In a video from March, Meta's CTO, Andrew Bosworth, says Ray-Ban users are "choosing" to have some of their content reviewed.
Turns out you're not the only one who thinks adding facial recognition to smart glasses is a bad idea.
Sen. Ron Wyden called it an "outrageous end run around the Fourth Amendment."
It's getting to the point of state-level legislation.
Not for your eyes only.
Mark Zuckerberg traipsed into court with Ray-Ban Meta AI glasses on and got a scolding.
Smart glasses bans are reasonable, important, and damn near impossible.
The search giant announced new tools aimed at giving people more control over how their information appears online.
Get your money since you can't have your privacy.
Microsoft claims it receives about 20 requests for BitLocker keys a year.
If Reddit leaks are anything to go off of, Google Glass 2.0 might have learned a thing or two about privacy and distraction.
The fears of centralizing forces in crypto are creating a lot of skittishness.
Want to chat with your friends? Please look into this orb.
I know what you're thinking: "They weren't already doing this?"
The problem is unsettling. The proposed solutions? Also unsettling.
Now that Google's anti-cookie initiative is dead, here’s what’s never going to happen.
“They just really didn't think anyone would look up.”
Is this #glassholes 2.0?
Flock Safety's high-tech drones designed for cops are now being offered to private security firms.
Neon wants use the calls to train AI, but a security concern forced it to go offline, for now.