Meta's Smart Glasses Set to Introduce Face Recognition Feature, U.S. Democratic Lawmakers Question Privacy Risks

Gate News reports that on March 18, several Democratic U.S. Senators pressured Meta regarding its plan to introduce facial recognition features in smart glasses, demanding an explanation of the potential privacy and data security impacts. In a joint letter to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Edward J. Markey, Jeff Merkley, and Ron Wyden stated that this feature could identify the public without consent, posing risks of tracking, harassment, and targeted threats.

The senators emphasized that smart glasses can capture大量 facial images without users knowing and match them with names, work information, or social profiles, which could weaken privacy boundaries in public spaces. Especially with Meta’s existing Facebook and Instagram ecosystems supporting such data integration, concerns are heightened.

Meanwhile, Meta’s handling of data from wearable devices has come under scrutiny. Reports previously indicated that outsourced personnel reviewed videos captured by Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, including some sensitive scenes. This raised public questions about whether those filmed were aware and how the data is being used.

Privacy experts warn that continuously recording with cameras combined with AI training could amplify risks. John Davisson from EPIC stated that device wearers cannot authorize data collection for others, and training AI systems on identifiable images may challenge biometric data protections.

Meta responded that the company filters some content before manual review and uses a combination of automated and manual processes to optimize the system. However, it has not provided a clear timeline on whether it will officially launch facial recognition features or connect them with social platform accounts.

Currently, legislators are demanding that Meta clarify its data usage scope, including whether it will store or share biometric information and how it obtains consent from non-users. Responses are required by April 6. This controversy also reflects the growing global discussion on monitoring technology and data boundaries as AI and wearable devices become more integrated.

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