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This is a common question – the short answer is that we can’t say for sure, but it’s unlikely.
It’s true that exposure to blue light can damage retinal cells in the lab – but only cells in a dish, or animal eyes. That’s an important distinction because these experiments expose cells to intense blue light for much longer than would happen in real-world conditions. Inside the human eye, the lens filters a lot of the light before it reaches the light-sensitive cells of the retina, so the exposure is much less extreme.
A review of the evidence in 2016 concluded that exposure to low levels of visible blue light for days or weeks had no impact on eye health, and found no evidence of damage from longer-term exposure over months or years.
https://www.macularsociety.org/about/media/news/blue-light-damaging-my-eyes/