In fact,
HP claims on its web site that the brominated flame retardant
known as decaBDE was removed from its product line years ago, but our
test results proved otherwise. We also proved that the HP laptop had
high levels of a number of other chemicals, including the highest
levels by far of PBDEs (a class of BFRs). Lead was also found in the
soldering.
As a result of these latest tests, HP has been downgraded on our
Toxic Technology report card. HP was third, but has now slipped to sixth
position, with 4.7 out of 10, down from 5.7.
But of all the laptops tested, Apple’s Macbook was the most
contaminated, with the highest level of another type of
toxic flame retardant, tetrabromobisphenol A.
The scariest result of these tests won't be found in the lab, but
rather in Asian scrapyards where young children dismantle these
computers by hand, and are exposed to all of the toxic chemicals within
them.
It doesn’t take a scientific study to see that we’re being sold a pack of lies and poison apples.