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Meta’s smart glasses have a new look and the same privacy problem
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Meta may have finally found a way to make smart glasses look normal. That might be the problem.
On June 23, Meta announced a new line of AI-powered Meta Glasses, starting at $299. The collection includes three frame styles: Meta Adventurer, Meta Fury, and Meta Glasses by Kylie, a slim oval frame designed in collaboration with Kylie Jenner.
Like Meta’s Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses, the new frames are meant to make AI wearable, stylish, and a little less like something you would only see at a tech conference. They can take photos, record video, play audio, handle calls, and let users interact with Meta AI hands-free. In other words, Meta is selling them as everyday eyewear that can also document what you see. That’s exactly where the issue lies.
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Online, users have been debating the new glasses with the usual mix of alarm, jokes, defensiveness, and rage. Some people have argued that the backlash ignores genuinely useful features, especially for creators, travelers, parents, and blind or low-vision users.
This why the meta glasses are dope to me ngl https://t.co/jFIXXNWbJX
— ItsShVo (@ItsShVo) July 6, 2026
The funny closing text aside, this is why the Meta glasses are a good idea. They allow you to be present and enjoy the moment and also non intrusively record.
That's why we need to figure out a way to solve the pervert problem and not lose a very good piece of tech cos of stigma https://t.co/q5rNQe5ky6— c.a.b.le (@DaramolaDunsin) July 5, 2026
Others have been more blunt, saying the glasses make it too easy for strangers to record people without their knowledge and then turn those interactions into content.
some influencer approached me & asked for my insta i said no sorry. i didnt know he was filming w meta glasses & now he has posted that reel & some weird looking creature has commented "always a 2/10 girl w attitude"😀
I texted the influencer to take it down hope he'll do it asap— kimm⁷ (@thvheals) May 23, 2026
Just experienced talking to a stranger for 10 minutes and them suddenly telling me they’re wearing meta glasses pic.twitter.com/X0Bb7Uu8xc
— J-dawg (@H4TEDEMON) July 5, 2026
I truly do not understand how Meta glasses are legal.
— 𐌁𐌉Ᏽ 𐌕𐌉𐌌𐌉 (@OrevaZSN) June 29, 2026
Me looking to make sure a mf aint got Meta glasses on while they talking to me pic.twitter.com/TvYxJg8FID
— Ayomide 🧢 (@Haryormdey4u) July 6, 2026
On a phone, recording usually requires a visible gesture. Someone has to pull it out, aim it, and hold it up. Smart glasses remove most of that very difficult process (sarcasm, detected). A person can be talking to you, looking at you, or sitting across from you on the subway while the camera is already built into their frames.
Meta’s glasses do include a small LED indicator that lights up when photos or videos are being captured, but people also argue that the light can be easy to miss, especially in bright settings or crowded spaces.
UNPOPULAR OPINION: Meta glasses should have a red light when they’re recording.
— Wholesome Side of 𝕏 (@itsme_urstruly) July 4, 2026
Telling people who are alarmed about the privacy implications of Meta glasses that the frames include a recording light, while knowing there are easy workarounds, is disingenuous.
— zellie (@zellieimani) June 29, 2026
New phobia just dropped cause I can’t believe one day I’ll be in the same space as someone wearing meta glasses and I won’t know I’m being recorded or what that person will do with the footage
— K. (@katlego_tefu) July 5, 2026
That concern is no longer just hypothetical. In February 2026, three women reported they were secretly recorded by men wearing smart glasses during staged pickup-style interactions, then posted online without consent. One woman said she was approached in a Washington, D.C., airport lounge and later discovered that the man had filmed her with smart glasses. Another said she was filmed in a grocery store and found the clip online, where it had already been viewed millions of times.
There have also been concerns in more intimate settings. In September 2025, a woman went viral after saying she realized during a Brazilian wax at a Manhattan European Wax Center that her esthetician was wearing Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses.
@niessaxoxo_ What should I do? #europeanwaxcenter #brazilianwax #metaglasses
The employee reportedly said the glasses were not charged and were prescription, and there was no evidence that the appointment was recorded. Still, the reaction made clear that the presence of a wearable camera can be enough to make people feel exposed, especially in situations where privacy is part of the service.
Drama has had real digital ramifications. In December 2025, TikTokker Anthony Festa went viral after posting about arriving for a 6 a.m. Solidcore class on Nov. 30 and finding the studio empty, with no instructor present. He filmed himself on his Meta glasses doing a makeshift private workout, and the situation escalated after he alleged staff pressured him to take the video down.
@anthonyrfesta Clearing some things up…
While initially about the workout class, the situation brought up a recurring question: if wearable cameras make it easy to document everything in real time, what responsibility do public spaces have to make their rules clear before someone starts filming?
The recording light is now becoming a legal issue, too. On June 4, 2026, Pennsylvania state Rep. Joe Ciresi introduced a bill that would require smart glasses and other wearable recording devices to include a visual indicator when recording audio or video.
