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maxbond 3 hours ago

I wear cheap bone conduction headphones constantly. So I think I'm getting a lot of exposure. I think I'm going to find some kind of bandage or tape which doesn't have this problem, and put it on the headphones. And I'll try to wear them less often, and try especially to avoid sweating in them.

Does anyone have any other ideas to mitigate exposure?

terribleperson 2 hours ago | parent | next [-]

My immediate idea was to cover contact surfaces. My first thought of what to cover them with was more plastic...

I guess the proper thing to do would be to use big over-the-ear headphones and cover the cushions with fabric.

freehorse 27 minutes ago | parent [-]

> My first thought of what to cover them with was more plastic

Tinfoil is a good alternative, with the added benefit that it can also protect from other things /s

booleandilemma an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Is bone conduction itself safe for long-term usage? I feel like we're taking advantage of a quirk and using the body in a way it's not meant to be used, kind of like smoking or vaping.

maxbond 30 minutes ago | parent [-]

It definitely isn't comparable to smoking or vaping. Those introduces a lot of material to your body that's well established as harmful. To name just a few, formaldehyde, carbon monoxide, heavy metals, even radioactive polonium (for tobacco specifically). The problem with smoking isn't that we're misusing our lungs, it's that we're bringing a fairly large amount of toxic material into our bodies.

I'm not worried about bone conduction, I feel that open ear is much safer than closed ear because I can eg hear a smoke alarm or hear a housemate fall and cry out for help. If there were evidence it caused brain damage or something then I would stop using them but I don't think there is. I try to regularly turn my volume down below where I can hear it and then turn it one click up to mitigate damage to my hearing. That's definitely a real risk but that's not specific to bone conduction.