42 comments

  • gorbachev 4 hours ago
    Meta cancels the contract with the outsourcing company they contracted to classify smart glasses content after employees at the company whistleblow about serious privacy issues with the content they were paid to classify.
    • SlinkyOnStairs 3 hours ago
      "Fun" bonus fact: This isn't the first time Sama (the outsourcing company) has had these problems.

      OpenAI had them classify CSAM, so Sama fired them as a client back in 2022. https://time.com/6247678/openai-chatgpt-kenya-workers/

      We're 4 years on, 3 years since that report broke. Not a single thing has improved about how tech companies operate.

      • prepend 2 hours ago
        How else do you want companies to remove and prevent CSAM? It seems like you must have some human involvement to train and monitor.

        It’s a terrible job, I wouldn’t want to do it, but someone needs to. Perhaps one day, AI will be accurate enough to not need it, but even then you need someone to process complaints and waivers (like someone’s home photos being inaccurately flagged).

        • SlinkyOnStairs 2 hours ago
          > How else do you want companies to remove and prevent CSAM?

          Different situation.

          Facebook has to do CSAM moderation because it's a publishing platform. People will post CSAM on facebook, so they must do moderation.

          And "just don't have facebook" isn't a solution because every publication of any sort has to deal with this problem; Any newspaper accepting mail has this problem. (Albeit to a much more scaled down version) People were nailing obscene things to bulletin boards for all recorded history.

          ---

          In contrast, OpenAI has no such problem. It did not have CSAM pushed onto it, it actively collected such data itself. It could have, at any point before and after, simply stopped scraping all of the web indiscriminately and switched to using more curated sources of scraped data.

          The downside would be "worse LLMs" or "LLMs being created later", which is a perfectly acceptable compromise.

          ---

          This is not to say that genuine content flagging firms have no reason to curate such data & build tools to automatically flag content before human moderators have to. (But then they also shouldn't be outsourcing this and traumatizing contract workers for $2-3 an hour)

          But OpenAI is not such a firm. It's a general AI company.

          • GrinningFool 1 hour ago
            > traumatizing contract workers for $2-3 an hour)

            Is there an hourly rate at which this should be acceptable?

            • arw0n 4 minutes ago
              There is labor that is necessary for our societies to function, but a direct threat to the people doing the work. Someone has to do it, and it should be seen as a great service to society and rewarded accordingly. In a just world, we would be paying significantly extra for threats to health that come from work, in the one we are currently in we use threat of worse harm instead.
            • bonesss 8 minutes ago
              We have coal miners destroying their bodies and lungs, cobalt mining slavery, cocoa nut child labour and de facto slavery, sex workers, CPS investigators, first responders, and doctors with high rates of suicide…

              Not only is there an acceptable market rate for trauma, it’s sometimes competitive and requires licensing.

            • SlinkyOnStairs 52 minutes ago
              There's no dollar amount but proper support during and after employment is a minimum, and a large paycheque will both offset some of the human cost and make it easier for people to be pushed to quit the job; Such that they aren't doing the job for too long.

              The current support systems for police in this subject are already insufficient. Facebook's treatment of their moderation staff is abhorrent. The point of including the pay figure is to further illustrate just how damning this subcontracting practice is.

            • genewitch 1 hour ago
              triage doctors, what do they make? give people who have to review the worst humanity has to offer and pay them that. and while we're at it, ambulance personnel should get a huge pay bump. Take it from nurses' pay.
              • harvey9 4 minutes ago
                ER triage is usually done by a nurse, at least in England.
              • jdiff 1 hour ago
                Why take from other workers when it can be siphoned from upper management and shareholders?
                • genewitch 9 minutes ago
                  you're right, it's a personal failing that i must snip at nurses whenever the word appears in my head. Apologies.
          • BobbyJo 48 minutes ago
            > In contrast, OpenAI has no such problem. It did not have CSAM pushed onto it, it actively collected such data itself. It could have, at any point before and after, simply stopped scraping all of the web indiscriminately and switched to using more curated sources of scraped data.

            You've just thrown the garbage over your fence. Instead of OpenAI contracting Sama to classify CSAM, the "Curators" have to.

            At the end of the day, someone needs to classify it. If you say the platforms need to, and they miss some, and it ends up in OAI training data, OAI is going to be the entity paying the prices.

          • deaux 1 hour ago
            > In contrast, OpenAI has no such problem. It did not have CSAM pushed onto it, it actively collected such data itself. It could have, at any point before and after, simply stopped scraping all of the web indiscriminately and switched to using more curated sources of scraped data.

            This is of course incredibly illegal, but megacorps (by valuation) and oligarchy members are above the law so who cares. I assume there could be a regulatory framework which can make this legal for an extremely specific purpose, but there is zero change that OpenAI was part of this/abiding by this in 2022, absolutely none.

          • fragmede 1 hour ago
            OpenAI runs ChatGPT where users submit text and photos and OpenAI generates and sends text and photos back. So users could be submitting CSAM. And yes, OpenAI could be generating CSAM. It's not limited to being a pull operation. What am I missing?
        • abdullahkhalids 2 hours ago
          CSAM exists on social media because they are so large that it's not possible to moderate them effectively. To me this is a a no-go. If a business is so large that it cannot respect laws, it needs to be shut down.

          The correct way to organize social media is in federated way. Each server only holds on average a few hundred or few thousand people. Server moderators should be legally responsible for content on their server. CSAM on social media will be 100x suppressed because banning people is way easier on small servers.

          Not many moderators will have to look at CSAM because the structure of the system makes is unappealing to even try sharing CSAM, knowing you will be immediately blocked.

          • devilbunny 1 hour ago
            > Server moderators should be legally responsible for content on their server.

            And therefore anything that is remotely questionable will be blocked. Not just kiddie porn. Pissed off a local business with a bad review? Blocked.

            Child abusers are twisted people, and I really don’t care much what happens to them, but making it impossible for them to use the internet means sterilizing the whole thing.

            • prmoustache 14 minutes ago
              >And therefore anything that is remotely questionable will be blocked. Not just kiddie porn. Pissed off a local business with a bad review? Blocked.

              This is already the case. There is a lot of lawful, useful, medical or educational content that is actively censured on social medias because they include words or pictures of organs while same social medias actively encourage and develop algorithm to push underage girls (and possibly boys) posting pictures of themselves in sexual poses, attires and context.

              Big tech and social media networks love and push CSAM, they just hide the genitals but the content really is the same.

            • abdullahkhalids 1 hour ago
              You are just saying that physical life doesn't function. People get banned or removed from all sorts of informal and formal groups all the time because of completely illegitimate reasons. That's just human politics embedded so deeply in our psychology it will never go away. They simply move to different groups - and similarly online they can move to a different federated server.

              But that's not possible in today's oligopoly of social media. An invisible algorithm will ban you, and there is no way back, and few alternates. Big Social Media is way worse from a sanitizing perspective than some federated social media.

              • devilbunny 57 minutes ago
                I have no deep problem with exclusion; as you say, that’s human nature and unfixable. Making mods personally legally liable for everything that appears on their board is just insane. How many minutes are acceptable for them to see and review content? Or does everything have to be pre-approved?

                I know a local blog that pre-approves every comment. He lets a lot of stuff through, because he lets people be dumbasses. If he were personally liable, the conversation would get a lot quieter.

          • scarmig 56 minutes ago
            Having tens of thousands of decentralized, independently moderated servers would result in an order of magnitude more CSAM being shared than having a few oligopolies. The abusers just have to find the weakest link, and that weakest link will have fewer resources than multi trillion dollar companies. You would also likely not hear many news stories about it, because they won't have the expertise to even detect it.

            That's a tradeoff you can choose to make, but you need to enter into it with open eyes.

            • camgunz 51 minutes ago
              This isn't an either or. X isn't the only place CSAM is, there are gazillions of other sources. It I'd probably the easiest place to find it tho.
            • freejazz 43 minutes ago
              >That's a tradeoff you can choose to make, but you need to enter into it with open eyes.

              No it's not. It's certainly not my choice. No one asked me if it's okay for Facebook to distribute CSAM because you insist it would be worse if it didn't.

              • scarmig 34 minutes ago
                I don't really care if you classify it as a choice or not. One set of actions results in more CSAM than others. Just because you don't like the implication of there being tradeoffs doesn't mean there aren't tradeoffs.
                • freejazz 33 minutes ago
                  You classified it as a choice, not me.
          • haritha-j 2 hours ago
            Also, if you've gone from zero to one of the biggest coroporations in the country, and have billions to throw at the 'metaverse', I find it hard to believe that removing CSAM is where you struggle.
            • abdullahkhalids 1 hour ago
              No. It's a legitimately difficult problem because there not all naked pictures of kids are illegal. The false positive problem is bad for business, but also generally bad even if the big social media was benevolent.

              Moderators need to actually understand the context of the picture/video, which requires knowledge of culture and language of the people sharing the pictures. It's really difficult to do that without hiring moderators from every culture in the world.

              But small federated servers can often align along real world human social networks, so it's easier for the server admin to understand what should be removed.

            • red_admiral 49 minutes ago
              The amount of CSAM online is completely out of control. There's already nation-level and sometimes international cooperation to catch any known images with perceptual hashing (think: the opposite of cryptographic hashing) as well as other automated and manual tools.

              My impression is it would take Manhattan-Project levels of effort and funds to come close to "solving" this problem, especially without someone getting on a watchlist for having a telehealth-first primary care provider insurace plan and asking for advice on their toddler's chickenpox.

              Human review? Meta has small armies worth of content moderators already that tend to burn out with psychological problems and have a suicide rate where you're probably better off going to fight in a real war. (This includes workers hired by Sama in Kenya, to link back to the OP.)

              I will reluctantly grant Meta that they're up against a really hard problem here.

              • freejazz 42 minutes ago
                >I will reluctantly grant Meta that they're up against a really hard problem here.

                It is a problem of their own making.

