169 comments

  • blakesterz an hour ago

      Meta aims to introduce facial recognition to its smart glasses while its biggest critics are distracted, according to a report from The New York Times. In an internal document reviewed by The Times, Meta says it will launch the feature “during a dynamic political environment where many civil society groups that we would expect to attack us would have their resources focused on other concerns.”
    
    
    
    https://www.theverge.com/tech/878725/meta-facial-recognition...
    • pluc an hour ago

      They better invest in frame designs too cause as soon as they're recognizable they're gonna get slapped off faces real quick

      • thewebguyd 41 minutes ago

        Maybe we'll see the revival of the term "glasshole"

      • pesus 35 minutes ago

        Sometimes analog solutions are the most effective against digital problems.

    • ViktorRay an hour ago

      The lack of self awareness is pretty fascinating.

      • tty456 an hour ago

        The individuals making these decisions are 100% aware of what they are doing. Driving for and implementing stuff like this is for profits, bonuses, and internal recognition.

        • cyanydeez an hour ago

          Right, this is socipathy, kleptocracy and pure madness that having more money than need generates.

      • ambicapter 25 minutes ago

        What do you mean? They're fully aware this would be received poorly by "certain groups" and are applying all that highly-praised brain power to getting around that undesirable issue to keep their RSUs growing.

      • xg15 22 minutes ago

        care-less people, etc...

    • koolala 33 minutes ago

      It could auto blur faces... but people wouldn't use that feature.

    • Forgeties79 an hour ago

      Why is it always this accusatory “while you were distracted”-style rhetoric?

      Who has been distracted from Facebook’s shenanigans? Who are they talking about? Is it me? Because I can tell you I have certainly not been distracted on that front. Am I supposed to feel guilty? Am I supposed to hold somebody accountable who should’ve been paying attention?

      I do actually understand why it’s done, but I just find it very grating and if your goal is to actually raise awareness, shaming people is generally not the way to go about it.

      Also the classic “we can walk and chew bubblegum at the same time” thing

      • lamontcg 25 minutes ago

        This is Meta claiming in their internal communications that they plan on doing it while people are distracted with other concerns.

        It isn't really "rhetoric", they're talking like they believe this actually happens, this is strategy.

        And I tend to agree with them that things like attention and political capital are ultimately finite resources.

        I've found that the "we can do two things" and "we can walk and chew bubblegum" line of argument to be simplistic and just wrong (and pretty incredibly patronizing). I think the world works exactly the way Meta thinks that it does here.

        It might blow up and turn into a Streisand effect, but more often than not this kind of strategy works.

        Much like how people think they can multitask and talk on the phone and drive at the same time and every scientific measure of it shows that they really can't.

        • Forgeties79 12 minutes ago

          Damn you’re right. I got so annoyed at the headline I didn’t even read the article so that’s on me

          • dormento 5 minutes ago

            Yeah its more like "quick, its friday night and someone just got bombed, toggle that feature on"

      • datsci_est_2015 22 minutes ago

        American society has a finite aggregate supply of attention. Politicians and megacorporations often exploit this fact. This Verge article is a leak that verifies that Meta is actively and brazenly continuing to exploit it.

        Is that a good enough explanation to reduce your feelings of being personally targeted?

      • raisedbyninjas 15 minutes ago

        Well to an extent, it does work. Flood the zone.

      • LambdaComplex 43 minutes ago

        I feel the same way every time I read that someone did something "quietly" in a headline.

      • tokioyoyo 44 minutes ago

        Less attention on you, less negative press, better sales.

      • ghurtado 33 minutes ago

        I usually hate this kind of click bait, but I think in this case it's warranted, since their explicit policy was to do this "while they are distracted". Verbatim.

      • GuinansEyebrows an hour ago

        interesting (respectfully!) take that the "while you were distracted" rhetoric is coming from investigative journalists/commenters - i read this more as Meta's admission that they're betting on critics being distracted than an admonition by outside observers. it's probably easier to sneak up on a person to rob them when it's foggy; that's not victim blaming.

    • wongarsu an hour ago

      That shouldn't be too difficult with the current US administration. Maybe another reason Bezos and Trump get along so well

  • MerrimanInd an hour ago

    I was in engineering school back in ~2012 when Google Glass came out. One of my classmates got hold of a pair when they were still quite uncommon and wore them to an extracurricular club meeting. Within minutes someone made a comment about him wearing the "creeper" glasses and asked if he was filming. He never wore them to the club again.

    I just don't see a world where that doesn't happen with Meta glasses.

    • xboxnolifes 44 minutes ago

      An entire new generation of people have been born and raised into a world that is more accepting of always recording and being recorded since 14 years ago.

    • yonatan8070 an hour ago

      Unfortunately, the Meta glasses look much more normal, and a person who isn't actively looking for them (and especially one who is unaware of them) isn't likely to notice them.

      • http-teapot 25 minutes ago

        A family member has one and I didn't notice until they had to charge their pair. The little circles are subtle giveaways otherwise they look like regular pair of glasses. When everything is always on, I'd like to keep my house "off" and those things are a direct violation of that.

