anyone. Those lasers are essentially useless as pointers as well as looking at the spot directly is uncomfortable. That is not to say that they are entirely useless, they make stargazing a lot more fun, and they are great conversation starters. These are not available to the general public. They are only available to adults. In the same way that many other dangerous things are only available to adults. I agree that selling them to children would be a mistake, but Wicked has measures in place to ensure that only adults buy these. Furthermore, the only people that would be silly enough to drop 2+ bills on something like this is a fairly small enthusiast community; all of whom are familliar with safe handling of such devices. It does not take a PhD to know that you don't point the thing at people.
  11. Todd at 1:22am 15th July 2010 Hegemony Cricket said it well. So many people try to manage other peoples' lives and after reading this article I went and bought one as well before you liberals try to ban them. Just glad I got one before it was too late!
  12. Hegemony Cricket at 11:14pm 12th July 2010 For all you bed wetters getting so upset that there is a possibility someone could misuse this thing, you might want to take into account that it and only slightly less powerful yet equally destructive lasers have been on the market and available to the public for several years now. So, where are the news articles, police reports, emergency room records, and appeals to the UN to end the catastrophic mayhem they have caused? I'll tell you. They don't exist, because these products haven't turned out to be a problem. Heaven forbid that people should be allowed to exercise their own judgement as adults. No, everyone must be treated as if they are dim witted children and the entire world dumbed down accordingly. You geniuses are the same ones who think that somehow the entire world MUST be rid of every last sharp corner and made idiot proof. While you're at it you can take away everyone's pointy scissors and reissue those round tipped safety scissors used in grammar schools and prisons. We wouldn't want to take risk of someone running with point scissors, now would we? Until official FBI statistics show these lasers causing as much damage, grief, maiming and sorrow as sports cars do every day, I don't think I'm going to worry about them too much. What I am going to do after reading this article is buy one one of these lasers right now. Why? Because they sound fun, I'm a grown man with my own money, and I can do whatever I want without the permission of a bunch of hand wringers who are more interested in managing my life than minding their own business..
    1. Robert at 4:56pm 16th July 2010 here here. iv'e already ordered mine :)
    2. HalfBlind at 2:29am 19th July 2010 Good to see 2-3 people with intelligent freethinking mindsets compared to the fearmongering sheeple which comprise the other 95% of this news post. By the way lasers are also used in physics experiments but heaven forbid anyone here actually be educated before they open their mouth and bleat their ignorance. Do research people... think for yourself for once instead of just reading a few sentences out of an entire article and repeat them like a sock puppet. FIRE BLIND TERRORISM CANCER CANCER BAHHHH BAHHHH. Psh Sheeple...
  13. Matt at 8:40am 8th July 2010 Its called the Spyder ARCTIC laser which suggests to me that it would be particularly good for cutting large blocks of ice to make an iglo,
    1. Goofball Number Five at 4:38pm 8th July 2010 OHHH! MAKE ME AN IGLOO! D:
  14. OBK at 2:19am 8th July 2010 at least it's not as clumsy or random as a blaster
    1. R2-D2 at 8:02am 25th July 2010 Thank God they don't have blasters...
  15. Fools at 1:21am 8th July 2010 The lighter comparrison misses the point. Yes, a lighter flame has more energy, but that energy is limited to a couple inches above the lighter. You have to work a lot harder to injur someone. A laser can maintain focussed high energy levels great distances making it very very easy to acidentially injur an unsuspecting person many feet away.
    1. George Costanza at 1:45pm 8th July 2010 What about a handgun? There are handguns that are smaller, lighter, & CAN actually kill poeple from a distance... and we let people walk around with these every day. Many states don't even require a permit or license to carry a firearm around. There are everyday items people are allowed to have and carry that are every bit as dangerous, if not more, than a beefed-up laser pointer.
  16. Guest at 1:14am 8th July 2010 Yes it's dangerous and yes it's a recreational gadget. There are tons of things out there that are potentially dangerous if used wrong, welcome to life, move on....
  17. you are idiots at 12:15am 8th July 2010 Ok, so it's a pointless pointing = device useful for nothing but entertainment and producing a very small output power rated in the milliwatts - meanwhile, you could order a 100 Watt CO2 Laser that can cut sheet metal, melt glass, and etc. online (or build your own) and have been able to for years. This is like people discovering that rubber band guns exist and getting all upset.
