Dude, where's my vape app? After multiple deaths, Apple chucking them all
There have been reports on multiple vaping-related illnesses and even deaths before, but when it all becomes official via a “Outbreak of Lung Injury Associated with the Use of E-Cigarette, or Vaping, Products” report from the CDC, Apple springs to action.
CDC recommends that people should not use e-cigarette, or vaping, products that contain THC, particularly from informal sources like friends, or family, or in-person or online dealers. Until the relationship of vitamin E acetate and lung health is better understood, vitamin E acetate should not be added to e-cigarette, or vaping, products. In addition, people should not add any substance to e-cigarette or vaping products that are not intended by the manufacturer, including products purchased through retail establishments. CDC will continue to update guidance, as appropriate, as new data become available from this outbreak investigation.
As a health and fitness aficionado, Apple’s CEO Tim Cook would be approving of the App Store direction, as even when you don’t vape THC oils, the practice has been associated with lung inflammation and other respiratory syndromes.
Granted, the blame has been laid to some of the vaping liquid flavors, like apple or cinnamon, before the others, indicating that the flavoring chemical mixes are more to blame than the base itself, but Apple is still not taking any chances, and chucked them all.