      • NicuCalcea an hour ago

        There is a way to sus them out: https://www.404media.co/this-app-warns-you-if-someone-is-wea...

        Not perfect, but better than nothing I guess. I don't think I've noticed the glasses IRL anywhere, but if I start seeing them, I'm definitely installing the app and avoiding any interactions with those people.

        • paulpauper an hour ago

          they look like big bulky ray-bans that no one would wear unless they were starring in a 50s remake or something . easy to spot

          • giobox 19 minutes ago

            The Wayfarer style was always bulky, they have been a fashion staple for decades at this point. The Meta gen2 ones aren't really that noticeably larger than "normal" Wayfarers - probably why they latched on this style as it gives the most room to stuff electronics while remaining similar sized to the original Wayfarer design.

            I still see folks wearing Wayfarers almost every single day, and have owned various (non-Meta) pairs of them for most of my adult life. It's literally one of the most popular sunglasses designs of all time.

      • paulpauper an hour ago

        they are still very easy to spot. they are very bulky around the rims

    • kwar13 24 minutes ago

      People who get shamed with a comment like that are usually not the "creepers" in public. You don't need social pressure. You need actual safeguards.

    • baby_souffle an hour ago

      10 years have elapsed, peoples expectations have changed a lot. Back around the time of the first iPhone, it was pretty common to see signs in gym changing rooms akin to 'no cameras permitted'... Now you'd have to physically separate people from their phones before entering the locker room if you are going to enforce that.

      And all of that is to ignore that neither gen1 or 2 of Google Glass attempted to look like regular glasses. The Meta frames are largely indistinguishable from regular glasses unless you are very up close.

    • ThrowawayR2 12 minutes ago

      Unfortunately, "The French-Italian eyewear brand [EssilorLuxottica] said it sold over 7 million AI glasses last year, up from the 2 million that the company sold in 2023 and 2024 combined." from https://www.cnbc.com/2026/02/11/ray-ban-maker-essilorluxotti... . That's at least 9 million units in the field, probably 1000x more than Google Glass ever sold.

    • groos an hour ago

      I have a strict policy of no Meta glasses for guests in my house. Socially, they're poison.

      • nothrowaways an hour ago

        We have "NO meta glasses" rule at my workplace.

        • webdevver an hour ago

          privacy obsessed dorks have lost every single cultural battle so far, so i wouldn't bet on it.

          • bonoboTP an hour ago

            People don't care about privacy as long as a faceless corporation is doing the spying. People very much care if it has a plausible path to embarrassing or creepy situations involving actual people in your life. The chilling effect of ubiquitous phone cameras is well documented now this would amp it up by a 100. Many cool clubs already put stickers on phone cameras.

          • array_key_first 15 minutes ago

            Is it that they're privacy obsessed, or rather that most people have a passion for self destruction and exhibition?

            If you think about it, the "dork" position was the one that was most normal, it's the status-quo. The people wanting to record in lockerooms and what not is not the status-quo. They win because most people are short-sighted, or even secretly love hurting themselves.

          • GuinansEyebrows an hour ago

            i'm as pessimistic as you are, but this is a pretty far leap from key-signing parties and the like.

          • smarf 31 minutes ago

            "surveil me harder daddy"

    • Geonode an hour ago

      There is a world, because when the displays are high quality and they're thinner and lighter, they're going to replace phones, and almost everyone will be wearing them.

      • wewtyflakes an hour ago

        I think that since the input modalities are (seemingly) restricted to eye movement and sound, that it is impractical to replace a phone, where someone can engage privately.

        • gmueckl 38 minutes ago

          I think you have missed the wristband input device then. It gives the user fairly subtle finger gestures to interact with the device. I wonder how far that input tech can be pushed, not necessarily (only) in comination with glasses.

        • throwway120385 20 minutes ago

          The point isn't to allow people to do more with the glasses, the point is to interpose between the user and the physical world so you can control what they see and hear and so you can see what they see. You could see the same thing with Apple's VR headset -- if you can hide certain things from your own view in the headset, then Apple can hide things they don't want you to see too.

          There isn't really a counter to that because most people will buy these things to watch movies on the airplane or the train, and they won't see the yoke until it's too late.

      • hnuser847 an hour ago

        Nah, I don't see it. They've been trying to make smart glasses a thing for over a decade and it's not working. Nobody wants them. I don't think it's necessarily a privacy thing, it's just that smart glasses don't solve a real problem. Same with VR.

        • MarcelOlsz 29 minutes ago

          VR most definitely solves a real problem, but the issue with VR is the absolute setup complexity to get it performing 'correctly'. I spent 3 years tweaking mine and writing OpenXR layers to get it functioning how I wanted it to in iRacing. It's nearly a full-time job. VR right now is like if you went to buy eggs but instead of eggs they're grenades and opening the box pulled all the pins. Out of the box experience is beyond dog shit and impossible for casual users, leaving a very small avenue for VR enjoyment for regulars (PSVR and the like). I cannot think of a technology more diametric to 'plug n play' than VR, which is very unfortunate.