            • GrinningFool 1 hour ago
              Isn't this more about disincentivizing the posting of it in the first place by increasing the chances of getting banned? Once you have to remove it, it's too late.
          • Aurornis 1 hour ago
            > Server moderators should be legally responsible for content on their server.

            So if you want to send someone to jail, just talk your way into joining their server, upload some illegal content, and report them for it?

            > Not many moderators will have to look at CSAM because the structure of the system makes is unappealing to even try sharing CSAM, knowing you will be immediately blocked.

            Why would someone join a server with active moderation if they wanted to share CSAM with their social media friends?

            They would seek out one of those servers that was set up specifically for those groups, where it was known to be a safe space.

            This is what many people don't get about federated networks: The people in those little servers DGAF if you block them. They want to be surrounded by their likeminded friends away from the rules of some bigger service like Facebook or Twitter. Federated social media is the perfect platform for them because they can find someone who set up a server in some other country with their own idea of rules and join that, not be subject to the regulations of mainstream social media.

            • genewitch 1 hour ago
              right, and you have other users on fediverse that notice that server leaking, and if the content is bad enough, report the service to an authority. Having all of the pedophiles and other creeps on a tiny subset of servers, isloated islands of them; well, that ought make enforcement easier.

              It also makes it relatively easy to avoid, as server admins share blocklists. I know a dozen servers offhand that i'd block if i ran another fediverse server.

              Fosstodon fediverse server doesn't have this issue, for example.

              I replied this way because the way you wrote it, it sounds like an indictment of a system that's designed to avoid advertisers getting user profiles, over all else.

              The problem is the people who participate in this, and not "the network."

          • Yokohiii 1 hour ago
            I am not sold on the federated thing to solve CSAM or similar issues.

            Actually companies should be bullied about privacy and copyright so they are unable to share any contents at a scale with 3rd parties. Thus they have to solve it on their own and forced to realize their business model is shit.

          • 2ndorderthought 2 hours ago
            Yep. If you cannot both safely and legally provide the thing you are selling you are no longer a legitimate company you are a criminal enterprise profiting off of exploitation.
            • esyir 2 hours ago
              If car manufacturers cannot bring car related deaths to zero, they too should no longer be legitimate companies.
              • lokar 2 hours ago
                A better comparison would be that if a car company can’t meet preexisting crash/safety standards, they need to shut down.

                These are pretty clear laws established by a democratic government with a pretty good record for rule of law.

                • esyir 2 hours ago
                  Sure, then they can go demand said standards for social media platforms including expected amount per N post, just as car companies are not expected to have car fatality rates be 0.

                  The fact is that simple scale means that there will always be something, no matter how abhorrent. Small scale doesn't change this, it just concentrates it.

              • 2ndorderthought 2 hours ago
                Do car companies sell cars without air bags, or seat belts? What about cars that haven't been crash tested? What happens to them if they don't do this do you think?

                Would you drive a car optimized for profit that didn't have those safety features? How about on a highway? Daily?

              • _DeadFred_ 2 hours ago
                When FORD dngaf with the Pinto and Corsair( like tech companies do not gaf), they deservedly got this same level of contempt/demand for oversite. A dude named Ralph Nader went on a huge crusade about it. And they got a ton more oversite, safety requirements, etc put on them.

                So yes, yes, let's do like we did with cars.

                • genewitch 1 hour ago
                  I voted for Ralph Nader a few times, until he stopped appearing on ballots for whatever reason. For this reason, and many others. I don't remember any negative press about him, either. maybe he got out when mudslinging became defacto in elections.
          • Barrin92 1 hour ago
            >CSAM on social media will be 100x suppressed because banning people is way easier on small servers.

            No it isn't. Small servers often don't have paid security or moderation, are run in anonymous fashion, and have no profit motive that can even be used to incentivize them against hosting illegal content.

            That's visible when it comes to porn. There's a million bootleg porn sites on the internet hosted that show off illegal content. The only site that was ever forced to curate its content was Pornhub, because they're sufficiently large, work in a jurisdiction that has laws and can be held accountable. From a content moderation standpoint going after a million web forums is an absolute pain in the ass compared to going after Facebook.

            Which is the first argument any decentralization advocate always brings up (and they're correct to do so), censorship is harder and evasion of law enforcement easier when dealing with a network of independent actors.

            • red_admiral 46 minutes ago
              What stops Humbert Humbert from joining hundreds of small servers?

              You now have 100x the total human effort for mods to review and ban him.

          • devmor 1 hour ago
            The one thing I will throw out here that I can add to this conversation is that I think the government simply does not care, either. It's mainly only in regard to mass public outrage, or when someone is a political target that it gets dealt with from a law enforcement level.

            Anecdotally, when I was a young adult I was a volunteer moderator for a large forum. We got reports of CSAM several times a month and had a process for escalating and reporting it to the FBI IC3 - we retained a lot of information about the users that posted it.

            One of the administrators of the website mentioned to me that over the years since the inception of the forum, they'd reported almost a thousand incidents of CSAM distribution - and the FBI followed up with them to get information less than 10 times in total.

            • devilbunny 1 hour ago
              That seems reasonable though. The FBI isn’t interested in busting one perv in a closet, they want the ones making the stuff.
          • muglug 2 hours ago
            > Banning people is way easier on small servers

            Big “citation needed” here. My bet is that Meta have far better moderation systems than any other social media company on the planet.

            • genewitch 1 hour ago
              when i ran a fediverse server for myself and 3 people, but allowed public signups if someone came by; it was very easy to ban people, and very easy to null-route entire swaths of the fediverse, because i didn't want their content on my service.

              That's more what i got from that pull-quote. I know a company that has hundreds of individual forums, and those are all moderated quickly and correctly (last i heard). They're moderated so effectively they often get DDoS by Russian IPs for banning users for scam posts from that country.

        • Yokohiii 1 hour ago
          These workers prepare data for AI. I don't think the need for them will go away anyway soon.

          Westeners are too expensive and unwilling to do it. AI is a business model that requires poverty and extreme inequality to function. Yes other businesses do that too, but they don't claim it's a solution to everything while it actually has very special human requirements.

        • freejazz 46 minutes ago
          I don't understand why their size is an excuse for them to not remove and prevent CSAM.
        • IncreasePosts 1 hour ago
          Couldn't you just use multiple classifiers? Like "is a minor" classifier coupled with "is sexual content" classifier?
          • superfrank 1 hour ago
            How would you test that that works?
      • deaux 1 hour ago
        > Sama (the outsourcing company)

        If script writers gave the company this name in a fictionalization it would be rejected as too on the nose.

      • cyanydeez 2 hours ago
        Isn't it more that tech companies are just more high profile and integral to political and social landscape than older companies; but reviewing the current political zeitgeist, they're in lockstep to what some, if not all, would just call fascism?
        • 2ndorderthought 2 hours ago
          They are literal defense and offense contractors. They hang out at the Pentagon. They sell political data to sway elections. They give gifts to leaders for favors. It is technofacism.
        • intended 2 hours ago
          Yes and no.

          Safety and user pain is a part of tech which seems largely ignored, even on sites like HN.

          I really have no idea why this ignorance prevails; commenters seem to genuinely be unaware of what goes on in Trust and Safety processes.

          I mean, most users would complain about content moderation, but their experience would be miles ahead of what most of humanity enjoys when it comes to responsiveness.

          I believe this lack of knowledge, examples, and case history is causing a blind spot in tech centric conversations when it comes to the causes of the Techlash.

          Unfortunately this backlash is also the perfect cover for authoritarian government action - they come across as responsive to voters while also reigning in firms that are more responsive to American citizens and government officers than their own.

        • SlinkyOnStairs 2 hours ago
          Companies of the 20th century certainly weren't more ethical. (Though a few select tech companies seem to be intent on proving the opposite.)

          But it's not really a fascism thing. While fascism does love the oppression of women, and the current crop of fascists have a notable connection to the Epstein case, this is a lot more boring.

          Sam Altman's not a fascist, he's a wet noodle who sucks up to the Trump administration for money. He's not even good at it. The way his company handled CSAM does cast aspersions on Altman & the accusations from his sister, but all other evidence suggests he's just a moron acting recklessly. Not identifying the problem ahead of time, and acting poorly in response.

          In the case of Meta. We know who Zuckerberg is. The company got it's start as, in crude terms, a sex pest website. The original "Facemash" website forcibly taken down by Harvard. This is not some new consequence of this turn to fascism, Zuckerberg's always been like this, and the actions taken against him were clearly not enough to avoid the company culture following his precedent.

          • deaux 1 hour ago
            > Companies of the 20th century certainly weren't more ethical.

            Disagree, not on average. There was a non-trivially higher % of decisions made based on "what's good for the customer" or "what's good for the product" or "I would be ashamed to do this" and a lower % of decisions made based on "what maximizes profit in the next quarter". I think that is more ethical. To take it to an extreme, using slave labor because it's good for the customer is more ethical than using slave labor to maximize profit in the next quarter.

        • inquirerGeneral 2 hours ago
          [dead]
    • everdrive 4 hours ago
      Sounds about right. If you know someone who uses these smart glasses, it's important not to tolerate them whatsoever. Don't speak with them, interact with them. I wouldn't even recommend being in their presence.
      • jofzar 3 hours ago
        There's a name for these people, glassholes
        • OutOfHere 3 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • JohnFen 3 hours ago
            > It is not up to you to deprive anyone their right to use them.

            I don't see anyone saying that people don't have the right to use them. I see people saying that they have the right to avoid being anywhere near the people who use them and to disapprove of those people. Which is just as much of a right as the right to wear spy glasses.

            • AlecSchueler 3 hours ago
              I'm glad to see opinion seems to be swaying back in this direction. It was only a few months ago that the general sentiment seemed to be "times are different than the glasshole days, it's fine now."
            • projektfu 2 hours ago
              It is unfortunate that a large number of users here are not hackers, not even in an idealistic philosophical sense, and will betray the public good for their own short-term gain.
          • everdrive 3 hours ago
            >I don't think that's fair. Smartglasses have legitimate purposes.

