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Show HN: Glasses to detect smart-glasses that have cameras

Hi! Recently smart-glasses with cameras like the Meta Ray-bans seem to be getting more popular. As does some people's desire to remove/cover up the recording indicator LED. I wanted to see if there's a way to detect when people are recording with these types of glasses, so a little bit ago I started working this project. I've hit a little bit of a wall though so I'm very much open to ideas!

I've written a bunch more on the link (+photos are there), but essentially this uses 2 fingerprinting approaches: - retro-reflectivity of the camera sensor by looking at IR reflections. mixed results here. - wireless traffic (primarily BLE, also looking into BTC and wifi)

For the latter, I'm currently just using an ESP32, and I can consistently detect when the Meta Raybans are 1) pairing, 2) first powered on, 3) (less consistently) when they're taken out of the charging case. When they do detect something, it plays a little jingle next to your ear.

Ideally I want to be able to detect them when they're in use, and not just at boot. I've come across the nRF52840, which seems like it can follow directed BLE traffic beyond the initial broadcast, but from my understanding it would still need to catch the first CONNECT_REQ event regardless. On the bluetooth classic side of things, all the hardware looks really expensive! Any ideas are appreciated. Thanks!

Interesting idea. It seems to me that most things which would need to be protected from hidden cameras would be stationary and not require the operator to mount the detectors on his body, but starting with mobile constraints is often helpful.

I would like to draw attention to this gem of wit, easily the best I've seen in a long time:

> I think the idea behind this approach is sound (actually it's light)

11 hours agodotancohen

It's me. I want to be protected from hidden cameras from other peoples glasses.

9 hours agooctober8140

I want to be able to use glasses with a camera, in situations which warrant it, to prevent people from gaslighting me or others about our conversations. Something like you see in dashcams, where it's always recording to a circular buffer of a few seconds to a minute, and then one can then enable "full" recording which dumps the buffer to storage and then starts saving everything until disabled.

I also live in a US state that only requires one-party consent to record a conversation, meaning it is fully legal in my state to record any conversation I am a participant in, regardless of the consent of the other participants.

How should this be reconciled?

2 hours agoLocalH

Same way as the police body cameras do it: disclose what you’re doing. In the police’s case, there’s rarely a choice—but at least you’re reminded you’re speaking For The Record instead of with a person. In your case, that way I know not to talk to you.

Mainly because I’m not interested, but in any case if we’re doing formal for-the-record communication, it’s insane for me to do it without my own recording. It’s only fair that we have the same record to refer to as we endlessly litigate what would have been an ephemeral conversation between humans.

18 minutes agoalwa

Other people don’t have to agree to be around you if you insist on using a camera all the time. I wouldn’t.

an hour agolokar

Sounds dystopian to me, I'd want to reconcile it by not allowing "one-party consent" for people to record me.

Not sure if the state laws you're referencing are in reality limited to phone calls, but I strongly dislike unregulated public camera use.

Your vision (no pun intended) is the story of the Black Mirror episode "The entire history of you", IMO from the show's golden age.

edit; I know that surveillance cameras pass this line already, but here they have to be announced with signs. And even when they aren't, to me state or police surveillance is different from potentially everyone stealthily recording me in private or public spaces.

2 hours agomoritzwarhier

Project Codename: Allen Funt

Project Description: Glasses that have a speaker and appropriately say “You’re on Candid Camera!” when it detects others being recorded.

8 hours agovigilanti

... by using your own glasses with a hidden camera? Sounds like a good guy with a gun to stop a bad guy with a gun.

4 hours agoshmel

”I would feel pretty silly if my solution uses its own camera. So I'll be avoiding that.”

From the GitHub link.

4 hours agoskripp

Yeah but that approach using "sweeps" doesn't seem to be working. It's possible it actually requires a camera to do it reliably well.

3 hours agocrazygringo

I’ve heard of approaches using pulsed IR along with a Mk.1 Human Eyeball to detect the incident reflections, sometimes with the assistance of a filter. Glasses seem like a good form factor for that kind of thing.

Of course, the detecting person’s glasses may well light up on the surveiller’s recording, too…

8 minutes agoalwa

The solution to this (smart glass privacy debate) is Apple releasing smart glasses that automatically anonymize anyone in your photos/videos who isn’t a friend or family member with you at the time (it could be done automatically as Apple knows your friends/family members' faces already). All else appear as random faces, completely removed, a blurred out crowd to whatever privacy config options they offer and you choose.

Not a creep here and use my Meta glasses to record my normal non-creepy life and life experiences. They are really convenient and useful (just suck cause they break easily either from software updates to water splashes)!

