This e-mail has been cryogenically treated


I’d like to announce that, for no additional charge, all of my e-mails will be cryogenically treated. You can’t prove otherwise.

Seriously though, when a manufacturer claims their product has been cryogenically treated how would we even know? At least with seafood we can run DNA analysis, and often we find out we are being ripped off.

How would we know this about cables, plugs, power connectors, etc? Has anyone ever even seen this being done? That’s actually a serious question. I have never actually seen this happening.

How would we even know if, for instance, they treated a batch in 1995 and no longer do?

erik_squires

Showing 1 response by mapman

@erik_squires I’m pretty certain you know the answer is that nobody knows anything claimed about any product unless they can verify it themselves somehow. You are operating on pure trust otherwise. So be sure as always to do your homework and know who you are dealing with.

Personally, if I am paying a premium for something advertised I expect at least evidence and preferably proof. Esoteric and often expensive hifi tweaks are merely one very good example. High quality cosmetics is another that is very common. Always check the ingredients at minimum else all bets are off. Verification if tested somewhere is even better.

Companies marketing products often bank on the fact that consumers will take any claims made at face value and expect no proof or evidence. This is the norm. One can choose to be a smart consumer and maybe trust but verify but frankly most are not able to and don’t.

”A fool and his (or her) money……” always holds true.