            I think that's true in principle, but in practice there are going to be two kinds of smart glasses users; extraordinarily annoying kids or you adults acting annoying in public so they can post videos to social media, and then normal people who have no clear sense for how much they're violating the privacy of those around them, and just like cool tech.

            Very, very few users are going to be an interesting or valid use case -- eg: someone who is using them to assist with a disability, or for research, or something.

            Even most dash cams don't stream to Meta -- they just record the last _n_ hours and you need to know to save off the video if you're in an crash / incident. In other words, most of the time no privacy is violated, and the only potential privacy violation occurs during an incident.

            Even policy body cams, which I wholeheartedly support, have some pretty strong downsides: currently, if you're at the end of your rope, having the worst day of your life, and in your dishevelment turn a speeding ticket into a BATLEO, you're famous forever for being a lunatic. Maybe the rest of the time you're a good person, and you can learn from this and move on. Except now you have a permanent albatross around your neck. This is a secondary penalty that the justice system did not intend, and has no answer for.

            • com2kid 2 hours ago
              Vacations smart glasses are great at translating signs, historical plaques, and even ancient inscriptions on walls. (That last one surprised me.)

              For parents smart glasses are awesome, no need to pull out a phone to take a picture. No need to view the world through a phone screen.

              They are also useful as being regular BT headphones as well. Podcasts while walking w/o tiny earbuds to lose.

              • krupan 2 hours ago
                That's all pretty cool, but unfortunately the trade-offs do not justify it
            • iamnothere 2 hours ago
              I saw there is at least one company working on offline smart glasses for disabled users. I don’t have such a problem with this, and I wonder if the industry as a whole could be nudged in this direction. Offline glasses seem more ok to me.

              It makes a lot of sense for actual accessibility devices to be offline-capable. You don’t want to lose your “sight” when you step into a metal building or elevator.

              • bee_rider 2 hours ago
                Another bad thing about the privacy invasion glasses is that they’ve added a stigma to these potentially-useful offline ones.
            • randallsquared 3 hours ago
              > Very, very few users are going to be an interesting or valid use case

              You then list a mere two categories.

              Would your argument have been similar in 2008 if told that in ten years, everyone in the economic first world would be carrying multiple cameras including a dedicated "selfie" camera at all times?

              • rpcope1 2 hours ago
                You say that like it's assumed that ubiquitous smart phones were obviously a good thing, when it sure seems like there's an increasing number of people questioning that assumption.
              • xerox13ster 2 hours ago
                This is a specious argument because selfie cameras are not pointed at people and on at all times, recording whoever somebody is looking at.

                None of the cameras you're mentioning are pointed at people all the time.

                When you are wearing Meta glasses, they are.

              • everdrive 3 hours ago
                I'm not sure I understand the point about a dedicate "selfie" camera, however I think we're conflating "percentage of users" with "varieties of use cases." I think there could be quite a cornucopia of potential use cases, but I think per capita most people will not actually be making use of these. As other commenters have pointed out, I'd be a lot more tolerant if the data were not constantly piped to Meta.
                • randallsquared 2 hours ago
                  The point about a dedicated selfie camera was that in 2008, few would have considered taking selfies to be a major use case that would drive >90% of teens and adults to have a camera which has no other reasonable purpose. In the age of FaceTime calls, it would seem absurd to question why it's needed, but nothing like that was mainstream in 2008, which would lead to the same argument of "there are very few legitimate reasons to want such a camera (and it will enable creepshots)".

                  My wider point is that there are already many obvious use cases, and as adoption of cameras which are always on or plausibly always on rises, there will be a lot more, including augmented reality, translation, context hinting, AI agent awareness for assistants and personal security, and at least dozens of others, some of which I am sure no one has started building for, yet.

                  Meta is probably not the winner in this space (or, I hope not, at least, so we agree there!). However, the idea that people have a right to remember and process what they see and hear in full fidelity is pretty basic, in my opinion.

                  • everdrive 2 hours ago
                    Thanks for clarifying, I appreciate it. I'm so burnt by the potential downsides (and by the last ~19 years of smartphones) that I don't think we can see eye to eye, but I really appreciate you taking the time to expand on your point so I could understand your perspective.
                  • JohnFen 1 hour ago
                    > However, the idea that people have a right to remember and process what they see and hear in full fidelity is pretty basic, in my opinion.

                    If that's what we were talking about, I'd be much less bothered. But it's not. What we're talking about is people recording others and feeding that data to a third party.

              • hatsix 1 hour ago
                would your argument be similar if I told you that everyone in the economic first world is influenced by signals beamed down from space?

                no? You think what I wrote is just a scary way to frame GPS? Maybe that's because you're part of the conspiracy!

              • Ylpertnodi 2 hours ago
                "secretly"
          • steve_adams_86 3 hours ago
            I can't deprive someone of their right to use them, but I can refuse to interact with someone who's wearing them. This seems like a fair natural consequence. Feel free to wear them, but I won't speak to you when you do.
          • dgellow 3 hours ago
            So happy to live in Germany. I couldn’t care less if your gadget can be useful in some cases. I don’t want it close to me
          • monegator 3 hours ago
            dash cams are local and pointing at the road, not everywhere.

            body cams are local and mostly used by law enforcement to guarantee they are not abusing their power.

            glassholes are connected to the cloud. you may have the right to record on public space, i have the right to remain anonymous in the crowd and not be constatly targeted by an advertisement company.

            Even if 1% of the corner cases are legit uses (blind people having the glasses describe the world around them is fantastic.) 99% of the people using them are assholes that deserve to be put in the ground and the glasses smashed.

            • wolvoleo 3 hours ago
              Yes and those blind people are easily recognised and I'm sure there will be a lot more understanding of them using such products.
          • voidUpdate 3 hours ago
            What are the reasonable and legitimate uses of smart glasses with cameras in that can record without the subject being aware?
            • ClawsOnPaws 3 hours ago
              I am blind, and I could imagine several usecases which would make my life a lot easier by using glasses like this. But because of their reputation I will most likely never use them, and especially not in public. I'm already afraid enough people will think I'm recording them when I use my phone to get info about what's around me, definitely don't need to get punched in the face for wearing meta on my face.

              Edit: Not that I would want Meta to get all that data anyway. But even if glasses exist which are more privacy conscious, I think Meta and Google Glass thoroughly ruined the reputation of any kind of wearable like this.

              • voidUpdate 3 hours ago
                I can imagine there are many use-cases for blind people, but I also think having some kind of visual indicator that "these glasses are recording" would be good, and I don't know what tools you use in public at the moment, but if you use, for example, a white cane, it might help people to understand "this person is using a camera for assistance". But yes, the fact that glasses manufacturers have already demonstrated they want to take every frame of data they can does sour their reputation
                • wolvoleo 3 hours ago
                  They have such an indication already, an LED light on the other side of the frame.

                  Of course you have to be able to spot that. And trust that it really doesn't record when it's off (note that it simply may be covered by the user)

                  • voidUpdate 3 hours ago
                    I seem to recall that when the snapchat glasses were a thing, they had a very bright an obvious ring of LEDs around the camera itself, that were bright enough to shine through a sticker placed over them. Sure, there are still ways to defeat that, but it makes it a bit harder.

                    Also I just googled for what the light actually looks like when it's recording, and it's not even really that visible...

              • 2ndorderthought 3 hours ago
                I'm sorry you are dealing with the social repercussions of assistive technology. I really wish companies weren't so gross and that they did not endanger some of the advantages of advances like this by being gross
            • checker 2 hours ago
              A parent wanting to record a fleeting moment with their child without the potential distraction of pulling out a phone or other camera.

              This alone doesn't outweigh all of the negative uses, but I would argue that it's reasonable and legitimate.

            • 0xcafecafe 2 hours ago
              I have 2 kids in single digit ages (1 under 5). I bought meta gen 2 last month and I cannot describe how many sweet moments I have captured. My kid loves to sing while playing with dolls and stops as soon as I flip my phone out to record.
              • throwway120385 2 hours ago
                I hope you can appreciate that you're capturing this data for Meta and their contractors and that they have the capability of doing whatever they want with this data. My spouse and I ask everyone taking pictures of our kid to never post them to social media because Meta et. al. create a shadow profile using those pictures, and they can share those photos with contractors and with other people and we don't want a company like that to have my son's data without his 18-year-old self's consent.
                • vel0city 2 hours ago
                  I get this argument and largely agree with it in regards to these meta glasses. Its why I don't currently use them.

                  But I'd like to have some smart glasses that do respect my privacy and offer this kind of functionality. Honestly, most of the things smart glasses do today are stuff I'd really like. Having my glasses just be the bone conduction headphones I often wear anyways? Check. Easy access to taking photos and short videos of life experiences? Love it. Integrated into the thing I'm often wearing on my head anyways? Perfect.

            • bell-cot 2 hours ago
              If the "subject" is human, those seem rather few. Surgeries come to mind, though smart glasses would be more a convenience there. Maybe some psychiatric patients, where a doctor wants to review snippets of his interactions with lower-level staff or his family members? Law enforcement trying to record interactions between informants and targeted criminals - though the latter might wise up pretty quick. Security staff at some very-high-security facilities.
            • OutOfHere 3 hours ago
              I already noted it in the answer. If a person feels at risk, or even if they're on vacation, they have a right to record something/everything and someone/everyone around them in public, just as they could with a phone.

              Do you think you will know if someone has their phone in their pocket or in a holster, and is turned on and recording? You will never know.

              There are dozens if not hundreds of cameras pointed at the street that record people every time they go out in public in any urban setting.

              • voidUpdate 3 hours ago
                If someone is recording you on video with a smartphone, you are generally aware of it, because it has to be pointed at you. Sure, you have a right to record people in public, there is no reasonable expectation of privacy in a public place, but I would quite like to know if you are recording me. I'm also not terribly worried about people recording me having sex or being naked in public without my knowledge...
              • pjc50 3 hours ago
                > they have a right to record something/everything and someone/everyone around them in public

                Subject to local law. It's an offence to make indecent images of children, for example.