        • rbtprograms an hour ago

          i actually agree with this take; i dont see the problem that smart glasses solve. what, my phone screen isnt literally in front of my eyeballs 24/7? i have a need to be absolutely plugged into scrolling social media and consuming content so much that i just have to have the screen in my glasses? this feels much more like what tech companies want people to want rather than what people want.

          • array_key_first 9 minutes ago

            Not to mention the input methods just suck major ass. They're extremely slow, error prone, and annoying. Hands are better.

            And that's why I don't talk to Siri to drive my car.

          • jayd16 4 minutes ago

            You don't want your hands free?

        • Geonode 3 minutes ago

          Come on, it's obviously a hardware problem. If phones weighed ten pounds I wouldn't carry that around either.

          Great glasses would solve a problem, I could take my stupid phone out of my hand.

          And glasses will get replaced by contacts, which get replaced with brainwave tech.

      • kibwen an hour ago

        It doesn't matter how high quality, convenient, or light they are, as long as wearing glasses isn't inherently cool, normal people aren't going to choose to wear them.

        • function_seven an hour ago

          Remember those dorky Bluetooth earpieces? The ones only MBA nerds wore? They were uncool until the AirPods came along.

          The tail wags the dog. Wearing glasses may become inherently cool if all the cool people in your insta feeds are wearing them.

          • ph4rsikal 34 minutes ago

            There is a UI difference between looking into a camera and talking to someone with headphones on.

            • function_seven 15 minutes ago

              The parent was talking about people choosing to wear these. Today there might be reluctance to wear them because they're creepy or uncool. But that mirrors the reluctance for cool kids to wear bluetooth earpieces back when they were those chunky Borg-looking things. Then they got shrunk down. They got "high quality, convenient, [and] light".

              When these types of glasses are virtually indistinguishable from regular sunglasses, and a critical mass of cool people wear them all the time, the reluctance from the rest of us will melt away.

              I hope I'm wrong. Really.

    • wongarsu an hour ago

      Judging from the examples reported on in the article, Meta's smart glasses are either very easy to accidentally trigger or quite popular with actual creeps

    • AlienRobot an hour ago

      Unfortunately the frog is boiling and some people already think that "in public" means "it's okay to record people and post it on the Internet."

    • gambiting an hour ago

      >>I just don't see a world where that doesn't happen with Meta glasses.

      Apparently they sold 7 million of these. So I think a whole lot of people don't care about this aspect.

    • flir an hour ago

      It's strange to me that that's the line society seems to have drawn in the sand. Body cam, no problem. Doorbell cam, practically universal. Body cam worn on the face? No way. I wonder why.

      • fbelzile an hour ago

        Police body cams are typically only used while on-duty and in public, where there is no expectation of privacy. They also don't automatically send video into the cloud to be analyzed by a human for AI training, as mentioned in this article. Video is usually only retrieved if needed on a case-by-case basis.

        Doorbell cameras are also typically pointed toward public streets, where again, there is no expectation of privacy. Even then, many people have been removing Ring cameras after they were shown to automatically upload video without user's knowledge.

        • malfist an hour ago

          > They also don't automatically send video into the cloud to be analyzed by a human for AI training,

          Yet.

          • deanputney 31 minutes ago

            They almost certainly already do. If you just look into Axon you'll see they have tons of cloud-based and AI products. Axon is the major player in police body cameras in the US.

      • gorjusborg an hour ago

        I'm amazed you can't see the difference.

        Body cam - used to protect the police and people being policed in a potentially hot conflict. Recording is scoped to these specific interactions that rarely occur for most people.

        Doorbell cam - highly controversial. See response to dog-finding superbowl ad.

        Body cam wore on face - Mass surveillance in potentially every conceivable social context. Data owned by Meta, a company known for building a profile on people that don't even use their products.

        • likpok 3 minutes ago

          Eh, doorbell cams aren’t that controversial (ad aside). A lot of people have them already, both from ring (with the concomitant privacy issues) or from other providers (with different but similar issues).

          They’re controversial on hacker news but I don’t think people in the “real world” care all that much.

          How that connects to the meta glasses is certainly up for debate —- the doorbells provide a lot of value to the user (know who is at the door remotely!), the glasses are more of a mixed bag.

      • ClikeX an hour ago

        Body cams are directly visible, and are there to add accountability to the actions of law enforcement. These glasses are covert cameras. Someone that doesn't know what they look like isn't going to know someone might be filming. That's a big difference.

        Not sure how it is where you live, but doorbell cameras are commonly criticized where I live. With many people claiming they don't feel comfortable walking around anymore knowing that the entire neighborhood is filming them.

      • bonoboTP an hour ago

        What do you mean bodycam isn't a problem? Do people wear body cams to normal social occasions?

        People are more okay with cameras in public areas and less okay if it's in intimate, social, private situations, inside apartments, individual offices etc.

      • patmorgan23 an hour ago

        Body cameras aren't hidden and are worn by public officials while on duty, doorbell cameras are no more invasive than an CCTV camera a home owner might have installed on their premise.

        I think the difference is that these cameras are relatively concealed, and can be used to record every interaction, even in pretty intimate/private settings. Yes you could do this with a cell phone but it would be pretty obvious your recording if you're trying to get more than just the audio of an interaction.

