Hi there!
I'm the one in charge of the lasers at EF and I work with lasers on a daily basis for several years already and also attended a seminar to be “Laserschutzbeauftragter” (laser protection officer) according to german law. So it's no problem at all to explain why it in fact is safe and provide a few numbers. It might turn out very technical though but I hope it can still calm you.
First of all, here is an overview of what systems were used in last years setup:
eight ECS 3000 RGB lasers, with 600mw 637nm red, 800mw 520nm green, and 1600mw of 445nm blue were used in the back and one 12W RGB laser was used to write on the laser screen.
The technical explanation is that the eight ECS 3000 on stage had the blue dimmed down to 50%, about 800 mw output for a pretty warm white balance (so max. output with white is 2.2W)
The software in use is Pangolin Quickshow, scan speed was set to 30.000PPS. Safety card was turned on, the lasers do have shutters and Quickshow was set up in a way that no straight beam shot was possible.
While last year there was no direct audience scanning, there was a mirror ball which reflected the laser beams.
Now is that safe?
Yes it is, and this is why:
When the laser beams emit from this laser model their diameter is 4mm, and the divergence is 1.0mrad.
The distance of the mirror ball from stage was at least 25m, not counting the distance of the ball to the ground and the fact mirror balls are made from really low quality mirror material that would destroy the beam quality.
Those facts would lead to a beam having a diameter of 29mm in the best possible case, with a level of 2.4mw/mm².
Lasers that are considered safe (class 3R) have a level of 5mw/mm².
So even if all factors of safety fail and you'd have a straight beam shoot at the mirror ball and it would bounce off straight inside your pupil, with all color on, you'd still be safe
The only reason I don't, for now, do audience scanning, is for everyone with a camera as it could cause dead pixels
Laser damaged camera sensor / video projector - was it dangerous for human eye as well?
If your camera sensor or video projector has been damaged by laser beams, the show was not necessarily dangerous for human eye:
Camera sensors and video projector LCDs are much more sensitive to light impact than human eye.
If filmed from a distance, lasers normally don't harm camera sensors, but if you zoom into the beam, the optics act like a burning glass - and focus the already very sharp beams to the sensor (which in most cases is also no "real size" sensor, but a smaller one -> even more impact)
Human eye does not zoom, and the reception area is much larger compared to the actually projected image on the retina.
Conclusion:
A safe laser show (class 3R in MPE area) does not harm human eye, but can damage your camera/photo sensor or video projector.
Just last weekend, 24 x 10W + 4x 35W with audiance scanning with a distance of around 20M :
And this :
And a little video a did back in Prague with 8x 30W RGB and 8x 8W green with straight audiance beam :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQBg8UYBJOIAlso, I'm thinking, together with Snow-wolf601 that also has a laser licence for Germany ( Laserschutzbeauftragter ... ) to host a panel next year on stage about laser show and safety on theml