                However, it is absolutely not the case that Meta has a right to that data, as a data controller under GDPR.

                > feels at risk

                This is a red flag phrase: it's a justification that people whip out for all sorts of unjustified things up to and including murder.

              • close04 3 hours ago
                > Do you think you will know if someone has their phone in their pocket or in a holster, and is turned on and recording? You will never know.

                At least this says something about the intention. Someone who films with a hidden phone implicitly shows that they intentionally hid this from the people being filmed.

                Filming with glasses is hidden by design. It gives plausible deniability to the person filming, so they can film covertly but pretend they weren't hiding anything.

                In most cases this doesn't make a difference but there are some cases where the premeditation can make it worse for the person doing the "abusive" filming.

              • basisword 3 hours ago
                >> even if they're on vacation, they have a right to record something/everything and someone/everyone around them in public

                Big assumption here that the place you're on vacation doesn't have different laws. You may have absolutely no right to record "everything and everyone" around you.

              • Forgeties79 3 hours ago
                > Or are you new to how phones work?

                Ease off the gas

          • 2ndorderthought 3 hours ago
            I think the only legitimate use is for spies? And by commoditizing them it makes spies slightly less obvious?

            Oh blind people too. That one makes sense.

          • wat10000 3 hours ago
            I could see an argument being made for smart glasses that keep everything local.

            But smart glasses that send everything to The Cloud? Burn them all. Especially if they're from fricken' Meta.

          • dataflow 3 hours ago
            > Smartglasses have reasonabl eand legitimate uses. People also use bodycams that record continuously, such as for legal reasons. People have a right to record in public, such as if they feel at risk. Are you going to go after car cameras next?

            None of those default to sharing your recording with anyone else, let alone with no practical way to opt out.

          • jcgrillo 3 hours ago
            If you walk up to me and shove a camera in my face I'll get very loud and very angry with you very quickly. That's kind of paradoxical, if you intended the camera to make you feel safer. I don't think I'm in the minority.
          • mulr00ney 3 hours ago
            >It is not up to you to deprive anyone their right to use them.

            Why is it a right?

            >Are you going to go after car cameras next?

            No. A car cannot follow me into a building very easily. It cannot turn as quickly as a human head.

            >Any American who has any opposition to public recording is violating the First Amendment and doesn't even deserve to be an American.

            lmao

            • 2ndorderthought 3 hours ago
              I have no idea why you are downvoted.

              I do not want my employees recording their day job and selling it, or the creepy dude next to me in the bathroom filming my goods or the log jam flying out of my butt so meta can try to sell me pepto.

              I also don't want that one time I did something minor illegal like jay walking get auto fed into palantir so they can ship me to the latest internment camp.

              Or someone stealing my biometrics by just walking past me.

              • mulr00ney 2 hours ago
                Downvoted because I was flippant about the American comment (because it was _insane_)
          • 1718627440 3 hours ago
            > People have a right to record in public

            I do not want to live in such a dystopian country. No this right shouldn't exist and I'm glad it doesn't in my country.

            > If none of this makes sense to you, wait till standalone cameras become much smaller to where they become a smartbutton -- what will you do then?

            Why are you against killing? Wait till you don't need to hit them but can accelerate metal pieces at them -- what will you do then?

            > Any American who has any opposition to public recording is fighting the First Amendment and doesn't even deserve to be an American.

            Anyone who is against X deserves not to be protected by law. "First they came for the communists..."

            • randallsquared 3 hours ago
              > No this right shouldn't exist and I'm glad it doesn't in my country.

              Smartphones are illegal in your country? I am skeptical.

              The right to record is the right to remember.

              • 1718627440 2 hours ago
                Recording people without consent is illegal.
      • elevation 3 hours ago
        > I wouldn't even recommend being in their presence.

        Great! Now do people with smart TVs and people with smart phones

        • intended 2 hours ago
          Don’t we already hate the invasive ad tech industry?

          Aren’t there already posts and articles on how to ensure that TVs don’t farm information from us?

        • HotGarbage 2 hours ago
          [flagged]
      • paulddraper 1 hour ago
        Are GoPros acceptable?

        I went to the beach, jet skiing. One of the guys had Meta glasses.

        I liked the footage.

        • red_admiral 31 minutes ago
          The problem is there's places where you'd get noticed and probably removed for filming with a gopro, or even a smartphone. My local "wellness center" and pools have you deposit your smartphone before you exit the changing area into the showers.

          The danger with creep glasses is that many people don't know what they are, they can be used with the LED disabled so they're perfect for filming people without their knowledge, and "these are prescription glasses" has a good chance of working. In a place with a "no recording devices" policy, "could you put that gopro away" has wide social acceptance/support, "take those glasses off" less so.

          • paulddraper 23 minutes ago
            I get the problem.

            I don't think ostracizing users of Meta Glasses (or Google Glass before that) is the answer.

            But I get the problems of hidden cameras.

        • everdrive 1 hour ago
          >I liked the footage.

          So did the Meta's LLM training model as well as the contractor across the globe reviewing your footage.

      • divan 3 hours ago
        [flagged]
        • jmholla 2 hours ago
          You're aware of the privacy implications but think people talking about avoiding people who use them are proposing dumb arguments? I don't follow your logic.
        • HotGarbage 2 hours ago
          [flagged]
      • Aaronstotle 2 hours ago
        I want to get the Oakley Meta ones so I can record bike rides easier, should I not be tolerated?
        • bee_rider 2 hours ago
          A mostly-solitary sporting event (or one where you know all the other participants and can get their consent to record beforehand) seems like a reasonable use of these sorts of glasses. I wouldn’t personally give consent just as a sort of privacy reflex, but it really depends on your social circle.
        • bombcar 1 hour ago
          Wear a GoPro on your helmet like the rest so you can be shunned.

          If you insist on the glasses, wear a fake GoPro.

        • mplewis 1 hour ago
          No. Fuck off
        • HotGarbage 2 hours ago
          [flagged]
          • ortusdux 2 hours ago
          • prepend 2 hours ago
            How is a GoPro better than wearing these glasses while cycling?
            • dylan604 2 hours ago
              People recognize GoPro cameras for what they are. They are easily understood as a camera. Glasshole devices are not as easily recognizable and people honestly may not realize they are being recorded especially when the glasshole does not inform everyone they are being recorded.

              Now, for your "while cycling" qualifier, why does it matter? Again, if you stop to talk to people while recording and it is not obvious you are recording, you're a glasshole. Personally, I have no experience with camera quality from the devices, but I do know what a GoPro can do. My gut instinct is that the GoPro will be superior footage.

              • Aaronstotle 2 hours ago
                I have a go pro but it's a bit of hassle to setup, I tried a chest mount and the angle wasn't great and I think the eye level view would look better. Also more convenient to record on glasses which I'll have to wear anyways.

                Yes, I could record while talking to people but I wouldn't get the point of that, I want to record descents and pretty views.

                My main point is someone owning smart glasses doesn't mean they automatically suck and should be ostracized.

            • hilariously 2 hours ago
              It's a big obvious doofus camera vs a tiny spy camera, pretty simple!
      • arowthway 3 hours ago
        Also make sure to avoid people with smartphones and places with video surveilence.
        • powvans 3 hours ago
          Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.

          There's also nothing stopping us from stigmatizing the use of smartphones in public. Even a slight discouragement of it would be progress. It doesn't have to be all or nothing.

        • HumblyTossed 3 hours ago
          Is this an honest argument? Surely you can think of how glasses might be ... in a different league than the two items you mention?
          • yreg 2 hours ago
            Unless you are using these during sex I consider a microphone to be 10x more privacy intruding than a camera.

            Security cameras afaik usually don't record audio, but all phones can. And they don't even need to be pointed in any specific direction.

            • zdp7 1 hour ago
              Many security cameras have the ability to record audio. Depending on where you are, it might be illegal to use it. All the cams I have purchased have it. That would include ReoLink and a recommended model from the Frigate site.
          • arowthway 3 hours ago
            Because person wearing glasses usually can move and video surveillance cameras usually can't? If that's not it then spell it out for me, please. Also, why would i be deceptive in this discussion? I feel like I missed some ideological conflict.
            • intended 2 hours ago
              Imagine someone pulling up a smartphone and then recording everything that happens around them. Contrast that with someone wearing smart glasses and doing that exact same thing.

              On a separate note, (and this is a genuine question) are you by any chance aware the term Non-consensual intimate imagery / NCII?

              I am beginning to suspect that the average HN goer isn’t aware of the scope and scale of the Trust and Safety problem.

              • throwmeaway888 1 hour ago
                Have you heard the term non consensual intimate fantasies? I've heard it's an even bigger problem.
                • intended 1 hour ago
                  Well, you would fortunately be wrong. Fantasies are commonplace and well studied in society, psychology and even in the law.

                  The issue is when you go from fantasy to actually enacting it, which is usually when you earn the epithet of “Creep”.

                  Also, why make a throwaway for this line? I take it you haven’t heard of NCII?

              • salawat 1 hour ago
                They don't care. Or they refuse to realize that tech isn't the solution to it, but an amplifier of it's scale.

                Can tell you that my urge to take photos/record drastically dips around other people. Particularly if it were meant for any sort of commercial exploitation. Stephenson called people wired for max indiscriminate data collection/processing "gargoyles". Personally I prefer glassholes.

                https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/news/articles/the-borg-of...

          • db48x 3 hours ago
            Not meaningfully. Anyone holding a smartphone might be recording you. You’d better avoid them if you don’t want to be recorded.
            • NBJack 2 hours ago
              Most people don't run around holding out their smartphone directly in front of them. It has to be pointed at the subject, and tends to be obvious.

              Smart glasses, however, are always aimed at whatever the wearer is looking at. They may or may not be recording (note the reports of people hiding the LED indicators), and at a fair distance could easily be mistaken for a normal pair.

