Meta sparks privacy fears after unveiling $299 Smart Glasses with hidden cameras: ‘You can now film everyone without them knowing’::These stylish shades may look like a regular pair of Ray-Ban Wayfarers, but they’re actually Meta’s new Smart Glasses, complete with two tiny cameras and speakers implanted in the arms. The wearable tech was unveiled by Mark Zuckerberg Wednesday at the 2023 Meta Connect conference in Menlo Park, California, sparking a frenzy online.

149 points
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I remember when Google glasses came out, people got assaulted for wearing them

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/san-francisco-woman-says-she-was-attacked-for-wearing-google-glass/

Her Facebook post 💀

“OMG so you’ll never believe this but… I got verbally and physically assaulted and robbed last night in the city, had things thrown at me because of some ---- Google Glass haters,” Slocum posted to Facebook.

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76 points

Several bars in my city banned people wearing them.

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24 points

Venues will just need to implement infrared checks at the door.

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15 points

A simple solution would be to have a red led that displays when recording like video cameras

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24 points

The trick is now you can’t tell. Should it be illegal? Heck yes. Will it? “Hmm … technology, so important … innovation… privacy is dead anyway …. terrorism prevention… “

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52 points

Should it be illegal?

In the US, it’s been long held people do not have the “expectation of privacy” while out in public. One of the major issues that you’ve kinda touched on is how would it be enforced? So are you opposed to all forms of recording? Or is this more focused on a corporation potentially gathering data on people just by being in public where someone is wearing these?

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22 points

IMO expectation of privacy is valid, but I believe people should also have the right to reasonably know if they’re being recorded. Recording people in public’s one thing if you have your phone out and are waving it around pointing it at people, but it’s a whole other thing if it’s a concealed or otherwise hidden recording device.

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10 points

I think we’re getting to the point where “expectation of privacy” and “expectation of not being uploaded” need to be separated.

I fully agree with the idea that there should be no expectation of privacy in public, but I also don’t think filming some random person and posting them online should be carte blanche allowed.

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5 points

In the US, it’s been long held people do not have the “expectation of privacy” while out in public.

At the time it made sense. But laws need to change with the times. In the future you’ll have people wearing these shitty glasses with cameras all around you all day every day cataloging your movements and entering them into giant corporate data centers. Something needs to change.

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4 points

The problem is you won’t know you’re being recorded in private either.

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3 points

Legally speaking, you pretty much consent to being recorded when you step outside your own private space as far as I know.

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2 points

Also in the US, there has been this bizarre expectation that “if it’s illegal, it will go away”, which is how we have this shitty War on (some) Drugs, “assault” “weapon” bans, and people thinking that we have to completely outlaw AI.

The tech is here. It’s going to be legal. We just have to figure out how to deal with it.

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9 points

Why should it be illegal?

It’s perfectly legal to photograph strangers in public. You’re in public you have no reasonable expectation of privacy.

I don’t see people assaulting CCTV cameras for instance.

Sure some weirdos might I use it for nefarious reasons but if it didn’t exist they would still be weirdos using something else.

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28 points

People wear their glasses everywhere, including a variety of places where there is an expectation of privacy or where it is otherwise prohibited to record. Places where you would not be allowed to hold up your phone or camera and take photos.

The introduction of tech that makes it impossible to distinguish between someone minding their own business and someone recording you demands a change to the legal framework. It doesn’t make sense to hold to laws that were written for an entirely different scenario.

I don’t see people assaulting CCTV cameras for instance

I’ve seen that fairly often, particularly around political protests, and I’ve never seen a CCTV camera in a public bathroom, locker room, etc.

This tech is an inevitability and the potential legitimate uses are too valuable to ban it outright. But that doesn’t mean it should be treated exactly like a highly-visible camera or cell phone.

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12 points

It’s perfectly legal to photograph strangers in public.

Depends on your legislation.

Here it’s the other way round.

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1 point

Pretty sure there are at least some limitations to that. In a public toilet for instance…

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-1 points

Ok, now you and I are in a private place. Say, a bar. How do I know you’re not recording me?

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4 points

IT’S FOR THE CHILDREN

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3 points

How would banning these be enforceable though? They are only going to get more discreet, they will eventually appear completely indistinguishable from regular glasses.

There are certain ways to detect cameras, such as monitoring for infrared, but that would not work for all camera tech and could be hard to triangulate to exact people in crowded areas. There are also ways to detect electronic devices on a person but doing so could quickly become just as invasive in other ways.

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1 point

You don’t need the ban to be perfect. Especially if you go after manufacturers, not users. Make it harder for people to do uncouth things. Accessibility is a huge driver of people using things. You might not be able to stop everyone, but you can stop the majority of people.

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1 point

Thermal cameras are surprisingly good at detecting things that use power. Defeat the camera with another camera 😉

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0 points

Why should be illegal!?

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-1 points
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I think some cameras will “pop out” on your screen if you take a picture of them, right?

