Razer has had to retract claims that its Zephyr Pro mask features N95 grade filters following accusations of being misleading.
Razer unveiled the Zephyr Pro – an upgraded version of the original Zephyr mask – earlier this week. Advertised as an air purifier, the Zephyr Pro also comes with a voice amplifier – and Razer's characteristic RGB colored lighting.
However, as pointed out by the likes of PCMag and tech YouTuber Naomi Wu, Razer's claims that the mask has «N95-grade» filters does not make it a viable alternative to actual PPE.
Razer's website originally and repeatedly mentioned the N95-grade filters, but has since quietly removed them. It hasn't offered an official statement, but it did update the fine print to read «The Razer Zephyr and Zephyr Pro are not certified N95 masks, medical devices, respirators, surgical masks, or personal protective equipment (PPE) and are not meant to be used in medical or clinical settings.»
*The Razer Zephyr and Zephyr Pro are not medical devices, respirators, surgical masks, or personal protective equipment (PPE) and are not meant to be used in medical or clinical settings.January 8, 2022
Ultimately, what the problem was here was that Razer was advertising its mask as a viable means of protection against the coronavirus. Beforehand, Razer referred to the filters as N95 grade because they passed its own testing.
Apparently, the filters met a 95% particulate filtration efficiency (PFE), but it was technically never approved by regulators. Plus, the entire mask would need to block 95% of the particles, not just the filters.
Razer was essentially misleading consumers and while it has since corrected itself, it already successfully advertised the product as a genuine N95 mask.
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