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Old 10-10-2019, 07:44 AM   #357
NullNix
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Posts: 930
Karma: 15576314
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Ely, Cambridgeshire, UK
Device: Kindle Oasis 3, Kindle Oasis 1
Quote:
Originally Posted by Sirtel View Post
No, it isn't. Most people who work in front of computers and monitors all day would be blind by now, if that were true. I'm one of them and there's been no damage whatsoever to my eyes in the last 20 years (I've had my eyes thoroughly checked several times, the last time was this spring).
It's got nothing to do with glasses. Blue light exposure is (weakly) linked to glaucoma and retinal detachment disorders, not short-sightedness.

Actually, very very blue light is *inversely* linked to short-sightedness: the reason glasses are so common if you read a lot is now known, is a fairly strong result as these things go, and it's got nothing to do with reading. It's that people who read a lot statistically also don't spend as much time outside when they're young as people who don't, and solar UV exposure on the back of the eye acts as a signal to trigger the lengthening of the eyeball, so the eye grows evenly and the image remains in focus. Without that, perhaps because you're inside under UV-poor artificial light, the eyeball doesn't lengthen enough and you get short-sighted. Wearing glasses that fully correct your vision when your eyes are still growing worsens this, because your eye thinks it's growing right when actually it isn't and has more lengthening to do... hence these days opticians intentionally undercorrect the vision of pre-adults with myopia. Of course Kindle screens don't emit UV light: the screen's not *that* blue. So they won't help here!
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