  18. x101xtreme at 11:58pm 7th July 2010 I've personally built a laser like theirs as a laser hobbyist, and although 1 watt can instantly blind people, it is not nearly powerful enough to ignite skin or set people on fire instantly. It has the ability to ignite combustable materials (match, magazine paper, candles) if focused for long enough, but many of the articles over-exaggerate its power. People who buy this expecting it to be a "light saber" will be sorely disappointed. The primary concern is if someone accidentally blinds themselves with one of these. That said, these are certainly not toys, and should not be sold directly to the general public.
  19. antivigilante at 11:43pm 7th July 2010 well so far it's a bagillion "IT'S NOT A TOY!" 2 bagillion "SHUT UP" and maybe just maybe this thing will end the war on terror, bring our boys home, and get Ron Paul elected. ok maybe not.
  20. Greg at 11:41pm 7th July 2010 I just don't see the use for this thing other than idiots getting a hold of it and causing trouble.
  21. George Costanza at 4:31pm 7th July 2010 Basically, anybody genuinely concered about this product is a cry babies. Wear the goggles and don't misuse it and there will be no problems. Why should I be concerned about this prodect when: Cigarette lighters are far better at burning things and delivering thermal energy... I can legally walk around with a Glock 19 in my waistband... A pencil or other pointy object can render my eye equally blind... There are dozens of common carcinogens that give you cancer even when using them correctly (by the way, 445nm is NOT an ionizing wavelength of light)... Common pocketknives are WAY more deadly... There are 3 dozen toy companies in China making actual lookalike ripoffs of George Lucas's "Lightsaber"... This laser is incredibly powerful and dangerous... FOR A HANDHELD LASER... but there are still hundreds of risks incurred daily that are far more dangerous than this little blue laser pointer. At the end of the day it's just a handheld laser pointer. If you think it's neat buy one and use it safely.
  22. Chris the Physicist at 11:06pm 7th July 2010 This pointless for general consumers. But, this would be pretty useful in research (e.g. laser ablation, condensed matter physics, spectroscopy), assuming you could plug this into a wall. There aren't to many companies that produce a 445nm laser with a 1W or greater output. The only issue that might arise is the stability of the output. If the output power fluctuates too much then this is pretty much only useful for a light show.
  23. Tuna at 11:05pm 7th July 2010 "less power than a small hand mirror..." Not true. 1000 times more intense than sunlight. Instantly blinding if pointed directly at the eye. And being a high power laser, it probably has a range beyond what the user can perceive- So an accidental blinding is possible with no way to trace the source. Serious tool for idiots to abuse.
  24. Obiwan at 11:03pm 7th July 2010 Clearly we need tougher laser-control laws in this country.
    1. antivigilante at 11:35pm 7th July 2010 [in case you're not joking] and you want to increase the arms trade profits because?
  25. Dan Gaul at 10:59pm 7th July 2010 To all you people that don't think it' s very dangerous and keep comparing it to a laser pointer.... Sure, you can get blinded by looking at the sun, but you'd have to actually look at the sun to get blinded, with your eyes open. With this laser, you'd be blinded, permanently, the instant it is shone on your eyes, even if your eyelids are closed. You don't have to be looking at it, and it can be done when shone from a very far distance (I've read over 700 yards or more.) You can be blinded by it by looking at the reflection of the dot on the wall... Seems a bit more extreme doesn't it? At close range, the direct beam can pop an eye ball. Read more at http://www.laserpointersafety.com/june2010alert/j...
  26. Ryan_Fleming at 3:58pm 7th July 2010 This laser is listed as a "Class 4" laser, the highest classification of laser. A class 4 laser is (from Wikipedia, but backed up by the FDA): Class 4 lasers include all lasers with beam power greater than class 3B. By definition, a class-4 laser can burn the skin, in addition to potentially devastating and permanent eye damage as a result of direct or diffuse beam viewing. These lasers may ignite combustible materials, and thus may represent a fire risk. Class 4 lasers must be equipped with a key switch and a safety interlock. Most entertainment, industrial, scientific, military, and medical lasers are in this category. It is not a laser pointer. Using it as a laser pointer would be hilariously ineffective as you lit the screen you were pointing to on fire.
    1. George Costanza at 12:47am 8th July 2010 This could never light a projection screen on fire no matter how long you held the beam on the presentation screen. Presentation screens are designed to diffusely reflect as much light as possible. Nearly all the energy this laser threw at it would be diffusely reflected. You would however permanently damage the vision of anybody sitting closer than about 15 feet from the dot. Until you start dealing with MULTIwatt lasers, about the only things you can light on fire are darkly colored or have particularly high absorbance of the wavelength in question. For example, this laser can easily cut black, red, or yellow electrical tape... but would really struggle to melt or even heat up white or blue electrical tape.
