Did someone say something about an AI wearable?
Mere hours after Meta said its smart glasses
would disable the camera if the privacy light is tampered with—
a popular hack, it turns out—
a Financial Times report says the Facebook and Instagram parent was working on a “super sensing” version of its specs that captures audio and images nearly continuously.
Driving this privacy-piercing approach? AI, of course. Continuous capture would presumably enable Meta’s AI to better respond to the wearer’s queries about what they saw or heard over the course of the day.
“The glasses have prompted internal debates over how to handle novel privacy challenges, including non-wearers finding the technology invasive,” the
FT adds. Um, yeah.
There’s a lot to unpack. Can you add the feature to Meta smart glasses already in the wild? (Yes, via a software update, according to the report.) Does the privacy light activate for such features? (As of now, no.) Do you store the raw footage on Meta servers? (No.) Do you make it available to the user? (Unlikely.) How about law enforcement? (Unknown.) Can you use it to train Meta’s AI models? (Probably.)
It promises to be fraught territory. Meta has long touted its commitment to user privacy controls, but it has frequently been the target of regulatory scrutiny about the matter, and its business model is almost entirely based on selling targeted advertising against its customer base.
“People have really gotten comfortable not only sharing more information and different kinds, but more openly and with more people," CEO Mark Zuckerberg said way back in 2010. “That social norm is just something that has evolved over time.”
—AN