              The general populace is much more likely to notice the former recording rather than the latter.

              • recursive 2 hours ago
                I've seen people keep their phone in their shirt pocket. The only reason it tends to be obvious is that most people aren't trying to be covert. Those aren't the ones you should be worried about.
            • bredren 3 hours ago
              This line makes a valid point. People record strangers all the time. In an obvious way or trying to be sneaky.

              Just because you don’t notice it doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen.

              However, this is still a different thing than smart glasses which can further be segmented into who designed the smart glasses.

            • azan_ 3 hours ago
              Someone has to hold smartphone and point it at you.
            • iamnothere 2 hours ago
              [dead]
        • freehorse 3 hours ago
          If somebody was pointing a camera on me all the time? I would definitely avoid them.
    • stackghost 3 hours ago
      Mark Zuckerberg and disrespect for user privacy.

      Name a more iconic duo.

    • ignoramous 3 hours ago
      > the content they were paid to classify

        A Kenyan workers' organisation alleges Meta's decision was caused by the staff speaking out.
      
        Meta says it's because Sama did not meet its standards, a criticism Sama rejects ...
    • Frieren 3 hours ago
      Whistleblower protection is key for any working society. Only dictatorships and oligarchies protect criminals while shaming whistleblowers.

      I do not care which country the outsourcing company is in. When criminals go global, protection whistleblowers should go global too.

    • getnormality 3 hours ago
      Well, yeah. If I went straight to the press to trash the reputation of my client's product, rather than communicating internally first to help them proactively address the issues, I would expect to get fired.

      Not that I am remotely interested in defending Meta, or optimistic that they would proactively address privacy issues. But I don't feel that sympathetic to the outsourcing company here either.

      I don't know what happened behind the scenes. I'm just going off what is said and not said in the article. If I were whistleblowing about something like this, I would take pains to describe what measures I took internally before going public. I didn't see any of that here.

      EDIT: Look, to be clear, I think it's bad that naive or uninformed people are buying video recorders from Meta and unintentionally having their private lives intruded on by a company that, based on its history, clearly can't be trusted to be a helpful, transparent partner to customers on privacy. I think it's good that the media is giving people a reminder of this. I think it's good that the sources said something, even though the consequences they suffered seem inevitable. But to me, there is nothing essentially new to be learned here, and I don't know what can or should be done to improve the situation. I think for now, the best thing for people to do is not buy Meta hardware if they have any desire for privacy. Maybe there are laws that could help, but what should be in the laws exactly? It's not obvious to me what would work. I suspect that some of the reason people buy these products is for data capture, and that will sometimes lead to sensitive stuff being recorded. What should the rules be around this and who should decide? Personally I don't know.

      • elphinstone 3 hours ago
        What makes you think the outsourcing firm didn't raise these concerns in email or meetings? You think these people wanted to lose jobs and income? That's irrational.

        Why reflexively defend a massive tech corporation caught repeatedly violating the law?

        • Tangurena2 1 hour ago
          > Why reflexively defend a massive tech corporation caught repeatedly violating the law?

          Because it is the natural expansion of the quote attributed to Upton Sinclair:

          > Socialism never took root in America because the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat, but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires

      • giraffe_lady 3 hours ago
        There are transgressions severe enough that your duty to stop them is heavier than your responsibility to "the reputation of your client's product." Amazing this needs to be stated, frankly.
        • noir_lord 3 hours ago
          Beautifully and succinctly put.
      • ImPostingOnHN 3 hours ago
        You would help conceal a crime against the people just because it's good business??

        Congratulations, you have a bright future in politics and/or tech CEOing.

        • Bridged7756 1 hour ago
          More like a bright future being someone's fall guy. The ignorance to think that a large tech giant like Facebook would give a crap about any of those concerns makes this person too politically inept to make it anywhere
      • OutOfHere 3 hours ago
        Proactively address the issues? Are you kidding me? This is not an issue that just happened to slip by; it is 100% by design. You're fooling no one.
        • getnormality 3 hours ago
          What specifically do you mean? It is by design that smart glasses see the things happening in front of their users? Yes, it is. That is why people buy them.
          • OutOfHere 3 hours ago
            Huh. There you go again, thinking everyone else is an idiot. Capture of video data of users by Meta is never acceptable. It would not be acceptable for any phone, and it is not acceptable for any glass, ever.
            • fibonacci_man 3 hours ago
              Saving the data for any purpose other than allowing users to access it is bad enough; allowing Meta employees or contractors to view personal videos is on a whole new level.
            • getnormality 3 hours ago
              I don't know why people buy smart glasses. Maybe they buy them for video capture. If so, the videos go to Meta's servers and Meta might do things with them. They might be criticized for not reviewing them in certain cases. That's one reason why I wouldn't buy Meta smart glasses.
              • 3form 3 hours ago
                If only we had the technology to record video without sending it to Meta's servers.
              • expedition32 10 minutes ago
                Main character syndrome? Lots of people seem to act like they are in a 24/7 live stream with 50 million followers.
          • ImPostingOnHN 3 hours ago
            The main issue here is Facebook employees viewing users' private video streams (including of user nudity) without the users' knowledge.

            The secondary issue is that it's generally frowned upon to make your employees view nudity in the workplace. Are there extenuating circumstances here? No, we have no evidence there are any extenuating circumstances here.

  • redbell 3 hours ago
    > "We see everything - from living rooms to naked bodies," one worker reportedly said.

    > Meta said this was for the purpose of improving the customer experience, and was a common practice among other companies.

    Am I reading this correctly?! This is probably the weirdest statement I've read on the internet in twenty years.

    • ryandrake 2 hours ago
      > > Meta said this was for the purpose of improving the customer experience, and was a common practice among other companies.

      > Am I reading this correctly?! This is probably the weirdest statement I've read on the internet in twenty years.

      It's total fantasy. I've worked in big tech. Casually uploading and providing company/contractor access to non-redacted intimate photos or pictures of the insides of people's homes vaguely "for the purpose of improving the customer experience" would not pass even a surface-level privacy or data-protection review anywhere I've ever worked. Do Meta even read what they are saying?

      • 2ndorderthought 2 hours ago
        Well you gotta give out black mail material to the scam centers somehow. Otherwise they don't actually have leverage! Oh right... We don't want that happening.
      • finghin 2 hours ago
        With lawyers like these, …
      • intended 2 hours ago
        I’ve worked in trust and safety - for me this is stupid, but well below the threshold of impossible.

        Hell, I know of a major firm that decided QA was not needed for their trust and safety process.

        Another common issue will be SEA Arabic speakers tasked with labelling Middle Eastern Arabic content, because accents and cultural dialects are not a thing.

        I’ve had people at FAANG firms cry on my shoulder, because they couldn’t get access to engineering resources at their own firms.

        There was the famous case of meta executives overriding T&S policy and telling them that what content was news worthy during the Boston bombing. On a separate incident, they told their team that cartel violence was not newsworthy when friends in London complained about it.

        When you say this is fantasy, what do you mean precisely?

        • ryandrake 1 hour ago
          What I mean is: I'm not sure what they base their statement that it's "a common practice among other companies" on. Unlikely they are talking about their peer companies. I suppose if you read the sentence literally, there surely exist one or more "other companies" in the broad universe of "other companies" that routinely do this kind of stuff. But I wouldn't think anywhere serious.
          • intended 34 minutes ago
            I mean, given this happened and it was sent to Sama it seems pretty clear that the images being generated from this were being sent to a labelling pipeline somewhere.

            There’s probably an opt out / opt in clause somewhere in the terms and conditions, which makes it feasible for Meta (and other firms) to use this data.

        • abustamam 1 hour ago
          Meta could at least pretend that they don't intend to capture people in their most intimate and vulnerable moments instead of slobbering on the sideline like "mm... Data..."
    • DuncanCoffee 2 hours ago
      I once read the manual of one of those small floor cleaning robots (Ecovacs Deebot U2 pro), and it basically said that by using it you were giving them a right to take pictures and send them to a remote server (to analyze issues or something like that)
    • dotancohen 2 hours ago

        > Am I reading this correctly?!
      
      What you should have read correctly was the Facebook terms of service. I still get strange responses when I tell people that I don't use WhatsApp. All Meta's properties are tainted such that I won't use them.
      • falcor84 1 hour ago
        > What you should have read correctly was the Facebook terms of service.

        I'm reminded of Bo Burnham's wonderful "That Funny Feeling" from 2021's "Inside", where one of the absurd examples he offers in the lyrics is:

          There it is again, that funny feeling
          That funny feeling
          Reading Pornhub's terms of service ...
    • pfortuny 1 hour ago
      Tagging, tagging, tagging. That is what "improving...": teaching its LLMs and diffusion models.
    • chneu 2 hours ago
      How is this weird? People have been trading away their privacy for the smallest possible gains in convenience for a long time.
      • moritzwarhier 2 hours ago
        Are you conflating telemetry with literally live-streaming your life to Meta? Because that's what makes the statement weird.

        edit 2: OK, I see what you mean. But I'm wondering if it should be possible to consent to this via T&C. Basically the same issue as with many online services, turned up to 11, sure. And it involves OTHER people, who have not consented.

        Stuff like this used to be outrage fuel even when it was more of a social experiment, e.g. the documentary "We live in public" or the "Big brother" TV show. By now, I'm sure there have been millions of influencers doing similar things, but it's very much not considered normal?

        Streaming to an unknown number of employees might be considered different from streaming to the public, sure.

