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Man Wearing Smart Glasses Secretly Records Woman, Demands Money to Delete Video From His Socials

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Why This Matters

This incident highlights the growing privacy and safety concerns associated with smart glasses, which can be easily misused to secretly record individuals without consent. It underscores the urgent need for clearer regulations and technological safeguards to protect users from covert surveillance and harassment. For consumers and the tech industry, it emphasizes the importance of balancing innovation with privacy rights.

Key Takeaways

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A man secretly filmed a woman with smart glasses, before demanding money to take down the video he uploaded online.

The woman told the BBC that when the man first approached her while she was walking into a London shopping center, she had no idea she was being filmed.

“In the moment I just thought ‘OK this guy is just trying to talk to me, to chat me up,'” she said (the broadcaster didn’t reveal her real name, but identified her as Alice.) “I was hoping that he would leave me alone eventually but he did actually follow me.”

Alice only realized what happened when a friend sent her the video, which had racked up about 40,000 views.

“My initial reaction was complete shock,” she said. “He had no phone, he did not have a camera directly in my face.”

The alleged encounter grimly underscores the privacy and safety concerns that critics have raised over smart glasses. Since they appear like ordinary shades, they can be easily misused to film people — women especially, in practice —without their knowledge or consent.

Often, there can be no real means of recourse. Earlier this year, another woman in the UK discovered she was in a viral video with over a million views that was filmed by a man’s smart glasses. Horrified by the droves of comments berating and sexualizing her, she reported the video to authorities, but the police said there was nothing they could do because filming people in public wasn’t illegal.

Alice’s experience was no less harrowing. She told the BBC that when she contacted the man’s account asking to remove the video of her, the man replied that his video “fully complies with the law” and that he wasn’t “required to take it down.”

“That said, I understand that sometimes people may still prefer for certain content to be removed,” he wrote in an email obtained by the BBC. “In such cases, I usually offer the option of removal as a paid service, since it means taking down content that I’ve invested time, effort, and resources into creating.”

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