      • Retric an hour ago

        Cop body cam footage is more likely to help you vs a cop than get you into trouble because a cop is already there watching what you’re doing. IE: Thank god the cop’s camera was off when I was buying crack, I might have gotten in trouble otherwise… fails because a cop was already watching you.

        Cops also announce their presence in uniforms and are operating as government agents. People already moderate their behavior around cops so being recorded isn’t as big a deal.

        • sillystuff 15 minutes ago

          > body cameras had no statistically significant impact on officer use of force, civilian complaints, or arrests for disorderly conduct by officers. In other words, body cameras did not reduce police misconduct . . . 92.6 percent of prosecutors’ offices in jurisdictions with body cameras have used that footage as evidence to prosecute civilians, while just 8.3 percent have used it to prosecute police officers[1]

          Cops control when the cameras are filming, if footage is retained and what/when/if footage is released. Body cams are just yet another surveillance tool against the population.

          [1]https://www.aclu-wa.org/news/will-body-cameras-help-end-poli...

      • jbxntuehineoh an hour ago

        I also don't like having doorbell cams everywhere, at least not the ones that upload all their footage to the ~great mass surveillance network in the sky~ Cloud(TM). I don't think that's an uncommon point of view. And body cams are only worn by cops and at least provide some concrete benefits in terms of increasing police accountability.

      • mmh0000 an hour ago

        "Surveillance Camera Man"[1] makes a good practical example of it.

        [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X9sVqKFkjiY

      • cortesoft an hour ago

        It might be the line in the sand now, but it probably won’t be for long.

      • MagicMoonlight an hour ago

        A body cam is worn by a trained police officer and lights up with a big red flashing light and audible warnings. It is used to record serious crimes.

        A face camera has no light or warnings (you just put tape over the small light), and is operated by a pervert.

      • megous 42 minutes ago

        Lines were and are always weird, all the time. Americans killing 150 girls yesterday in a school, just a footnote in the news, already gone today. Some rando killing 10 people in a university in my country, endless discussion, politicians, punduits all up in arms spewing their opinions for months, discussing it to no end. Only difference? I don't know. I don't know almost anyone in my country, they're all as foreign to me as some girls in Iran. There's no difference to me.

        There's very little sense to me in searching for meaning in any of this. It just is, people are that way. There are no lines and boundaries based on anything but just whims.

      • sqircles an hour ago

        People want to be deceived.

    • dyauspitr an hour ago

      It’s just going to be accepted. Or there is going to be some sort of Japanesque requirement that there be some light on when the camera is filming.

    • idontwantthis an hour ago

      It can happen if it’s not easy to tell immediately what they are.

    • webdevver an hour ago

      stemcel gave the gym bunnies the ick... brutal... many such cases!

    • zer0zzz an hour ago

      2026 is not 2012

      • array_key_first 7 minutes ago

        You're right, it's much worse and we should be doing everything we can to turn it around.

        I propose we just assume people with meta glasses are recording others in public and we call them creeps. Shaming works, we should use it more.

      • esafak an hour ago

        They're okay in your circle today? Not mine.

        • zer0zzz an hour ago

          Anecdotal screeching aside, they’re objectively selling far better than any headgear ever made. The sales figures show they’re pretty popular as far as wearables go. That leads me to believe we’re not in the same world as Google glass especially when back then folks were far more trusting of tech (let alone the fact that it’s meta).

          The times I do I see folks wearing them the normie reaction is typically “oh cool” and not some libertarian allergic reaction to technology.

          • zer0zzz an hour ago

            I don’t know what the downvote is about. I’ve not said anything for or against this tech or the company that makes it. I just don’t think it’s valuable to inform your world view on tech takes that are old enough to be taking the practice SAT.

    • r0fl an hour ago

      I’ve had meta ray bans since the week they came out

      My friends always have a cheap shot when I wear them but are completely fine now and appreciate fun candid videos I send them

      Amazing for vacations with the kids

  • jbxntuehineoh an hour ago

    On an unrelated note, the FT reported today [1] that Israel was able to track Iranian leadership by hacking "nearly all" of the traffic cameras in Tehran. Anyways, I think we should continue to put as many networked cameras, microphones, and other sensors in as many products as possible. There are no downsides!

    [1] https://archive.is/QSCjf

    • twodave an hour ago

      I overall agree with your point, but I don’t think “tracking leadership of a country that murders tens of thousands of its own citizens” is a strong supporting argument…

      • palata 37 minutes ago

        Because you think that "being able to track leadership of a country that knows that other countries may want to target them" does not mean "being able to track pretty much anyone"?

        Or do you think that those cameras are less secure because the leadership is not good with their people?

        I'm not sure I follow the criticism here.

        • flockonus 18 minutes ago

          Anyone who has a mobile phone has been tracked by their phone provider forever, with the accuracy of a couple blocks. Smartphones only bring more trackers to the equation in the form of apps.

          What's the material concern to tracking that glasses add?

          • Onavo 5 minutes ago

            You can recognize a threat to national security without supporting the ideology behind it. It sounds like you are trying to to spread FUD around stronger privacy regulations. It would be a lot less funny when the shoe is on the other foot and it's not Iranian networks that's behind compromised. Are you perhaps a vendor of mass surveillance systems like your username's namesake?