        But the core question here is whether there's informed consent, and, IMO also, if it should be possible to consent to this when the other party is a company like Meta and the pretext is not deliberately seeking attention (like influencers and streamers do).

        edit, clarified social media comparison

        • abustamam 53 minutes ago
          Tangential but I always thought reality shows like Big Brother were mostly staged. Like not scripted, but definitely not natural.
    • 2ndorderthought 2 hours ago
      Meta is a defense contractor. They see the world a little differently from everyone else.
  • HarHarVeryFunny 3 hours ago
    Not sure which is worse here - that Meta are recording video from customers' smart glasses, or that they are firing people who talk about it.
    • embedding-shape 3 hours ago
      The latter, as they can't even claim to have done so by accident, or "it was just bug".
    • OutOfHere 3 hours ago
      Everything having to do with Meta, starting with its very name, has been evil from the start.
    • SV_BubbleTime 3 hours ago
      Can I squeeze in the just a teeny tiny bit of… why the hell are you wearing an internet camera on you while naked and/or having sex?

      … although I really extend that to why are you wearing an internet connected camera that is obviously going to be monitored by Meta.

      • embedding-shape 3 hours ago
        So already, this person wearing these glasses are already agree with that Meta can monitor them. They also probably trust Meta when they say "When the glasses are off, nothing is recording", for better or worse. So with that perspective in mind, it's not far fetched to assume these same people will willingly be naked into front of these recording devices they believe to be off.

        Of course, anyone who opened a newspaper in the last 10 years or so would know better, but I can definitively see some people not giving a fuck about it.

      • Tangurena2 1 hour ago
        There are "content creators" who intentionally record people without any sort of consent. At least when they point cameras, one can notice the cameras and take action. With these sorts of glasses, no one in view has consented, nor have they agreed to any sort of terms & conditions.

        I never understood the appeal of upskirt pictures. But I think that taking videos of non-consenting participants/victims is the current version of the upskirt photo craze.

      • sunaookami 2 hours ago
        The Ray-Ban stays ON during sex!
  • jmull 2 hours ago
    I believe the tricky privacy and security issues around smart glasses (and other "personal" tech) can be navigated successfully enough by a thoughtful, diligent, responsive company.

    Which is why I'd never touch a person tech device from Meta.

    Their entire DNA is written to exploit their users for profit. In my judgement, they literally cannot and will never consider those issues as anything other than something to obscure to keep people unaware of the depth of the exploitation.

  • reliablereason 3 hours ago
    I wonder under what circumstances footage from the glasses are uploaded for classification.

    Probably this is people asking the glasses something about what they see and the glasses uploading video for classification to generate an answer.

    People think it is "just AI" so are not very concerned about privacy.

    • pfortuny 1 hour ago
      Always by default I assume.
  • dhosek 58 minutes ago
    This headline reminds me that “row” is one of these words I’ve been mispronouncing almost my whole life (I just learned the correct pronunciation this year). In this context row rhymes with cow,¹ now dough.

    1. The first rhyme that came to mind was bow, but I realized there was a problem with that example.

  • KaiserPro 2 hours ago
    Ex Meta employee here (yes you are right to boo):

    The thing that really gets me is that internally there are 4 levels of data 1 being public domain shit (the sky is blue) up to 4 which is private user data, or something that is sensitive if leaked or shared.

    I was told that by default all user data is level 4, as in if you do anything without decent approval, you're insta fired. There are many stories about at least one person a month during boot camp accessing user data and getting escorted out of the building within hours.

    The part where I worked, in visual research, we had to jump through a years worth of legal hoops to get permission to record videos in public. We had to build an anonymisation pipeline, bullet proof audit trail, delete as much data as possible, with auto delete if something went wrong.

    We had rigid rule about where that data could be stored and _who_ could access it. We were not allowed to share "wild" footage (ie data that might have the hint of anyone who hadn't signed a contract) for annotation because it would be given to a third party. THe public datasets we released all had traceable people, locations all with legal waivers signed.

    Then I hear they just started fucking hosing private data to annotators to _train_ on? without any fucking basic controls at all? Just shows that whenever Zuck or monetsization want something, the rules don't apply.

    I look forward to that entire industry collapsing in on it's self.

    • dntrkv 1 hour ago
      > I was told that by default all user data is level 4, as in if you do anything without decent approval, you're insta fired. There are many stories about at least one person a month during boot camp accessing user data and getting escorted out of the building within hours.

      Given the size and nature of Meta's business, I would assume they would have better systems in place. SWEs should only have access to PII with explicit consent from users/customers e.g. support tickets.

      Especially someone going through boot camp. Do they have access to de-anonymized user data during training?

      Shit, at my last company I had to jump through so many hoops to access user data even with consent from the customer.

    • theplatman 1 hour ago
      have always wondered about this especially post Cambridge Analytica where Meta imposed really stringent requirements for API use even for personal things while it was blatantly obvious that internally it was a different story
  • mproud 3 hours ago
  • swiftcoder 3 hours ago
    One of the bigger commercial niches for smart glasses is filming POV porn, so it is hardly surprising that sort of content ended up in the moderation queue. The project should have planned to account for that use case.
    • swiftcoder 2 hours ago
      And I do appreciate how awkward it is for Meta to admit that use case exists. Even in the Oculus Go days there were a bunch of polite euphemisms internally to avoid mentioning "our device has to ship with a browser so people can watch porn on it"
    • hosteur 2 hours ago
      Why is there even a “ moderation queue”? Isn’t this people’s private recordings?
      • dylan604 2 hours ago
        This is my question too. I get moderating things that people are posting. Being not familiar with the device and how it works, I'd assume that all footage is posted to the user's cloud account even if not publicly posted. This being cloud storage, Meta is "moderating" the footage to ensure CSAM or other restricted footage type is not being stored on their (Meta's) platform. That's my very generous take on it, not that I believe it
      • inerte 1 hour ago
        Yes but also we don't want people live streaming murder and suicide, so there's detection and moderation in place.
        • jdiff 15 minutes ago
          Private recordings aren't public live streams.
      • intended 2 hours ago
        I’m betting this is going to some ML / Data labelling pipeline.
        • swiftcoder 1 hour ago
          Yeah, moderation may instead be labelling in this case. Its likely the same type of firm handles both sorts of work on behalf of FAANG
          • intended 1 hour ago
            Sounds plausible.

            We could also toss vibe coded mess on top of this and probably get closer to the truth.

            • swiftcoder 1 hour ago
              The article itself is ambiguous on this point: "At the time of the publication, Meta admitted subcontracted workers might sometimes review content filmed on its smart glasses when people shared it with Meta AI."

              That could be moderation, or it could be labelling new examples for training/validation

              • intended 29 minutes ago
                This feels like an instance of weasel words. One can scarcely imagine any reason to do content moderation over people’s own private and personally consumed data.
    • ozozozd 1 hour ago
      How do you moderate what people do? You send someone to stop them from having sex because it was streamed to your servers?
  • touwer 3 hours ago
    Bigtech and the race to the bottom of the ethical pitt. We can still go lowerrrr!
  • sheepcow 3 hours ago
    If you want to read more about how unsavory aspects of AI-training are off-loaded onto poor workers in third-world countries, would recommend Karen Hao's "Empire of AI". These workers are paid pennies an hour for unstable jobs that expose them to some horrific material.
    • intended 1 hour ago
      Which examples did they cover in the book?
  • mxfh 2 hours ago
    Meta ended its contract with Sama

    At this scale, this sound like some insider joke contract made up only to make some hustle on the side capitalizing with stock options on the possibility of adhoc news trading bots glitching out on the keyword, here "x.com/sama" signals.

  • m-p-3 2 hours ago
    Absolutely no way I'd buy anything from Meta that has a camera built-in.
  • bluedino 2 hours ago
    What does "in row" mean? For us non-English English speakers.
    • e28eta 2 hours ago
      “a noisy argument or fight”, from the Cambridge dictionary. I believe it’s primarily used in British English.
    • danparsonson 2 hours ago
      To add to the other replies, when it's an argument, it's pronounced like "how" not like "no".
    • bobthepanda 2 hours ago
      A row in this context is like a dispute or argument
      • prewett 2 hours ago
        It's also pronounced r-ow (ow, as in I hurt myself) in this context, instead of r-oh, in case that helps the OP
    • oa335 2 hours ago
      in an argument
    • jacobtomlinson 2 hours ago
      "row" means "an argument"
      • jakecraige 2 hours ago
        Yeah, I think it's more of a British English thing. It can also mean things like "in a fight". Like: "those two guys had a big row outside the pub the other night"
        • selimthegrim 2 hours ago
          I always remembered it from Phantom Tollbooth "a DREADFUL Rauw"
  • yaur 1 hour ago
    It seems the issue is not the glasses users, but the people that the glasses users were having sex with. Did meta get their consent before redistributing this content?
  • malshe 2 hours ago
    A question for the HN folks who work for Meta - Is the pay so good that it makes it worth working for such a morally bankrupt organization?
    • allthetime 1 hour ago
      There are countless large, high paying, morally bankrupt companies out there. It’s no mystery that people continue to work for them.
    • bradlys 23 minutes ago
      I’d like to know the well paying and non-morally bankrupt companies. What company out there has a flawless reputation and is paying $400k/yr for senior eng in SV?
    • jmye 43 minutes ago
      I think it's the excitement because it's a morally bankrupt organization. Some people really get off on knowing that the sum total of everything they do professionally is bent around making kids depressed to the point of suicide, and angry to the point of shooting up their school.

      I assume that every single person who still works at Meta has done that personal calculus and decided that they fall on the "this is fucking amazing, important work" side.

  • jimmyjazz14 1 hour ago
    It still blows my mind that anyone would volunteer to don these smart glasses, it's almost like some alien mindset to me.
    • lbrito 1 hour ago
      Its a reverse They Live!
  • prepend 2 hours ago
    I think Meta, like all companies, doesn’t want its subcontractors creating bad press for them.

    So it doesn’t surprise me that Meta didnt renew/cancelled a contract that is a net negative for them. Arguing over the reason seems fruitless as no reason is needed per the terms of the contract (I assume since breach of contract wasn’t brought up by the sub).

  • f311a 3 hours ago
    Why do they even need workers to classify naked content? They could filter some content prior to passing it to workers. They already have models to moderate explicit content.
  • rufasterisco 1 hour ago
    It would be refreshing for once to see the top comment to such articles to be

    “Yes, we all know it, and we keep those app installed regardless“.

