Meta draws scrutiny over smart glasses facial recognition work

Meta is facing renewed questions about its development of facial recognition technology for its smart glasses following recent investigations into partnerships and prototype code.

Meta has been testing facial recognition features for its Ray-Ban smart glasses in collaboration with Rank One Computing, a supplier of biometric tools to the US military and law enforcement. A recent Wired investigation revealed a software license allowing Meta to use the firm's military-grade facial recognition and liveness detection technology through the Meta AI app.

The company removed dormant code for a feature called NameTag in early June after public attention, but questions persist about its ongoing work. Meta has stated that no final decisions have been made on rolling out such capabilities and emphasized that nothing has been shipped to consumers.

In a statement, a Meta spokesperson said the company would approach any future release thoughtfully and with transparency. Privacy groups have highlighted risks of biometric surveillance, noting potential impacts on anonymity and marginalized communities.

This follows Meta's 2021 decision to end plans for a central facial recognition database and a 2024 settlement of a Texas lawsuit over data collection for $1.4 billion.

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Illustration of Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses with code being removed, representing the deletion of facial recognition features.
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Meta removes face-recognition code from smart glasses app

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Meta has deleted unreleased facial recognition code from its Meta AI app, which powers smart glasses made with Ray-Ban and Oakley. The move came one day after WIRED reported the discovery of the dormant system. The app is installed on more than 50 million phones.

Meta has embedded facial recognition components in its Meta AI smartphone app that powers its smart glasses. The feature remains inactive for now but has raised privacy concerns among experts.

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More than 70 civil liberties and advocacy organizations, including the ACLU, EPIC, and Fight for the Future, have called on Meta to scrap facial recognition plans for its Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses. The groups warn the 'Name Tag' feature could empower stalkers, abusers, and law enforcement to silently identify people, endangering abuse victims, immigrants, and LGBTQ+ individuals.

Meta is creating an artificial intelligence version of its chief executive, Mark Zuckerberg, to interact with employees. The project involves photorealistic 3D characters trained on Zuckerberg's mannerisms, tone, and statements. Zuckerberg is personally training and testing the animated AI as part of the company's AI push.

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Meta workers have begun circulating flyers at US offices to protest a company program that tracks their mouse movements and keystrokes. The initiative aims to train AI models but has sparked concerns among employees about surveillance and job security.

Meta unveiled Muse Spark on Wednesday, the inaugural AI model from its Superintelligence Labs and the first in the Muse family. The company described it as a ground-up overhaul of its AI efforts, aiming for personal superintelligence. While proprietary for now, future open-source models are planned.

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Meta staff have expressed frustration after CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced a large companywide AI hackathon next month. The plan has drawn internal criticism amid broader concerns over the company's AI strategy.

 

 

 

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