cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/33445279

Two former Harvard students are launching a pair of “always-on” AI-powered smart glasses that listen to, record, and transcribe every conversation and then display relevant information to the wearer in real time.

“Our goal is to make glasses that make you super intelligent the moment you put them on,” said AnhPhu Nguyen, co-founder of Halo, a startup that’s developing the technology.

Or, as his co-founder Caine Ardayfio put it, the glasses “give you infinite memory.”

“The AI listens to every conversation you have and uses that knowledge to tell you what to say … kinda like IRL Cluely,” Ardayfio told TechCrunch, referring to the startup that claims to help users “cheat” on everything from job interviews to school exams.

  • fubarx@lemmy.world
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    17 days ago

    I remember being at a conference when a guy walked up to a group of us chatting. wearing a Google Glass. Everyone stopped talking, turned around, and just scattered. A while later he walked into the men’s room and someone reported him to security. That afternoon, the glass was gone.

    Guess nobody learned that lesson.

      • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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        16 days ago

        When your mom briefly mentions hers and you realize your conversations have been recorded for god knows how long.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          16 days ago

          If my mother has one then uncontacted tribes in the Amazon also have them. She’s only recently learnt that you can send gifs in messaging apps. Now it’s all I get.

          At some point I’m going to have to have a conversation with her about how memes have meaning, and you need to respond with the right one, and not just like a random one.

    • paraphrand@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      And those were just assumptions about if it was recording. People should make similar assumptions about someone holding their phone or carrying it in their shirt pocket.

      All I’m saying is the fact we already have recording devices everywhere (our phones) means the transition into acceptance for glasses will happen. As long as the usefulness of the glasses is high enough.

      The usefulness of Google Glass was basically zero. So it went away quickly. The whole project was just intended to be a stunt, so Google could look like they were ahead of the curve. I’m convinced of that.

  • hagelslager@feddit.nl
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    17 days ago

    Your Scientists Were So Preoccupied With Whether Or Not They Could, They Didn’t Stop To Think If They Should

    • Dr. Ian Malcolm
  • Maeve@kbin.earth
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    17 days ago

    While Meta’s glasses have an indicator light when their cameras and microphones are watching and listening as a mechanism to warn others that they are being recorded, Ardayfio said that the Halo glasses, dubbed Halo X, do not have an external indicator to warn people of their customers’ recording. “For the hardware we’re making, we want it to be discreet, like normal glasses,” said Ardayfio, who added that the glasses record every word, transcribe it, and then delete the audio file. Privacy advocates are warning about the normalization of covert recording devices in public… Under the hood, the smart glasses use Google’s Gemini and Perplexity as its chatbot engine, according to the two co-founders. Gemini is better for math and reasoning, whereas they use Perplexity to scrape the internet, they said.

    These evil af people.

      • Maeve@kbin.earth
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        17 days ago

        “no reasonable expectation of privacy” in public spaces. Then you have multi-member living spaces. One member is against, others are for.

      • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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        16 days ago

        When I did customer service we had to do this as part of then training course, no idea why since we didn’t choose whether or not to record calls, they were all recorded.

        I think the way it works is the customer is told, before the call starts, that the call is recorded, if they continue with the call that’s consent, however now consent already exists for the call to be recorded, they can record your call and they don’t have to tell you, because your consent to the call being recorded is kind of assumed.

        But you have to actually get that consent, you can’t just assume that people will be okay with being recorded, you have to tell them that a call will be recorded. Critically this has to be before the call starts you can’t tell them after the fact.

        So in this case you would have to wear a t-shirt that says “I’m recording everything”, and if people don’t like it they won’t talk to you.