  • cwillu 2 hours ago
    > Meta's glasses have a light in the corner of the frames that is turned on when the built-in camera is recording.

    Because nobody knows how to put a dot of nail polish on an led they don't want seen, right?

    • loeg 2 hours ago
      There is some detection for obstructing the LED. It's a little more clever than you assume.
  • sidcool 1 hour ago
    Why would anyone trust Meta with their personal data! After a while it's just natural selection.
  • letmetweakit 3 hours ago
    Unfortunately this news will have no impact, neither on customer behavior, neither on policy, neither on Meta's behavior.
  • I_am_tiberius 3 hours ago
    Not a fan of regulation in general, but would love to see a ban of cameras on glasses used in public spaces.
    • pxc 2 hours ago
      The most important real use case of devices like this is as accessibility tech. Blind people everywhere are talking about devices like this.

      It's the same with phones. I know blind people who have been harassed for holding their phones up to things as though they are taking pictures, but in fact they're using the camera on their phone to render signage legible to them, or having their phone (or a person on the other end) read it.

      Banning this in a way that doesn't in practice cause problems for visually impaired people would be difficult. It might also be difficult to do in a way that doesn't harm, for instance, accountability for cops who are acting in public.

      The impulse to "ban" is sometimes a bit naive imo.

    • stronglikedan 3 hours ago
      Why? What's the difference between that and one of the many, many concealed camera options that you don't even notice? Just that it's noticeable? I don't think that's a good enough reason for yet-more-regulation. You're already being recorded everywhere you go in public by the authorities, and often by people standing right next to you unnoticed, so just act accordingly.
      • jnovek 3 hours ago
        “You're already being recorded everywhere you go in public by the authorities”

        You are the frog being boiled.

      • stfp 3 hours ago
        Because they will be popular and lots of people will buy them and use them all the time, leading to much more generalized surveillance than the concealed options that only a tiny tiny fraction of people would buy or use (and that we should also regulate)
      • applfanboysbgon 2 hours ago
        > What's the difference between that and one of the many, many concealed camera options that you don't even notice?

        The latter is literally illegal, at least in my country and I hope in any civilized country. If your point is that there's no difference between glasses and other forms of creep cams and the glasses should be illegal too, I concur!

      • Retr0id 3 hours ago
        The problem is if it becomes socially normalized. If you're using a concealed camera and someone notices, you're a creep/asshole.
      • intended 1 hour ago
        Yet more regulation? We have regulation for these glasses already?

        Aren’t there countries that make it mandatory to blot out faces of people on videos if they didn’t consent?

    • schnitzelstoat 3 hours ago
      If anything they should be banned in private spaces, like if someone wearing them enters someone's home etc.

      There is no expectation of privacy in public.

      • ldoughty 2 hours ago
        The owner of the private space generally has authority to deny this already, there's no need for an additional law.

        In the US at least, any private homeowner/renter can deny entry to their property, barring legal warrants and exceptional circumstances. A business can have a policy, and is generally legally protected as long as the policy is 1) equally applied, and 2) does not violate ADA... A court would have to weigh in if glasses are allowed or not for ADA... but I suspect there's already a case where a movie theater banned such glasses and they would probably(?) win, since such individuals could be expected to have non-recording glasses.

  • talkingtab 3 hours ago
    Meta said the contracting "did not meet (meta's) standards". I am sure that is true. meta's "standard" is not to reveal the illegal, immoral, unethical things meta does. No matter what the harm.

    Maybe a company with those standards should not get our business. Oops, no wait, maybe they mean the Friedman Doctrine standards? In that case they are entitled to do any and every thing to make a profit. No matter what the harm.

    [edit: add last two sentences]

    • jaidhyani 2 hours ago
      I used to work for Meta. I quit largely because of intense frustrations with the company. Meta has made a lot of mistakes, overlooked a lot of harms, and made a lot of short-sighted, selfish choices. Many things about the world are worse than they could be because of choices Meta has made.

      So that when I say that they really do have a zero tolerance policy for anyone using their internal systems to violate user privacy, it's not because I'm eager to defend them. It's just true (at least, it was when I was there). There are internal systems dedicated to making sure you have access to what you need to do your job, and absolutely nothing else. All content you interact with through internal tools is monitored and logged. If you get caught trying to use whatever access your job gives you for anything other than doing your job, security immediately escorts you out of the building. This is drilled into new hires early and often. For everything Meta gets wrong, they really do take this seriously.

      • malfist 1 hour ago
        These contractors were hired to view this data. Your defense of Meta here doesn't make sense. Meta fired them for speaking out about the data Meta collects, not because they saw the data they were hired to look at.
        • nradov 1 hour ago
          Meta didn't fire individual independent contractors, they terminated a contract with a vendor. It's possible they did so because some of the vendor's employees spoke out but we don't know the real reason.

          (I do think these smart glasses are super creepy and I'm not defending Meta's data collection practices.)

          • malfist 13 minutes ago
            This is some real weird defense going on here.

            > but we don't know the real reason.

            We know the course of events. We have brains and can reason. You really expect Meta to come out and say "Yep, we fired them because they whistleblowed"

            > I'm not defending Meta's data collection practices

            No but you certainly seem to be over here quibbling about epistemology in the defense of Meta

      • advisedwang 1 hour ago
        There's no allegation that these workers abused their access. The allegation is that their routine work reviewing footage included private content. The revelation is that USERS are using meta glasses non-consensually.
      • causal 1 hour ago
        The problem is that your comment and the one you're responding to can both be true: Just because the rules are heavily enforced does not mean the right rules are in place, starting with the fact that Meta is collecting this data to begin with.
        • thaumasiotes 1 hour ago
          > starting with the fact that Meta is collecting this data to begin with.

          But that can't be the problem. They're collecting the data that users send them. To avoid collecting it despite the expressed wishes of the user, they'd need to be able to recognize it as untouchable.

          And recognizing the data is the exact problem that this African firm was hired to help with. What do you want Meta to do?

          • magicalist 1 hour ago
            > To avoid collecting it despite the expressed wishes of the user, they'd need to be able to recognize it as untouchable.

            > And recognizing the data is the exact problem that this African firm was hired to help with. What do you want Meta to do?

            This is written as if logically exhaustive, but it misses the very obvious alternative that none of these videos should have been reviewed by a human at all (aka no reason to "recognize it as untouchable"; they're all untouchable).

            If you want to get stricter and talk about collecting at all, Meta already has that solution too, by leaving the video in the user's camera roll. Let the user manually add the video to the Meta AI app or whatever if they want to share it with others there.

            • thaumasiotes 1 hour ago
              > This is written as if logically exhaustive, but it misses the very obvious alternative that none of these videos should have been reviewed by a human at all (aka no reason to "recognize it as untouchable"; they're all untouchable).

              No, taking that approach would mean that when someone sends you data that you aren't supposed to collect, you collect it anyway. This is the opposite of what was suggested above.

              • magicalist 50 minutes ago
                > No, taking that approach would mean that when someone sends you data that you aren't supposed to collect, you collect it anyway. This is the opposite of what was suggested above.

                That was in reference to the original story, that human annotation is happening on videos that no one knew were getting reviewed. If you want to talk about not collecting at all, well:

                > If you want to get stricter and talk about collecting at all, Meta already has that solution too, by leaving the video in the user's camera roll. Let the user manually add the video to the Meta AI app or whatever if they want to share it with others there.

          • DrewADesign 1 hour ago
            Ok, let’s see that consent form and how explicitly it states that random call center people will possibly look at anything you record. I’ll bet you a crisp $50 it was a form designed to be as click-through-worthy as possible, being sure to not trigger the “wait, should I do this?” reflex in users, and also not loudly disclosing that you could still use the device without agreeing, if you even can, while still technically “””disclosing””” this information. The tech world has turned consent into a fucking joke.
      • rkagerer 1 hour ago
        Many things about the world are worse than they could be because of choices Meta has made.

        If Facebook were designed with a different set of incentives that prioritized the user, fostered positive engagement, and better respected individual's privacy and data sovereignty - setting a better standard for the whole industry - I feel there wouldn't be all this fuss today about banning social media accounts.

        • bilekas 1 hour ago
          It's likely they wouldn't be as profitable too though, and their mandate to shareholders is to make number go up.
      • red_admiral 1 hour ago
        Indeed, on this one point, Meta has higher standards than the NSA used to - Snowden mentioned that employees tracked their current wives/girlfriends so often it unofficially got the codename LOVEINT.

        Same for "Meta reads your E2E whatsapp messages". Meta does many things, is probably massively net negative for civilisation, but it doesn't do that.

        • magicalist 47 minutes ago
          It's kind of weird to have a subthread about "Meta doesn't do these other unrelated things" in a thread about a thing Meta is doing.

          They don't boil live kittens either, I believe. Doesn't seem relevant though.

      • cozzyd 1 hour ago
        Anecdotal of course, but I heard that this wasn't at all the case circa 2006 and that (then) FB employees would routinely read private messages and such. Obviously it wasn't a big company yet and probably didn't have those policies yet... (clearly the policies are there for a reason...)
        • bombcar 1 hour ago
          That’s my recollection too - there were some high profile cases and so institutional safeguards were established. They very well may be at the forefront of it - however, it’s a side issue to what’s being discussed.
      • thunderfork 1 hour ago
        As someone who worked for a contractor which had Meta as a client, I disagree.

        All advertiser support agents were given super-read on all profiles & pages, and I never once observed a CSR being questioned on their use of this access in any way.

        • bombcar 1 hour ago
          It’s often the case that employees are much more locked down than contractors, simply because the company is more liable for employee actions.
      • keybored 1 hour ago
        > I used to work for Meta. I quit largely because of intense frustrations with the company. Meta has made a lot of mistakes, overlooked a lot of harms, and made a lot of short-sighted, selfish choices. Many things about the world are worse than they could be because of choices Meta has made.

        When did FaceBook make the world not-worse?

