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Your Vape Wants to Know How Old You Are

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Why This Matters

The development of biometric and blockchain-based age verification technology for vapes could significantly enhance regulation and safety in the US vaping market. This innovation aims to curb underage access, ensuring flavored vapes are sold responsibly and meet FDA standards. It represents a potential shift towards more secure, regulated, and consumer-safe vaping products.

Key Takeaways

Flavored vapes are everywhere. The US Food and Drug Administration heavily restricted the products for a variety of reasons, including the fact that their colorful, sweet-flavored appeal was a deliberate effort to market them directly to children.

But in early March, the Food and Drug Administration released draft guidance, or “nonbinding recommendations,” about what it would take for flavored vapes to be approved in the US. The main requirement would be for nicotine companies to verify their user’s age directly on the device. That is something e-cigarette companies have struggled with for a decade or more.

Now, a company thinks it has solved the problem and says it is in active talks with the FDA to bring the technology to market.

Ike Tech is a partnership between Ispire Technology, a vape manufacturer that makes cartridges, e-cigarettes, and batteries, and Chemular, a regulatory consulting company that specializes in the nicotine market. Announced earlier this month, the goal of Ike Tech is to use biometric data and blockchain as security for age-verification measures built directly into the cartridge of a disposable vape.

Vape Nation

The vape market in the US is overwhelmingly flooded with cheap but potent disposable vapes from overseas. Because they’re not regulated, just about anyone can get hold of them. Lack of regulation also means they aren’t properly inspected for chemical components that have adverse effects, such as nickel, lead, or other chemicals that can make them more toxic than regular cigarettes.

Ispire CEO Michael Wang wants to counter those “irresponsible players” and “questionable actors” who he says “are only in it to make money.” His hope for this age-verification tech is that it opens the market for flavored vapes to be made and sold in the US and go through proper FDA inspection.

“By making the device a different color, light up in the dark, and even almost like a game console design, it's really targeting underage people,” Wang says. “We are hoping that with age gating, the FDA could finally approve fruit-flavored devices that are safe.”

Many of the big nicotine companies have worked on age-verification tech for years, including Juul, British American Tobacco, and Altria. But those methods tend to rely on collecting personal information from users in a way that can make privacy a problem, or they use chips on devices that store info and have the potential to be hacked.

“The industry has been selling this stuff for a decade now,” says Stanton Glantz, a former University of California, San Francisco professor and director of the UCSF Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education. “Age-verification tech has never been shown to work.”

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