With cameras becoming increasingly prevalent, privacy issues rise simultaneously as startups push for on-device AI.
The partnership with Pattern to sell Ray-Ban and Oakley eyewear products on Amazon, is a global first for EssilorLuxottica, ...
Using the glasses' "Meta AI" features⁠—a main selling point of the device⁠—on an image makes it fair game for the company to ...
On Wednesday, some Harvard students made headlines by outfitting a pair of Ray-Ban Meta glasses with facial recognition. The ...
Plus: Harvard students pack Meta’s smart glasses with privacy-invading face-recognition tech, Microsoft and the DOJ seize ...
You may have noticed "electronic eyeglasses" are now listed as items banned from the courtroom during the trial of accused ...
Pushing the boundaries of privacy, two Harvard University students have developed a modified version of Meta’s “smart glasses ...
The US$600 G1 glasses are a premium, display-oriented product in a market increasingly flooded with cheap Chinese ...
In what might be described as a real-life Black Mirror episode, a Harvard student uses facial recognition with $379 Meta ...
The capability isn't unique to Meta Ray Ban Smart Glasses, but shows the potential for just about anyone to be able to ...
The Meta Ray-Ban Smart Glasses have been around for a little while now and they’re generally accepted to be a cool way to ...
Eyewear giant EssilorLuxottica has asked a U.S. judge to throw out what it called “misguided” consumer lawsuits accusing the ...