      • iJohnDoe 1 hour ago
        @jaidhyani I hate to burst your bubble, but there are major privacy violations here.

        https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47226756

      • iJohnDoe 1 hour ago
        @jaidhyani I hate to burst your bubble, but there are major privacy violations here.

        https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47225130

      • magicalist 1 hour ago
        [dead]
      • 2ndorderthought 2 hours ago
        Yea but no. Meta is a defense contractor that hires out to 3rd parties exactly to do this. so you guys don't get to do that, but a lot of other people are. I hope that helped you sleep at night while you were there. But yea, it all gets bought and sold at the end of the day.

        The irony is meta wants to implement verification to protect kids. Meanwhile it's doing everything it can to exploit them most at every single level for profit and for the love of the game. Billions of dollars, the world's most advanced computers all dedicated for it

      • deaux 1 hour ago
        You're still on the koolaid, as many replies here accurately point out. Saying it's not because you're eager to defend them is lying to yourself, because you're smart enough to think of most of these replies yourself. Primarily the fact that these are contractors whose entire job is to watch smart glasses footage and the point your bringing up - even if we believe it at face value - is completely irrelevant to this post.

        If you truly want to atone for your sins, you have a long way to go. I don't blame you for having worked there, I've worked at places that are only a little better than Meta (which is hard considering Meta is at the absolute bottom of the entire ladder, including Peter Thiel companies, thanks to Meta's sheer scale of carnage). But its time to completely come to terms with the reality, rather than stopping halfway to try and feel better about your resume.

    • deepsquirrelnet 2 hours ago
      > At the time of the publication, Meta admitted subcontracted workers might sometimes review content filmed on its smart glasses when people shared it with Meta AI.

      They just got fired for "piercing the veil". They committed the sin of bringing attention to the invasion of privacy.

      • alistairSH 1 hour ago
        Were/are video recordings from the glasses advertised as being E2E encrypted?

        Mostly, I'm just surprised that anybody would be naive enough to take a camera provided by Facebook into a sexual encounter and expect anything else.

        • ninth_ant 1 hour ago
          If you don’t disable the glasses they could continue to share content. The article describes the glasses being left on a dresser and then sharing content of people without their consent, which could easily parallel into showing a sexual encounter or other privacy-sensitive scenarios.
          • alistairSH 1 hour ago
            Sure, and the same is true with my iPhone or my Olympus. Except the former encrypts the video and the latter isn't internet-connected.

            The problem here (other than Meta being Meta) is people assuming Meta isn't permanently operating in bad faith. I'm just surprised anybody into tech to the extent they'd buy first-gen VR glasses would be surprised at Meta doing Meta things. That's all, I guess.

    • burnte 2 hours ago
      Yeah, why the hell is Meta wa5tching people's videos either? Why PAY a company to invade our privacy and watch our videos? It's flipping BIZARRE.
      • stingraycharles 2 hours ago
        Isn’t that obvious from the article? They’re labeling content for training AIs, something which is happening all over the world constantly.
        • 2ndorderthought 2 hours ago
          Yep gotta bake in that personal data into generative models so it can be reproduced later for profit.
          • woodson 2 hours ago
            Why generative? Or has it been decided that only generative models are “AI”?
            • throwpoaster 2 hours ago
              What kind of model "reproduce"s things later for profit that is not generative?
              • Ritewut 1 hour ago
                Surveillance models.
        • jmye 1 hour ago
          And then people are shocked that no one wants the data centers for this shit built in their backyard.
    • stingraycharles 2 hours ago
      Unfortunately in today’s world where organizations are larger than many a country’s GDP, they really only have to face responsibility towards shareholders and maximizing profits is the thing they usually care about.
    • throwpoaster 2 hours ago
      That's not what the Friedman Doctrine is, technically. It is that management should obey moral, ethical, and legal frameworks in the operation of the business for the benefit of its investors; and specifically NOT take actions which are outside of that narrow scope.
      • Avicebron 1 hour ago
        Does that include trying to influence moral, ethical, and legal frameworks to the benefit of the investors as well? Because if it does it is kind of a moot point.
        • throwpoaster 39 minutes ago
          Yes, although as the Koch Brothers point out in their book: you have to play by the rules that exist, not the rules you want.

          If you read, eg, Buffet, he makes the point that a manager donating to a political cause, whether the Heritage Foundation or, God forbid, something as far right as the SPLC, makes that donation with money that otherwise accrues to the shareholders. The manager therefore creates an agency problem, where he might pursue his own interests at the expense of the owners.

          If they are aligned, the manager can retain the earnings and create a dividend for the owners, such that they can then make the donation directly. If they are not aligned with the owners, they are redistributing wealth.

          I am not surprised that the Left advocates for backdoor wealth redistribution, but I would prefer they be honest about it.

    • prepend 2 hours ago
      Is it illegal or immoral? Having Meta review this material has to be approved by users and has their consent.

      There was an example in the article where a user’s glasses kept recording the user’s wife after he took them off. That’s bad but on the user, not Facebook.

      Seems similar to a situation where someone takes nudes of someone without their consent and then sends them off to a lab to be printed. The lab isn’t doing anything illegal or unethical printing them when they ask the user “are these legal” and the user replies “yes.” Unless you want to stop photo printers from ever printing nudes, I think the responsibility is on the user, not the firm.

      • msh 2 hours ago
        Is there explicit approval? Or is it buried in the legal agreements?
  • swyx 1 hour ago
    this may be the greatest title i've seen on hacker news in a decade
  • theowsmnsn 3 hours ago
    Meta is so evil
  • dickeeT 3 hours ago
    i don't think smart glasses itself is a good idea
  • fortran77 2 hours ago
    People have sex with their glasses on?
    • krupan 1 hour ago
      I'm guessing at least some of these cases are where the glasses are sitting on a nightstand and still recording
    • kylehotchkiss 2 hours ago
      Are their partners even consenting to glasses with cameras??
  • shevy-java 2 hours ago
    Facebook may have to rename itself into NaughtyBook or SpyBook or Pr0nBook. They really want people to help them spy on other people here - including their sex life. Expect new sexy videos in 3 ... 2 ...
  • hirvi74 2 hours ago
    Good. Anyone who works for such a company is immoral in my opinion.
  • mmanfrin 1 hour ago
    I got a paywall, first time I've seen that on BBC.
  • game_the0ry 1 hour ago
    Can we boycott meta yet? I am sick of this company.
  • tamimio 2 hours ago
    > and was a common practice among other companies.

    Meta isn’t lying, you should assume other companies are doing it too, Tesla did it with their cameras, and assume others like any company has access to your camera, I would even assume CCTV cameras too. It’s why for anything sensitive, try to use open source stacks, you might lose some of the features, but it’s a needed compromise.

  • jmyeet 3 hours ago
    So I've never had a smart speaker in my house (Alexa, Apple, Google). I've just never been comfortable with the idea of having an always-on cloud-connected microphone in my house. Not because I thought these companies would deliberately start listening and recording in my house but because they will likely be careless with that data and it'll open the door for law enforcement to request it. Consider the Google Wi-fi scraping case from STreetView.

    Or they might start scanning for "problematic" behavior, a bit like the Apple CSAM fingerprinting initiative.

    So not one part of me would ever buy Meta glasses (or the Snap glasses before that). You simply don't have sufficient control over the recordings and big tech companies can't be trusted, as we've witnessed from outsourced workers sharing explicit images. And I bet that's just the tip of the iceberg.

    I honestly don't understand why anyone would get these and trust Meta to manage the risks.

    • xerox13ster 2 hours ago
      That is to say nothing of the new technological use cases that could develop from the already existing technology. They just haven’t been thought of developed yet.

      Things like audio scanning your living space using those Alexa smart speakers with ultrasonics to get an image of not only everything in your space, but where you are in that space as well.

      That technological use case only came out within the last five or so years, maybe closer to eight. Either way I could see that coming before it became a thing just because ultrasound imaging of your unborn child is a thing ultrasound imaging of the sea floor is a thing so why wouldn’t ultrasound imaging of your living space be a thing by a company who wants to know what you buy.

      I never ever ever had Alexa I only ever had a Google home because I got it for free with GPM but I almost never used it because I hated the idea of it always listening.

      I already regret Wi-Fi because they figured out now how to look through walls with that.

    • intended 1 hour ago
      You were wise enough to avoid this, unfortunately for most people “shiny tech!”.
  • JKCalhoun 2 hours ago
    Oops! Oh, too late. And another nail in the heart of smart glasses…
  • aklemm 1 hour ago
    I bet the victims had their socks on too
  • rickdg 3 hours ago
    This is what happens when you buy a camera from the "they trust me, dumb fucks" guy and put it on your face.
    • aeve890 1 hour ago
      But aren't the users wearing glasses while nude or having sex dumb fucks though?
  • ai-network-lab 1 hour ago
    [flagged]
  • 3748595995 3 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • ghm2180 2 hours ago
    About the "they asked us to view it and then fired us for it". Having worked in their RL division(I don't work at meta anymore) this story is quite weird for two reasons:

    1. Meta AFAIR paid/compensated people — contractors or recruited via ads — to have them submit their data. There are strict privacy protocol and reviews in place to distinguish data use in these cases vs gen public. This is not to say the process is perfect, but if these users are gen public, I would be very shocked.

    2. Hiring contractors to submit data is a more controlled environment VS recruitment of gen pub via ads to submit data, but the former has more well understood privacy disclosures than the latter. This means in practice asking contractors to wear glasses and "move around their surroundings naturally and do things" goes well with basically the privacy practice "the data your are submitting we can view and use all of it for purpose X and nothing but X". BUT this framing is with ad based recruited people — which are general users who willingly submit data — is much much harder. My suspicion is they are running ad based recruiting in general public and while those users may have signed a privacy statement it is very surprising that they did not tighten the privacy practices around the use of the data and who has access.

    • jdiff 11 minutes ago
      You seem to misunderstand the situation. These contractors were reviewing sensitive customer data, not collecting data of their own.