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Harvard students create app that reveals personal info using smart glasses
Two Harvard University students have created new technology that gives users access to your name, phone number and address just by looking at you.
College students used Meta’s smart glasses to dox people in real time
Two Harvard students have created an eerie demo of how smart glasses can use facial recognition tech to instantly dox people’s identities, phone numbers, and addresses. The most unsettling part is the demo uses current, widely available technology like the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses and public databases.
Dark Side of ‘Smart’ Glasses: Students Show How They Can Instantly Find Strangers’ Names, Addresses
Pushing the boundaries of privacy, two Harvard University students have developed a modified version of Meta’s “smart glasses” called I-XRAY. The system employs artificial intelligence and facial recognition technology to identify individuals instantly, disclosing their personal information.
Terrifying look at how Meta smart glasses can reveal personal details about strangers on the street — even home addresses
I-Xray then prompts another AI tool that scours public databases to retrieve personal details about the individual in the image, including their name, address, phone number and even information about relatives. This information is then sent to the I-Xray mobile app.
Are my Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses spying on me? No, but college students are
A recent tech demo has highlighted the risks of facial recognition when it comes to our personal information. Here's what you should know, and how to protect yourself.
Harvard students make utterly dystopic smart glasses that can instantly dox anyone they see
Two Harvard students, Caine Ardayfio and AnhPhu Nguyen, have built a project called I-XRAY (via Interesting Engineering) that demonstrates just how terrifyingly easy it is to harness available technology to dig up the personal information of any stranger you could clap eyes upon.
Smart Glasses Can Use Facial Recognition to Dox Complete Strangers
Using Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, Harvard students were able to look up personal information on people at a glance – and even creepily stalk them.
Students used Meta's smart glasses to automatically dox strangers via Instagram streams
An unsettling report from 404 Media has shed light on some ways that the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses could be used to violate people's privacy. Two Harvard students used facial recognition tech and a large language model to unearth a subject's name,
Students Add Facial Recognition to Meta Smart Glasses to Identify Strangers in Real-Time
Two students at Harvard University modified a set of Meta Ray-Ban Smart Glasses to add AI-based facial recognition technology, and the result is
Terrifying Smart Glasses Hack Can Pull Up Personal Info of Nearby Strangers in Seconds
I-XRAY For years, privacy experts have warned that widely available facial recognition tools could make it possible to do things like dox strangers you see on the street or allow dangerous creeps to immediately look up personal information about women at the bar.
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Meta’s Ray-Ban Smart Glasses Used To Instantly Dox Strangers In Public, Thanks To AI And Facial Recognition
Harvard students hack together a system to gather intel on strangers to build their trust, then share steps for the public to ...
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The Next Big Thing Is Still … Smart Glasses
Last week, Mark Zuckerberg stood on a stage in California holding what appeared to be a pair of thick black eyeglasses. His ...
MIT Technology Review
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The coolest thing about smart glasses is not the AR. It’s the AI.
Recent demos of smart glasses from Meta and Snap have shown off some impressive visuals. But the brains are the thing.
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