3 hours agopaul7986

This isn't a solution, they would still have the data. Companies can't be trusted, they'll do what is more convenient for them, we need to remove the problem at the root by not allowing people to take pictures/videos if not permitted.

3 hours agoLucasoato

Indeed, this solution is in some way even worse.

It teaches people to trust "Currently NonEvil Company™" to do the good thing.

First, and obvious problem is that this "trains" us to rely on brands to protect us. And to keep doing this. Companies may have different interests than their consumers. Ideally and sometimes these interests are aligned. But nothing guarantees this remains so. Companies will "Become evil", if only because they are sometimes legally forced to by governments or shareholders.

Second, is that this teaches people not to be responsible but to leave that to companies or technology. Which works if e.g. Apple and Meta are the only providers. But falls apart the moment Focebook glasses, Apelle Gear or Rang Doorbell is available on temu. And becomes worse when HP, Dell, Samsung, IBM and other legitimate producers start competing in the space. We've now been trained that what the first companies did was "The Good Thing", but lack the social structure, laws, or even common sense to manage a world in which this self-constraint of the companies no longer applies.

3 hours agoberkes

Apple is the privacy company already .. that's their brand and a brand that the public trusts.

Overall why are we not up in arms about all the video cameras that record in all cities everyday which companies like Clearview and others have our public images in their databases yet we are up in arms about smart glasses?

THis is a solution to this public debate and Apple hasnt released their glasses yet and they are a privacy company and heavily market themselves as such. As the poster notes smart glasses adoption is rising and will only continue to do so... so this debate in time will continue to fade into the background as there is no same amount of debate about all the cameras in cities that are already recording us. With that in mind the smart glass privacy debate is an odd one to me where corporations are already recording us in these same public places.

3 hours agopaul7986
[deleted]
an hour ago

> Apple is the privacy company already .. that's their brand and a brand that the public trusts.

...for now. What happens if they end up with a future CEO who is more like Zuck?

2 hours agodblohm7

As noted Apple already knows your friends' and familys' faces... why are people not up in arms about this fact already? It's been close to a decade or more they have done this.

Also the debate is around a lot of people not wanting to be recorded without permission in public via glasses (yet they are complacent about all the video cameras recording us now.. i dont get it) so with Apple marketing smart glasses with a solution to this debate and millions buying their smart privacy glasses the market forces all others to follow suit (offer smart privacy glass features too).

3 hours agopaul7986

Going by data, most likely a path with prior success.

3 hours agorakamotog

Isn't the biggest mobile use case where you don't want to be secretly recorded in public? This was a big concern with the original Google Glass.

10 hours agoarionmiles

Massive problem in Japan where the issue of sex pests and covert recordings comes up every other day in the media. I suspect it's one of the reasons why Japan isn't on the list of supported countries for the Meta glasses. I hope it stays that way.

7 hours agotjpnz

> sex pests and covert recordings comes up every other day in the media.

These are also issues where we live, they just don't get the same media attention.

4 hours agoAlecSchueler

The idea of being constantly monitored by a megacorp tracking all my movements wih their swarm of cameras to feed us personalized ads is utterly dystopian indeed.

But I think the only valid way yo prevent this will be legislation though, it's not a fight individuals can win on their own.

10 hours agolittlestymaar

Do not expect this from the UK. That fight despite millions of signatures was batted down:

The UK is introducing passed legislation that citizens' digital IDs are owned by a Google or Apple smartphone.

The UK already have such laws active and in force that company directors must submit their information through an app available only from Google or Apple. It is clear 'digital IDs' will go the same way.

It's not about age or attribute verification. It's about tracking. Which Google excel at, the only alternative Apple and their opt-in.

Governments are quite happy making citizens have megacorps track their lives.

7 hours agothrowaway808081

In the USA, at least, the right to record in public is protected by the First Amendment.

8 hours agohackingonempty

We have a similar law in the UK but it does depend on what you mean by public place.

In somewhere like a public toilet block, at least here in the UK, you have an expectation of privacy. If some creep in Meta glasses is filming you take a piss then they are breaking the law.

If you were on a public beach sun bathing then you probably don't have that expectation of privacy.

7 hours agoLio

In most eu countries, you can record in public, but gathering identifying data ("making a database") is strictly regulated, and that includes faces from those photos. You can't even point a security camera at public areas (ie. outdoor camera recording the street infront of your house), because that's enough data to make it a "database".

8 hours agoajsnigrutin

You can record in public, but you can’t point cameras at public areas? That seems contradictory

Or is it the fact that it’s always recording that makes the difference or something?

8 hours agocircuit10

The easier way of phrasing it is "you can't record in public, except in certain circumstances". Those certain circumstances just happen to encompass most things reasonable people want to do.

