In 2021, the same year it launched, Unjected was removed from the Apple App Store for violating Covid misinformation policies
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Covid and other vaccines have been proven safe through rigorous trials and years of research, and before Robert F.
Key facts
- It’s not an anti-vaccination movement,” says Shelby Hosana, the 32-year-old founder of Unjected
- In 2021, the same year it launched, Unjected was removed from the Apple App Store for violating Covid misinformation policies
- According to ticketing platform Eventbrite, IRL dating events have been on the rise since 2025
- Kennedy Jr., a known vaccine skeptic, taking over the US Department of Health and Human Services, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reflected those realities
Summary
As a crowd of 60 anti-vaers squeezed into the upstairs dining area of Jonathan’s Grille in Nashville on a recent Monday night, a moment of pride washed over Scott Armstrong. Years ago, he had been let go from his job as a drug and alcohol counselor for refusing to get vaccinated. They were there to attend a mixer hosted by Unjected, an anti-vaccination dating app that, according to its website, is “built on creating health-conscious relationships.” It was the second stop on Unjected’s four-city “ Summer of Love ” tour meant for singles who oppose the Covid-19 vaccine. “We’re still some of the most persecuted people in society right now,” Armstrong, who now owns a video production company and helped organize the event, tells WIRED. The reorientation around in-person events to cure app fatigue is a major trend among dating apps struggling for signs of new life.