Vape Apps Apple. Apple’s banishment of the vaping related apps was first reported by Axios, and follows a decision by the company earlier this year to stop allowing new vaping apps in the App Store.Now, it seems that policy has been extended to booting existing apps. Does your app-connected vaporizer still work? No Vape (1-844-8-NO-VAPE) was created by a stop vaping service and research-based program at the University of California, San Diego. Our program has been helping people with behavior change since 1992, using clinically proven methods. Apple has removed all vaping- and e-cigarette-related apps from the App Store in response to what it says is a "public health crisis and a youth epidemic." In total, 181 apps have been removed.
Apple’s banishment of the vaping related apps was first reported by Axios, and follows a decision by the company earlier this year to stop allowing new vaping apps in the App Store.Now, it seems. Apple has removed 181 vaping-related apps from its App Store. The move comes amid growing concern over the health effects of e-cigarettes and the rise of vaping-related illnesses among young people.
Apple did not allow apps that sold vape cartridges, and the apps that were pulled offered vape-related news or controls for vape devices. PAX, for example, relied heavily on the App Store to.
Although Apple was acting in good faith, removing all vape-related apps has done many people a disservice, and now even apps that set out to help users wean off nicotine and ultimately quit. Apple did not allow apps that sold vape cartridges, and the apps that were pulled offered vape-related news or controls for vape devices. PAX, for example, relied heavily on the App Store to. Apple’s banishment of the vaping related apps was first reported by Axios, and follows a decision by the company earlier this year to stop allowing new vaping apps in the App Store.Now, it seems that policy has been extended to booting existing apps. Does your app-connected vaporizer still work? Apple announced Friday that it would remove 181 vaping apps from the App Store, in response to a rash of deaths and illnesses seemingly linked to an additive in certain vaping liquids. Which seems fair enough, only … what is a vaping app? In a statement to Axios, Apple described the vape boom as “a public-health crisis and a youth epidemic.”So far, 42 people have died and over 2,000.