TheCryptoUpdates
Web 3.0

Meta plans facial recognition for smart glasses this year

Meta’s Smart Glasses Get Facial Recognition Capabilities

Meta is moving forward with plans to add facial recognition to its smart glasses lineup. According to a report from The New York Times, the company is preparing to introduce what it calls the “Name Tag” feature. This would let wearers identify people through Meta’s built-in AI assistant.

The feature sounds like something from a sci-fi movie, but it’s apparently quite real. Meta reportedly considered launching it at a conference for blind users first. That didn’t happen, but the company still wants to roll it out broadly. The target is sometime this year across both Ray Ban and Oakley smart glasses models.

How the Recognition System Would Work

Here’s the interesting part: the technology wouldn’t try to identify every single person you see. That would be both technically challenging and, well, pretty creepy. Instead, it would focus on recognizing your existing contacts from Meta platforms. Think Facebook friends, Instagram connections – people you already know.

It might also identify people with public profiles on services like Instagram. So if you’re looking at someone who has a public Instagram account, the glasses could potentially tell you who they are. But only if they’ve chosen to make that information publicly available.

I find myself wondering about the practical applications. For someone with vision impairments, this could be genuinely helpful. Recognizing friends in a crowd, remembering names at events – there are legitimate use cases. But the privacy implications are significant.

Meta’s History with Facial Recognition

Meta isn’t new to facial recognition technology. They had that whole Facebook photo tagging system that automatically suggested tags for people in your photos. That system got discontinued in 2021 after regulatory pressure and legal scrutiny.

The company faced lawsuits and privacy concerns over how it handled facial data. Some states passed laws restricting facial recognition use. So Meta knows this is sensitive territory.

What’s different this time? Well, the glasses are a physical product you wear on your face. The recognition happens in real-time as you look at people. That feels more immediate, more personal than photo tagging after the fact.

Privacy and Implementation Questions

There are so many questions about how this would actually work in practice. Would there be clear indicators when recognition is active? Could people opt out of being recognized? What about children or people who don’t use social media?

Meta will need to address these concerns if they want this feature to succeed. The regulatory environment around facial recognition has only gotten stricter since 2021. Europe’s GDPR, various state laws in the US – there are more hurdles now.

I think the company is probably being cautious about the rollout. Starting with existing contacts makes sense from both a technical and privacy perspective. It’s less invasive than trying to identify strangers.

But still, the idea of glasses that can recognize people raises important questions about consent and privacy in public spaces. We’ll have to see how Meta handles those concerns when the feature launches.

Loading

Related posts

Exploring Decentralized Communication with Web3 Telegram Listener

Jack

Sorare Teams Up With the NBA for its NFT Fantasy Basketball Game Release

Mridul Srivastava

Kurtosis plans on changing the way Web3 developers create dapps by raising $20M

Close No menu locations found.