Technology
Juul sets up a web portal for narcing on vaping teens
Juul doesn’t want teens hitting its vapes. The company promises.
Facing a rising tide of criticism for underage use of its e-cigarettes, vape manufacturer Juul is taking a new approach aimed at cracking down on teen use. Specifically, the company launched an online tool designed to track how specific vapes find their way into the hands of minors.
The idea, as explained by Juul, seems pretty straightforward. If a parent or teacher confiscates one of the company’s e-cigarettes from a minor, the authority figure should head on over to a new web portal and enter the device’s serial number along with a few additional details. This will, at least in theory, allow the company to figure out how the youths are getting their tiny hands on its nicotine delivery devices.
“We are implementing product traceability that will allow us, through confiscated product, to identify where youth are obtaining Juul products,” reads a page explaining the company’s “youth prevention” efforts. “We will share this information with FDA, and take actions immediately to address these access points for youth.”
In other words, if Juul realizes that a bunch of confiscated vapes were all sold from the same shop, perhaps that shopkeeper isn’t ID’ing customers well enough. Or maybe someone’s older brother buys his vape goods there.
Either way, it’s an additional piece of a multifaceted plan to prevent kids from vaping. Another interesting idea, seemingly in development, is to lock each vape to a specific age-verified user.
“We will develop a new user-authenticated Juul device that can prevent those underage from using the product,” explains the aforementioned youth prevention page.
While it’s unclear how the latter idea would work exactly, it’s heartening to see the company make an effort to reduce teen vaping — even it requires parents narcing out their own kids.
-
Business6 days ago
Lordstown Motors’ ousted CEO settles with SEC for misleading investors
-
Business5 days ago
Apple sued, Microsoft’s AI ambitions and Nvidia’s surprises
-
Business4 days ago
TechCrunch Mobility: The wheels are starting to come off the Fisker EV bus
-
Entertainment4 days ago
Amazon Big Spring Sale 2024: Shop 350+ deals on Apple, robot vacuums, security cameras, more
-
Business3 days ago
Maju Kuruvilla is out as CEO of one-click checkout company Bolt
-
Entertainment2 days ago
Where’s the AI in these ‘AI-powered’ products for your home?
-
Entertainment3 days ago
Asus ROG Zephyrus G14 (2024): The MacBook Pro of gaming laptops
-
Entertainment6 days ago
Amazon’s Big Spring Sale 2024: Shop 340+ deals on Apple, robot vacuums, security cameras, more