Does Sprint's in-home cell phone reception booster cause cancer?

netsurfer733

New member
I know, everything causes cancer these days. But as I understand it, cell towers give you more than the 'usual' dose. As such, I felt like I should find out if one of these devices which boosts your cell phone's reception in your own home by essentially acting as (what is said to be akin to) a cell phone tower in your own home. I could not find the items online tonight for some reason, but nonetheless, I know Sprint has a device that boosts the reception in your home with a white-ish device which costs $100, then +$5 a month (I believe Verizon's, years ago, costed $200 with no monthly fee). If anyone can send me a link for the Sprint version of this, please do so!

The question is, however, would these devices cause more cancer in a person than, say, a Wi-Fi router? Or standard radios? Would it be worth the risk to one's health, in other words, to buy such a thing (given that I get next to no reception in my house as-is and that's where I normally use my cell phone)?
 
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