      • Computer0 33 minutes ago

        I overall agree with your point, but I don’t think defending a country engaged in a genocide is a strong supporting argument…

  • Havoc 2 hours ago

    Brought to you by the CEO that tapes the webcam on his laptop

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/jun/22/mark-zuck...

    • pimlottc an hour ago

      To be clear, he /puts tape over/ his webcam, that's very different from /taping/ (recording) the output of his webcam.

    • xoxxala an hour ago

      Tape?! Tape is sooo 2016.

      I 3d printed a flap for my webcam.

    • bigyabai 2 hours ago

      I will be genuinely shocked if people aren't taping their smartphone cameras by 2030.

      • lnrd an hour ago

        Cameras in phones are pretty much locked up today, assuming you have an updated version of the OS from a respectable manufacturer. Apps will not be able to access the camera feed (or the microphone) without explicit consent and a visual warning.

        The manufacturer might access it, Apple states they don't, Google and Samsung I'm not sure. A bad actor with 0days might too.

        • reorder9695 28 minutes ago

          Funny enough it's the OS and manufacturer I don't trust with my phone, with my PC I trust them a lot more as they're much more open and I can choose the OS.

        • bigyabai 43 minutes ago

          You know what's stronger than a manufacturer's promise? 2cm of double-ply electrical tape.

        • jiggawatts an hour ago

          For reference, Samsung screenshots everything shown on their televisions at regular intervals and sends these to their South Korean data centres for advertisers to use. It's called Automatic Content Recognition (ACR), which any sane country should be outright banning under international espionage laws.

      • ge96 an hour ago

        It is funny since I wonder when you're looking through say the Google Feed (swipe left on Android devices on home screen) does the camera track your eyes, what you're looking at

        It does seem harder to tape the phone camera since the in/out motion into your pocket I imagine would remove the tape.

        • wongarsu an hour ago

          For the main camera there are cases with sliding covers for many phone models. Marketed for protecting the lens from scratches, but quite effective for privacy as well

          For the front camera that's a lot more difficult. You could probably modify one of those flexible screen protectors to black out the camera, but it'd be very inconvenient to take off.

          Maybe there is some niche android phone that offers physical shutters, similar to the ones on Lenovo laptop webcams

      • numpad0 an hour ago

        Laser engravers. Blu-ray drive laser modules are dime a dozen and are plenty powerful.

  • majestik an hour ago

    Is anyone here actually surprised Meta is recording and reviewing their content?

    Vote with your dollars people.

    • tombert an hour ago

      I deleted my Facebook eleven years ago. I wish I could say it was for some cool reason about privacy concerns and whatnot, but honestly it's because I was spending way too much time arguing with people I barely knew, and I figured that that's not healthy.

      I missed Facebook for about a day, and after that I barely even thought about it. In 2021 I bought an Oculus Quest 2, which at the time required a Facebook account so I made a throwaway one, but other than that I haven't been on Facebook (and I haven't even touched my Quest 2 in three years).

      Point being, it's really not hard to get off Facebook and to ditch Meta products. More people should delete it.

      • ClikeX an hour ago

        I don't actively use Facebook and I block most(?) of the tracking, but I do have an account simply because most of the information about my area is on there. This means events, safety updates, second hand shit.

        • tombert an hour ago

          Yeah, that's fair enough. My neighborhood doesn't have that so it's fairly easy to avoid the use of Facebook.

          I still spend too much arguing on HN but not as much as I was on Facebook and the audience here is generally more educated and so the arguments aren't as mind-numbing.

    • dataflow an hour ago

      Yes, I'm surprised at this. I would've never expected they would be doing this, and I didn't exactly have high expectations of Meta. This is incredibly invasive and not at all what people expect.

      • Aeolun an hour ago

        Am I so cynical, or does this sound hopelessly naive? This is exactly what I would expect. Certainly of Meta. Amazon had to go out of their way to reassure people that Siri wasn’t always recording. And I’m still not entirely sure I believe that.

        • adamwk an hour ago

          I am also surprised, but not because I believe Meta to care about the ethics of the whole thing. After all their privacy scandals, I’d assume they’d have policies in place to prevent something that can so easily be leaked. But here we are

        • dataflow an hour ago

          The thing is it's not just surprising from a privacy standpoint but also from an engineering standpoint -- this sounds very data-, power-, and storage-intensive, in a device that's very constrained on all sides, so it wouldn't have even occurred to me this was a possibility. When are they even uploading all the videos without blowing through their power budget and internet data limits? Are they heavily compressing it to like one frame per second or something?

          • robocat 7 minutes ago

            > data limits

            The data required is small. Each embedding might be 1/2 kB per face.

            > power budget

            To process a video for biometric feature extraction, it might take 0.5% to 2% of the total power used to record a video. Video uses a lot of power (compression, screen, etc)

            Assuming you've got a modern device (e.g. with Apple Neutral Engine). Disclosure: Googled info (Gemini).

        • leptons 33 minutes ago

          Amazon Siri?