  27. Robbie at 10:53pm 7th July 2010 The author of this article needs to get a clue what he is writing about. Does he really think the diode in the saber would last the required time to dehydrate and catch fire to a person? The author needs to better learn to research his claims.
    1. ioman at 11:01pm 7th July 2010 http://www.laserpointersafety.com/june2010alert/j... Dude, it can pop an eye. POP, like make a sound that goes pop. That's nasty.
      1. Robbie at 1:00am 8th July 2010 What the hell does that have to do with fire and who points lasers at eyes to begin with?
        1. ioman at 3:02am 8th July 2010 Are you kidding me? You think everyone is a perfect angel? Of course not. Kids will point these at eyes because they think it would be funny.
          1. johnny at 4:47pm 9th July 2010 Thats why you dont give it to Children genius, you lock it up or hide it.
            1. WTF? WDTGG? at 7:45am 25th July 2010 Indubitably, Johnny, indeed.
    2. Karl Stephens at 6:26am 8th July 2010 I've seen the sleeve on a lab coat ignite (using a 2.5W laser) so a 1W laser would take a little longer but it would ignite conbustible material. At 1W though, the flich reflex would be enough to save a finger, arm or leg from a burn and a nominal ocular hazard distance of 200 metres is a damn fine reason to warn protective goggles!! Reflections from this device would blind you for hours (if you're lucky).
  28. you are idiots at 10:46pm 7th July 2010 Ooooh let's all get concearned about something witth less power than a small hand mirror..... wtfo? get over it people.
    1. Sam at 10:57pm 7th July 2010 Someone let the retards out today. Does a small mirror cause cancer? Um no. Can you take down an airplane with a small mirror? Didn't think so. Time to head back to your home (read: Facility), take your pills and finish your tapioca pudding. Night Night
      1. you are idiots at 12:11am 8th July 2010 Does a small hand mirror cause cancer - if it is reflecting sunlight, yes. Actually sunlight un-concentrated causes cancer - this isn't new information. There's a whole industry making sunscreen because of this.
      2. Sam Especially Idiot at 12:40am 8th July 2010 yes a hand mirror can cause cancer and yes it can be distracting to a pilot (its what the blue angles use to know where the runway is). ps: i had to shorten name to allow to send
        1. Poop Shamshir at 7:41am 25th July 2010 The Blue Angles, you say? What do they do? Possibly measure the hypotenuse from strange triangles that threaten their existence? Sorry, I'm just in a dickish mood tonight.
  29. Voice-Of-Reason at 10:44pm 7th July 2010 Ok, so it's a high power level for a pointing device..... but that's about it. It doesn't compare with a Bic lighter as far as delivering BTU energy to a target goes - and is abysmal compared to even a small laser cutter. Yes, you could blind yourself with it - but you could do the same with any pointy object or by looking at the sun too long. It IS a toy, in the sense that it doesn't have enough power to be useful for any real purpose (laser sintering, cutting, etc.)
    1. Sam at 10:56pm 7th July 2010 Again: http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2010/06/17/may-the-fo... "Also, at a thousand times stronger than sunlight on skin, it can burn skin and may even cause skin cancer. So Wicked Lasers adds an FDA-mandated safety sticker on the device, includes a pair of safety glasses and warns that you shouldn’t make direct eye contact with the beam. Or expose it to bare skin. Or shine it at anyone. Or shine it at reflective surfaces. And don’t use it near airports, highways or construction sites. Really, they say, it should be used only by “individuals who have appropriate laser safety training and product familiarity in using Class 4 lasers.” This is not a toy. I would hate to see what your kids play with. Steak Volleyball with a Bitbull perhaps? :)
      1. antivigilante at 11:33pm 7th July 2010 it's an adult toy i would only get this for my kid when he turned 18 just the same the easier weapons are to manufacture the quicker the arms trade collapses
      2. Supoib A-Hole at 7:35am 25th July 2010 Wow. That is completely unoriginal and retarded. Especially the last bit. Feel proud. You deserve it.
    2. you are idiots at 12:09am 8th July 2010 Is it a tool? No. It is a toy, sorry dude - but you aren't going to be cutting sheet metal with this - it is purely for entertainment purposes and is therefore nothing but a toy. Putting a sticker on it does not change the fact that it is purely an entertainment device - or, in other words, a toy. Whether it is appropriate to hand to a 6 year old is not relevant, it is still a toy and nothing more.
