Meta is reportedly staying mum on whether it is collecting video and image data from its AI wearable device Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses to train its large language models (LLMs). The company announced a new real-time video feature for the device using which users can ask the AI to answer queries and ask for suggestions based on their surroundings.
The feature offers real-time video capability that enables Meta AI to “look” at the users’ surroundings and process that visual information to answer any query a user might have. For example, a user can ask it to identify a famous landmark.
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Meta Smart Glasses Raise Privacy Concerns
All of these functionalities require the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses to take passive videos and images of the surroundings to understand the context. In normal circumstances, once a response gets generated and the user has ended the conversation, the data should be kept in private servers if not instantly deleted. This is due to a lot of data might be private information about the user’s home, and other belongings.
However, Meta is reportedly not stating this. On being asked whether the company is storing this data and training native AI models on this, TechCrunch quoted a Meta spokesperson. Another spokesperson reportedly noted that this information is not being shared externally and added that “we're not saying either way.”
Meta’s refusal to clarify what happens with the user data raises concerns given the private, and potentially sensitive nature of the data the smart glasses can capture. While Meta has already confirmed training its AI models on public user data of its US-based users on Facebook and Instagram, the data from the Ray-Ban Meta glasses aren’t public.
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Apple Planning To Rival Meta Ray-Ban AR Smart Glasses
There have been several rumors about Apple renewing efforts to build augmented reality (AR) smart glasses, although it seems like these could be ready by 2027 at the earliest. Now, a trusted source has reported that the company is considering less ambitious smart glasses.
Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman, in his newsletter Power On, suggested that Apple is thinking about developing non-AR smart glasses. “That category has done quite well for Meta Platforms Inc. in recent quarters, so Apple may try to join the party,” Gurman added.
Several firms currently offer smart glasses, but the $299 Meta Ray-Ban glasses are arguably the most prominent product. The glasses come with a camera, built-in speakers, AI chatbot functionality, music playback, and the ability to take calls. However, Meta’s product doesn’t offer any AR features, such as head-tracking or an integrated display.