        • bdangubic an hour ago

          I find it extremely naive too. I expect much worse than this from Meta and I am often amazed at just what it is going to take for people to realize what Meta is and does. I mean it is not like we have 11 million examples of what and who they are. In this story I would have expected additionally that Meta would notice little bit of cellulite in the woman that was changing and then having the employees call her husband to tell them to surprise her with amazing cream he should buy her for their upcoming anniversary (and if this was actually part of the story I would be able to continue on top of this and would not be surprised if true).

      • financetechbro an hour ago

        I’m not sure what sort of signals you’ve gotten from Meta that would suggest they are above this type of behavior?

    • com2kid 34 minutes ago

      When you buy them and set them up you are told this many times. The onboarding screams at you that everything you do is used for training AI.

      Maybe this changed since I set mine up, but I felt so damn informed I was getting tired of tapping I understand.

  • msy an hour ago

    You would have to have been hiding under an extremely large rock not to assume this given the technology involved and Meta's overtly and consistently anti-privacy stances and history.

    • argomo an hour ago

      While true, that doesn't make it acceptable. In a functioning society, companies would be punished harshly for this behaviour.

      • Aeolun an hour ago

        > In a functioning society

        Have you been alive for the past decade?

    • http-teapot 13 minutes ago

      [inserts image of a smiling Mark Zuckerberg walking in the middle of unsuspecting attendees wearing VR headsets]

      That image always felt dystopian to me

  • mayowaxcvi 22 minutes ago

    My concern was whether the glasses might record or transmit data while switched off or in standby mode. From what I can tell, they don’t do this intentionally. So the risk is broadly similar to other modern electronic devices.

    The creepiness concern is real, but I think people misplace where the actual surveillance happens. The most consequential stores of personal data aren’t ad networks they’re things like banks, hospitals, insurers, and telecoms. These institutions hold information about your health, finances, movements, and relationships, indexed and searchable by employees you’ve never met, governed by policies you’ve never read.

    Realistically, there’s very little an individual can do to completely opt out.

    My take is: if the main outcomes are that I get shown ads for things I don’t need and my facecomputer knows the difference between a fork and a spoon… I… I can live with that.

  • NalNezumi 29 minutes ago

    I sincerely hope someone in Japan or Korea get caught using those to peek under trousers on the train so it get the forced camera sound treatment of smartphones over there.

    So the world can label them as Hentai glasses and move on

  • bogzz an hour ago

    I am so far removed from the type of person who might consider buying something like that. You'd have to be exceptionally impervious to social cues to even think of wearing that in public.

    If you're blind, it's of course understandable but that's pretty much it in terms of cases in which I would consider the glasses acceptable to wear in public.

    • algoth1 an hour ago

      Yet, it’s a life saver for blind people

      • bogwog 12 minutes ago

        How so? I'd expect the opposite

        > Hey Meta, is it safe to cross the street

        > You are absolutely correct to check whether it's safe to cross before crossing! (emoji). Let me check for you(emoji)

        > ...10% ...40% ...80% ...100% DONE. (made up progress bar)

        > It is perfectly safe to cross right now! (emoji)

        > Thanks Meta! (user dies)

      • bogzz an hour ago

        Thanks for the edge case! Edited.

  • yalogin 18 minutes ago

    Of course they can, why would one expect anything else? However if you look through their processes I am sure they are covered by some legal jargon to do the bare minimum in terms of security. They will have every knob available to debug to the lowest level possible and view everything

  • roughly 22 minutes ago

    Everything else in this article is horrific, but this stuck out to me:

    > “The algorithms sometimes miss. Especially in difficult lighting conditions, certain faces and bodies become visible”.

    Right, “difficult lighting conditions,” not sure when we’d run into those in situations where we might be concerned with privacy. A 97% success rate looks good on paper.

  • nosequel 40 minutes ago

    I won't even walk into a house with Alexa devices around, there is no way I'm going to let Meta glasses be in the same room as me.

    • crazygringo 3 minutes ago

      Don you carry a cell phone? Do you walk into rooms where other people have smartphones with Siri or Google Assistant? Those are literally no different from Alexa.

  • jcgrillo 7 minutes ago

    It's genuinely uncanny to see good tech journalism.. it's normally so much worse than this

  • impossiblefork 31 minutes ago

    While it may be legal for an individual to film something, it is certainly not permissible to process video data of this sort at scale.

    I don't agree that responsibility to comply with Swedish law is on the wearer. This should motivate prosecutors to immediately order raids to secure any data relating to the processing of the data.

    I also think the Swedish camera surveillance law is also applicable and there's a deceptive element since the cameras are disguised as glasses.

  • xmx98 an hour ago

    Of course! Glasses with cameras are a classic secret spy gadget :)

  • smbullet an hour ago

    Hopefully this causes Meta to be more transparent about what data is sent to their annotators. It seems like even the annotators didn't know whether the person explicitly hit recorded (whether accidentally or not) or if it's samples from a constant stream. This kind of makes it impossible for anyone to consent to the purchase agreements.

  • nomilk 32 minutes ago

    Is it paranoid to assume every device with a camera/mic can see/hear everything?