@luxewrapstars Have you picked up your #GhostDot yet?? Protect your privacy, cover up your indicator light your glasses! Used in all sorts of situations for content creation, safety, workplace discrimination, and so much more! #tiktokshop #glasses #recording #privacy #security
Data protection lawyer Kleanthi Sardeli on the hidden danger most smart glasses buyers never think about:
Meta sold over 7 million pairs of its Ray-Ban smart glasses globally, and now holds roughly 80% of a market that Grandview Research valued at nearly $2.5 billion in 2025.… pic.twitter.com/jp4hcQCWPu
— High Signal AI (@HighSignal_AI) July 1, 2026
This is aimed at a real loophole in the current smart-glasses setup. On TikTok, retailers sell “ghost dot” stickers to block or dim the recording light, and similar LED-blocking stickers have appeared on retail sites.
The bill is part of a wider wave of scrutiny around where smart glasses could go next. In February, the New York Timesreported that Meta had been exploring facial recognition for its smart glasses through an internal feature called “Name Tag,” which could allow a wearer to identify people and receive information about them through Meta AI (Meta has not launched that feature for consumers). U.S. Sens. Ed Markey of Massachusetts, Ron Wyden of Oregon, and Jeff Merkley of Oregon sent a letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg in March demanding more information about these reported plans, and in May, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton launched an investigation into Meta AI Glasses over concerns.
And in June, the Verge reported that people in at least 30 states were offering to remove the recording light from Ray-Ban Meta glasses, including a New Jersey modder who said he performed the service multiple times a week. Meta has responded, saying tampering with the light violates its rules and that it removes listings for those services, but the reporting has given lawmakers a concrete example of why a tiny indicator light may not be enough on its own.
Not only are Meta spyglasses dangerous for the environment and people's physical and mental health, there's men in cities like Atlanta disabling the indicator red lights so victims don't know they're being covertly recorded. Doing this and wearing this spy tech should be illegal. pic.twitter.com/yg5hWyXddR
— Carolyn Hinds 🇧🇧 #FreePalestine #CongoInCrisis (@CarrieCnh12) July 5, 2026
Smart glasses have been a hard sell. Google Glass became a punchline more than a decade ago, and even Meta’s more recent Ray-Ban and Oakley glasses have had to fight the same basic problem: people do not always love the idea of a camera sitting on someone else’s face. Reuters reported in November of last year that smart-glasses sales were growing, but that mainstream shoppers still had concerns about privacy, comfort, and price.
Meta seems to know that. Its newest rollout isn’t just about making the glasses cheaper — it’s about making them look like something people might actually want to wear, even before they think about the technology inside. By tapping Kylie as the face of this much chicer version, Meta’s launch event pulled in a fashion-and-internet crowd that included stylist Law Roach, creator Nara Smith, and DJ Peggy Gou.
The glasses have since popped up on everyone from F1 WAGs to influencers — perhaps for fashion, perhaps as a gift from Meta — though not without the inevitable internet backlash that accompanies every such sighting.
Is she wearing meta glasses?????
What is wrong with her its like these people don't care abt women's safety bc they know they'd never be affected https://t.co/5dS2cbiEvO— Noor³⁸¹👨🏻🦰 (@noorstappen) July 5, 2026
Terry O’Connor licking the boots of the zuckerberg’s surveillance state by shilling for meta. Crazy fast ick. Selling your personal and artistic integrity to promote the glasses that let you record people without their consent bc you wanna “take photos with your eyes.” Hack shit. pic.twitter.com/ylJEREVzP2
— coleman spilde (@colemanjspilde) July 2, 2026
Why are celebs/influencers promoting meta glasses! Is everyone okay???!!
— PMaggie (@preciousmustaph) June 29, 2026
Kylie Jenner i Jennie znalazły się w ogniu krytyki po tym, jak zostały ambasadorkami inteligentnych okularów od firmy Meta.
Internauci są oburzeni, ponieważ mężczyźni używają tego gadżetu do potajemnego filmowania kobiet w intymnych sytuacjach. pic.twitter.com/ppVu436WKG
— MNFPL (@musicnewsfactpl) June 30, 2026
the glasses :/ not only are those for Perverts™ they also send all your data to meta for ai training and a good portion of that footage gets seen by their employees so it's security risk for him too https://t.co/UHeOx8P8RR
— jey 🏁🪞⚔️🧬 (@jidh_) June 30, 2026
As lawmakers rush to catch up, Meta is simultaneously making its smart glasses cheaper, more fashionable, and more ordinary. But the more “ordinary” this tech looks, the more concerns it brings.
Crystal Bell is the Digital Culture Editor at Mashable, where she leads coverage of the creator economy, internet culture, and digital life. Her work focuses on the people, platforms, and communities shaping modern entertainment, from YouTube creators and livestreamers to fandoms, social media trends, and the evolving relationship between technology and culture. She also oversees the Mashable 101, the publication’s annual list recognizing the internet’s most influential creators.
Previously, she was the entertainment director at MTV News, where she helped expand the brand’s coverage of fan culture, K-pop, and the internet’s most passionate communities. Her work has appeared in Teen Vogue, Rolling Stone, PAPER, NYLON, ELLE, Glamour, NME, W, The FADER, and elsewhere on the internet.
She’s exceptionally fluent in fandom and will gladly make you a K-pop playlist and/or provide anime recommendations upon request. Crystal lives in New York City with her two black cats, Howl and Sophie.

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