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Modders are turning Ray-Ban Meta glasses into spy gear for as little as $50

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Why This Matters

The modification of Ray-Ban Meta glasses to disable recording indicators highlights a growing concern over covert surveillance and privacy breaches in wearable tech. This underground industry underscores the challenges faced by manufacturers in balancing user privacy, security, and the potential misuse of popular devices. For consumers, it raises awareness about the importance of understanding device limitations and the risks of unauthorized modifications.

Key Takeaways

C. Scott Brown / Android Authority

TL;DR Many modders are charging $50 to $100 to physically destroy the recording LED on Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, creating an undetected “stealth mode.”

While Meta’s software blocks low-tech cover-ups like tape, physically drilling out the LED severs the circuitry without triggering the camera lockout warning.

The demand for modifications is heavily driven by content creators secretly filming strangers for viral trends

Meta and EssilorLuxottica finally hit a goldmine with the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses. The companies reportedly sold over 7 million pairs in 2025 alone, doing what Google Glass never could: making wearable tech look genuinely fashionable. But as with any piece of tech that achieves massive mainstream scale, the compromises and edge cases are starting to catch up. A new report from Joanna Stern is shedding light on a rapidly growing underground industry dedicated to turning these everyday smart glasses into covert spy gear.

On a standard pair of Ray-Ban Meta glasses, the right side houses the camera lens, while the left side features a prominent capture LED. Whenever you record a video or go live, that light pulses to signal to the people around you that they’re on camera.

Meta knew people would try to cover this up, so they built a software fallback. If you try the low-tech approach, like putting a piece of black tape or a sticker over the LED, the glasses detect the blockage and throw an error on your phone, completely locking you out of the camera until it’s cleared.

The $100 “Stealth Mode” mod

As Stern highlights on YouTube, modders on platforms like Facebook Marketplace are offering a service to physically disable the front recording LED on the Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, effectively creating a “stealth mode” that completely bypasses Meta’s built-in privacy guardrails.

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