    That's my default assumption.

  • FireSquid2006 35 minutes ago

    I'm not sure if there is any use case that could convince me to mount an internet connected device to my head at all times.

  • jotux an hour ago

    Meta needs to make a find-your-lost-dog commercial for their smart glasses ASAP.

  • diacritical an hour ago

    I'm against surveillance in general and I see many people being against these glasses, yet not caring at all about surveillance cameras. Flock in the USA is a bit of an outlier in that it got some people riled up, but where I live in Europe there are private cameras looking out of at least half of the buildings, maybe more. So if you're walking down the street for 15 minutes, you'd be caught by tens or hundreds of cameras from various manufacturers, installed by various business and homes. Who knows how many have microphones, which server they store their feed in, what security each cam has and so on.

    I asked 2 cops in a patrol car if I could install cameras on my own and how I should go about it. They said they don't mind them. Officially it's illegal unless you have a permit, but it's so widespread and the law is so unenforced that it's practically 99.99% legal.

    I can point a few cameras to the street and record everything 24/7. When I'm on a bus I'm being recorded by a few cameras. On most bus/tram/subway stops there are cameras. In stores and public buildings there are cameras. Most cars have cameras for insurance or general safety concerns. Self-driving cars would have to have cameras, as well as delivery robots.

    If we accept this shitty reality, why shouldn't I wear a camera and a mic, too?

  • aucisson_masque an hour ago

    Beside the privacy part, I fail to see what value these glasses bring that a smartphone with a camera can't do already ?

    And you're still forced to carry a smartphone anyway with these glasses since they require internet connection.

    Is this fashion, or something I'm not aware of ? They look horrendous to me.

    • hapticmonkey 35 minutes ago

      > I fail to see what value these glasses bring that a smartphone with a camera can't do already ?

      Stop thinking like an end user and think like a Meta shareholder.

      Meta don't own smartphone hardware or operating systems. Apple and Android locked that market up. But if they can create a new market and own that, then imagine all the data they can harvest!

    • ninininino an hour ago

      POV camera footage without holding your phone out in front of you distracting you from having to look down at your phone instead of up at the thing you're filming? Imagine you want to capture your POV but also want to be present and in the moment, not looking at a 6 inch rectangle screen to check your framing of what you're capturing.

    • charcircuit an hour ago

      You can seamlessly take a photos without having to pull your phone out of your pockets and dedicate and arm to filming and you can listen to music without having to touch your phone. The audio recording of videos is 3D and when you play them back it's realistic where the audio is coming from.

      >since they require internet connection.

      Only the AI features require internet. You can technically take pictures and video without carrying around your phone, but realistically people are going to carry there phone with them.

  • nothrowaways an hour ago

    The whole project is a Creepy privacy nightmare.

  • oldfuture an hour ago

    this should be known by everyone

  • yogorenapan an hour ago

    The annoying thing is that even if you yourself don't use these glasses, as long as people around you do, you are still affected by it. We really need laws to limit always-on recording devices in places where we have an expectation of privacy.

    • lnrd an hour ago

      We need laws and social norms where filming a stranger and uploading it online is considered a serious unacceptable offense regardless of the device. I find it absurd that today is completely acceptable to just film an unaware stranger and put the video online, especially since that the majority of the videos are about making fun of them or humiliate them.

      • observationist an hour ago

        You shouldn't expect privacy in public spaces. That's the nature of public spaces. In the US, freedom of press means anywhere public means you have no expectation of privacy, and should comport yourself as such; don't do anything or wear anything in public you wouldn't want to be recorded.

        This is why paparazzi exist and how they operate. It's the dirty, dingy cost of having a free press, freedom of travel, freedom to hold public officials accountable, subject to the same laws you are; you can't waffle or restrict or grant exceptions, because those inevitably, invariably get abused by those in power.

      • teaearlgraycold an hour ago

        The difference is public vs. private spaces. The supreme court in the US has defended the right to record videos in public. But if someone walks into my home, or my 3rd space, etc. with one of these on actively recording that should absolutely be criminalized and enforced.

      • leptons an hour ago

        >the majority of the videos are about making fun of them or humiliate them

        That's just nonsense. Your feeds seem to be polluted by what you are seeking out, as I've never seen a video on any service that shows humiliation of anyone.

        I watch a lot of 1st ammendment audit videos, and that is never about humiliation, though many people end up looking very ignorant of the laws concerning recording in public which is in the 1st ammendment.

    • observationist an hour ago

      Actually useful AR needs cameras, of course, so the technology has legitimate use cases, but you'd have to be a real asshole to wear them to a bar, or a restaurant, etc. Maybe we mandate that the glasses have to have a base station dongle, and if they're more than 10 feet from the dongle, recording doesn't work without incredibly obvious annoying lights indicating that recording is on?

      A cultural convention that lets people make honest mistakes, but turn it off when someone says "hey, you're recording" seems like a good solution. Just need to make it easily visible and obvious to others - you can run around in public with a big news camera on your shoulder or a tripod and you usually won't get hassled. It's just the idea of being covertly recorded, even while in public, that gets creepy.