What a shitty future ahead of us. “Why are you taking a picture of me?!” “Because you’re wearing some suspicious glasses and I want to make sure that you are not recording me. Yup. There they are.”

Edit: well, after seeing some pictures, you can still tell that the cameras are there. But you have to be looking for them, which is still shitty.

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3 points

That’s only if it sends infrared signal (for example it has night vision). I don’t think anything will show up with these.

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10 points
7 points

What will be the new name for Glassholes in the Meta era?

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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2 points

Boiled the frog too quickly

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104 points

“They trust me — dumb fucks,” says Zuckerberg

Always good to keep in mind

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22 points

Alt headline: Dude with boundary issues makes least surprising glasses ever

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97 points

A quick search on Amazon for “spy camera” finds a bunch of devices small enough to easily conceal inside clothing, built in to pens, and built in to watches. A search for “spy camera glasses” finds exactly that, and most of them are well under $300. We’re already well into the era of being able to film everyone without them knowing.

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56 points

They aren’t directly connected to a social network and promoted with vast marketing resources however.

I remember playing with one of these about 10 years ago that looked like a car key fob, it recorded somewhat subpar footage in a weird format to a microSD card. A neat novelty but not very practical to use unless you really had a need to do covert surveillance of something, which most people don’t.

However if it’s made to be effortless to push watchable footage to social media, and people are heavily encouraged and incentivised to do so and it’s a different proposition.

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24 points

I think it is just a matter of convenience. Very few people buy lasers to aim them at airplanes. Give everyone a laser and you’ll get a thousand reports of people aiming lasers at their plane.

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11 points

Those at least don’t automatically sync to Zuck.

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9 points

People aren’t a fan of those existing either, but not much you can do about it. At least, you can assume that it’s only a tiny fraction of people who own these devices, let alone carry them around, ready to go.
With these glasses, more people will own them and will have them ready to go, on their nose.

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2 points

Smart glasses outside of specific applications were a fad when Google did them and will continue to be, at best, a fad.

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3 points

Those cameras only record locally.

These glasses presumably upload every frame to corporate data centers to be cataloged and used to profile the people in the images.

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75 points
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Hidden cameras? They’ve got big ol fuckin cameras on them and apparently a red LED that lights up when in use lol. It’d be easier to secretly film someone by pretending you’re texting on your phone. More ragebait.

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31 points

You seriously think it wouldn’t be trivial to disable the LED?

And by the time you notice the LED you’ve already been filmed.

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22 points

It would be trivial to just buy spy cameras already built for spying. The tech already exists

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21 points

Buddy, have you been on Aliexpress recently? It’s trivial to wire tiny cameras all over your body if you really wanted.

Not that it matters, I can point an 8K cinema camera at you in public, and you don’t legally get a say.

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5 points
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Not that it matters, I can point an 8K cinema camera at you in public, and you don’t legally get a say.

This isn’t the case everywhere. Some places have laws with likeness rights if you try to use the footage in commercial productions.

Two-party consent states also attach legal consequences to secret voice recordings.

This is strictly legally speaking. People can and do violate the law.

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1 point

New art project!

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8 points
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Deleted by creator
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6 points

The led is a simple transistor that happens to glow, just replace it

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7 points

Again you can record already without any led while “reading your messages” with your phone. Like I feel they did the expected and necessary.

Plus is not like there isn’t already available pens, USB chargers, watches or whatever they can come up secret cameras, like if the intention was to secretly record somebody they wouldn’t go with this ones disabling the led… plenty of better less suspicious alternatives.

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0 points

Ray ban have had them for years. I hate meta but it’s not just them.

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7 points

To be fair that was also a Facebook partnership. This is less news and more product revision

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-2 points

It took me a 3 second google search to find that it doesn’t work with the LED covered.

By the time you notice someone’s phone is out you’ve already been filmed. That’s status quo these days, it isn’t any creepier than every single person walking around with a camera in their pocket.

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6 points

I imagine it wouldn’t take long until someone finds a way to disable that LED.

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5 points

looks like a sharpie would do the trick

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3 points

Doesn’t work while covered, there’s a sensor in the light

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-7 points

Exactly. The pearl-clutching over smart glasses is so misplaced. You’re already being recorded constantly in public, what’s the big deal?

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8 points

Pearl clutching over new tech is the satanic panic of modern times

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-3 points

Y’all use the same vocab religiously, I’m just gonna start training models and feeding it to bots to auto respond to y’all lmfao

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58 points

I miss when CCTV was a world ending privacy concern. Its gotten so much worse in the last decade.

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9 points

Perhaps one of the biggest advances in human knowledge is in how to make ultra-slick slippy-slopes for abstract ideas. It seems to me that the most common reason people give for accepting some new bullshit is that we already have some other bullshit which is worse. But it is the accumulation of additional bullshit that has gotten us into this mess. I’m referring mostly to sacrifices of privacy; and to loss of freedom of use in products and software; the ownership being replaced with ongoing fees and subscriptions. That kind of thing.

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