  30. Tyler Style at 6:04pm 7th July 2010 I've read several other blogs/articles with similar comments, and I have to wonder - isn't the right to bear arms in the US constitution? How is this different from a gun? It's most amusing to me to watch the furor when thousands of deadly firearms are sold in the US every day with nary a mention...
    1. ioman at 7:35pm 7th July 2010 Tyler, There are procedures required for purchasing guns that are not being applied here. We are talking about a product that was designed to look like a toy, but which can actually hurt or kill people.
      1. Chris at 10:47pm 7th July 2010 Like a baseball? Or a baseball bat? Or perhaps rocks? Bow and arrow? Those could easily do more damage than this thing. Let's leave the paranoia elsewhere and try to stay reasonable.
        1. Anon at 3:50pm 7th July 2010 Wow, I just had to comment to tell Chris that he is off his rocker. If you think anything you listed can do more damage than that laser, you are the biggest idiot ever
        2. ioman at 10:51pm 7th July 2010 Can a bat bring down an airplane? Didn't think so. If this is not dangerous, why are the warnings on the company website so extreme?
        3. Sam at 10:55pm 7th July 2010 Ok, time for you to get with reality: http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2010/06/17/may-the-fo... "Also, at a thousand times stronger than sunlight on skin, it can burn skin and may even cause skin cancer. So Wicked Lasers adds an FDA-mandated safety sticker on the device, includes a pair of safety glasses and warns that you shouldn’t make direct eye contact with the beam. Or expose it to bare skin. Or shine it at anyone. Or shine it at reflective surfaces. And don’t use it near airports, highways or construction sites. Really, they say, it should be used only by “individuals who have appropriate laser safety training and product familiarity in using Class 4 lasers.” Read this and then try to defend yourself.
          1. Dan Gaul at 11:04pm 7th July 2010 Yup, and the big problem is people think this is a toy, which is obvious by the comments on this article alone. It's most definitely not a toy. This can cause serious injury to people extremely easily from extreme distances.
            1. Sakai at 3:06am 8th July 2010 This thing can blind pilots just by shining into the cockpit. Therefore it can bring down planes. Not a toy.
      2. antivigilante at 11:29pm 7th July 2010 what all of you fail to grasp is the potential for this sort of thing to be so easy to manufacture that it would actually cause the arms trade to collapse. in which case by the economic decimation of the arms trade it would actually save lives but go on hyperventilating [polldaddy 3442375 http://answers.polldaddy.com/poll/3442375/ polldaddy]
  31. Mortal Majority at 3:47pm 7th July 2010 How irresponsible of a company to sell this. It's basically a weapon. It has not purpose other than to destroy things for amusement. Why isn't the FDA doing anything about this? or the ATF?
    1. Jeremy at 3:53pm 7th July 2010 It isn't legal in the united states. You can't buy or own a laser that is more powerful than 5 mW. This one is much more than that.
      1. Jeremy at 3:55pm 7th July 2010 Sorry, meant to say "laser pointer"
      2. ioman at 3:55pm 7th July 2010 I am pretty sure you can buy this in the U.S. from their website.
      3. Joseph at 12:32am 8th July 2010 Actually, that's only partially true, Jeremy. In the US, any laser marketed as a "Laser Pointer" must be 5mW or less. The sky's the limit for "Portable Lasers", which this is classified as, as well as mounted lasers and medical equipment.
      4. Johnny at 4:42pm 9th July 2010 Well in response to Jeremy's first response it is infact legal in the United States to own a 5mW laser pointer, the key is that it is a portable laser and not a laser pointer. Yes you have to sign waivers and read a manual on how to use it what not to do, and the multiple reasons of how its a felony to point it a a flying or non-flying vehicle. But there are infact multiple uses for it as well. It's fun and you can show it off to your friends ect. So YES IT IS DEFINETLY LEGAL in the U.S.
      5. Jedi at 5:29pm 21st July 2010 Actually I have a 125mW laser so no, they are not illegal.
    2. mike at 10:55pm 7th July 2010 what would the FDA do? say you cant eat it?
      1. Ben at 11:57pm 7th July 2010 The FDA regulates medical and non-medical lasers, so yes, they're the appropriate government agency.
    3. @domalhambra at 5:47pm 18th July 2010 US Food and Drug Administration? I don't know about if they have jurisdiction over lasers.
    4. Jedi at 5:34pm 21st July 2010 I can't stand people like you who whine about every little thing. Go drink your hot coffee, BE CAREFUL it's hot!
  32. tiggymow at 1:52pm 7th July 2010 Oh wow, that really does make a lot of sense www.anonymous-vpn.be.tc
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