    • xmx98 an hour ago

      I heard that in Japan phones have an audible shutter sound. Not mandated by law. Though I think that having this in the law is very reasonable. Maybe EU can step up. Taking photos is more fun with the sound too.

    • leptons an hour ago

      There are very few places you can expect privacy in public. Restrooms, changing rooms, etc. But in most places in public you should have zero expectation of privacy (in the US).

      In private settings, as with public, you are typically free to leave a setting where people are recording.

      The law has no specifications for what type of device can do the recording, pr for how long a recording can be.

    • hollow-moe an hour ago

      "But it's the public space you can't expect any kind of privacy there, if you don't want private companies to do biometrics on your face from a rando glasses just don't go out :)" The open air panopticon, where every inmate is also the warden, gov salivates at the idea. (yes, yes, you're very smart, you, the reader: smartphones are already tracking and recording us everywhere. One more device, one more case isn't an issue anymore. So let's just keep adding them instead of trying to address them.)

  • aerodog 13 minutes ago

    Mark Zuckerberg is a Jewish supremacist and will share everything with Israel and other Israeli agencies. Tell me what would stop him.

  • ncr100 42 minutes ago

    Just think of the children. Changing a soiled garment, transmitting video of the whole ordeal, isn't that super illegal?

  • lvl155 an hour ago

    Only Meta and Zuck would continually introduce invasive products.

  • guelo 40 minutes ago

    those glasses a tiny white led when the camera is on. It really needs to be more obvious. This might be something we'll need legislation for since Meta is an evil-ish immoral company.

  • GuinansEyebrows an hour ago

        “I saw a video where a man puts the glasses on the bedside table and leaves the room.”
        “Shortly afterwards his wife comes in and changes her clothes”, one of them says.
    
    based on this and other context in the article, it seems like there's a very realistic chance that Meta is in possession of and actively distributing (internally and to contractors) video content of minors. i wonder if any contractors have confirmed this or have been unwillingly (or worse) exposed to this.
  • unselect5917 2 hours ago

    "People just submitted it. I don't know why. They 'trust me'. Dumb fucks."

    -Mark Zuckerberg, 2004

    • webdevver an hour ago

      oh come on, who of us didn't go through a power-tripping edge lord phase? i too had a community game server once...

      • xmx98 an hour ago

        It seems his values aren’t much better now. Too bad his company is so successful.

  • webdevver an hour ago

    i mean theres kind of no way around it. how else are you gonna get the training data you need? the only way to bootstrap ai is to tag the data with bio-ai first (humans).

    different companies 'launder' it differently: with voice, it was done by "accidental" voice assistant activations. i guess with glasses, maybe there will be less window dressing this time. after all, it is clearly pitched to see what you see, at all times of the day.

    similar controversy happened with the various roomba products, although arguably that was a combination of data harvesting + lazy engineering.

    • dangus an hour ago

      There are lots of ways around it, like adding a transparent “training mode” that a user can enable with consent, legitimately purchasing training data, etc.

      The root cause is that meta didn’t want to pay the fair market value for those videos and just stole them from its users by burying it in TOS.

      If they were honest about their intentions most people would say no or demand payment for providing something of value.

  • pstoll an hour ago

    TLDR the recorded media isn’t end-to-end encrypted and they aren’t selling it but instead using it to train their own systems. What is new here?

  • sschueller 2 hours ago

    Of course, why wouldn't they? They do not work without a meta account. /s

    Is anyone at meta going to be bald accountable?

    An absolute privacy nightmare especially in places like Switzerland or Germany where recording people (subject focus) even in public is not permitted without consent but you have tourists now showing up everywhere wearing these.

    The LED is barely visible during the day and some have modified their glasses to disable/remove it.

    • msy an hour ago

      I suspect what'll kill these is the same thing that kill google glass - social ostracisation. It's so, so wildly adversarial to effectively shove a recording device in the face of everyone you're interacting with you might as well wear a emergency orange t-shirt with 'verified asshole' written on it.

      • aardvarkr an hour ago

        They look like any other pair of sunglasses. No piece of glass over one eye reminding everyone you meet that you’re wearing a camera. They’re incredibly stealthy

        • msy an hour ago

          Have you seen them in the wild? They're notably chunky and have an obvious hole where the lens is. You might not notice it in passing but if someone's talking to you it's hard not to notice. I wonder how many of their owners realise how much they're affecting every interaction they have with another human.

      • darrylb42 an hour ago

        Unlike google glass they don't look weird. Unless you know what to look for you will probably just think they are ray bans.

    • RajT88 an hour ago

      > Is anyone at meta going to be bald accountable?

      They haven't yet. Don't see why now.

    • aucisson_masque an hour ago

      > An absolute privacy nightmare especially in places like Switzerland or Germany where recording people (subject focus) even in public is not permitted

      That's the prime example of a law that can't be enforced and thus shouldn't exist. You go in town, you can be recorded inadvertantly, as long as it's not some creep stalking you, I say it's fine.

      • sschueller an hour ago

        It can and is enforced. Again it's if the person is the focus of your video.

        If you post a video online of someone's worst day which you decided to film for entertainment, they can legally go after you.