In Europe there is very much an expectation of privacy in public. But that expectation is not absolute, it competes with various other rights and public interests.

For example you can make street photography without blurred faces, because art trumps privacy in this instance. If you start making photos of individuals instead of areas then privacy wins out again and you need consent. A surveillance camera is not creating art, so it doesn't have that excuse going for it and needs a really good reason to be pointed at public areas (and "I fear someone's going to break into my private home" is generally not a good enough reason). And even if you can set up the surveillance camera, operating it requires complying with the GDPR, which has a lot to say on that topic

7 hours agowongarsu

Note the "I fear" is treated differently if you e.g. have to remove graffiti hate speech from your front door on a weekly basis. It's just about the "you better have a concrete reason to fear, pure abstract fear won't cut it", and as always, data minimization principles do apply.

5 hours agonamibj

Short answer is its complicated and will vary from member state to member state. My parental unit had a dispute with neighbor over where his camera is pointed and filed some motion to see what he does with it ( 'not making a database' part ), but the law was mostly toothless as the enforcement of it lacked. On the other hand, the dispute part of the real estate was handed real toot sweet, because everyone and their mother cares about outcomes in those.

tldr: I wish I could tell you there is a simple tldr

7 hours agoA4ET8a8uTh0_v2

> toot sweet

Not sure if intentional but just in case: the usual term is "tout de suite"

7 hours agojorvi

It might be in the original French, but it’s been anglicised and adopted as an English language term:

https://www.oed.com/dictionary/toot-sweet_adv?tl=true

6 hours agotomalpha

Quelle surprise (wink wink)!

This is the first time I've ever seen "toot sweet" used. The more you learn :)

4 hours agojorvi

To be clear, it’s a jokey informal English language term, not a standard one.

2 hours agoumanwizard

There's also the UK practice of deliberately mangling French for comedic effect, as in Del Boy's cries of "Bain Marie!" and "chateuneuf-de-paper!" on 1980s TV. Saying "Toot sweet" can fit right into that bucket.

4 hours agokjellsbells

“The English language doesn't exist, it's just badly pronounced French” strikes again.

5 hours agolittlestymaar

Some right to record in public may be protected by the current jurisprudence invoking the first amendment, but the first amendment itself obviously doesn't say anything about the right to record in public:

> Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

5 hours agolittlestymaar

It's a bank shot. SCOTUS has recognized that newsgathering gets some first amendment protection because "without some protection for seeking out the news, freedom of the press could be eviscerated" (Branzburg v Hayes).

3 hours agodelichon

One could argue that having a contractor of US intelligence service (Google) collecting data on every citizens all the time isn't exactly “news gathering” and ought to be prevented if one wanted to abid to the spirit of the Constitution.

2 hours agolittlestymaar

Private businesses, however, can choose to refuse service for any reason as long as it’s not discriminatory. If enough businesses collaborated to create a “no camera glasses” policy, people might be less likely to buy them. This could keep the market small.

Perhaps a good approach would be to pressure businesses about this. Frankly they probably don’t want pervasive recording of their employees anyway.

5 hours agoiamnothere

I highly doubt that businesses will take a stand against these camera glasses. The kind of people that buy these smart glasses are usually a) wealthy, and b) not very frugal. What business would want to turn away the people with lots of money?

4 hours agoamitav1

Plus the footage goes on social media as free advertising.

4 hours agoastura

> What business would want to turn away the people with lots of money?

Plenty? Random dive bars, for example, probably don’t care how rich you are (it’s not like a millionaire is going to buy 10x more $5 beers than an average person).

2 hours agoumanwizard

I’m d assume businesses like social media attention, so if these cameras post to Social Media that’s free advertising.

Also, how would you differentiate banning cameras on glasses vs cameras on smartphones. It could get murky

4 hours agosghiassy

Corporations don't need cameras to track people, they have had the ability to track bluetooth emissions for well over a decade. Unless you turn off a lot of connectivity settings, smartphones are pretty much open tracking devices.

[1]https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2019/06/14/opinion/bluet...

3 hours agomerely-unlikely

So Ring doorbells and networked CCTV? We're there already. Billboards alongside roads containing targeted advertising already exist, too.

I'm not too fussed about the advertisers in this aspect. The people these companies sell data too not meant for advertising are much more dangerous. That includes the government.

6 hours agojeroenhd

> The idea of being constantly monitored by a megacorp tracking all my movements wih their swarm of cameras to feed us personalized ads is utterly dystopian indeed.

That's very similar to the basis of _The Circle_ by Dave Eggers.

6 hours agoalexfoo

It's not only personal advertisements for consumerism. It's also personalized political messages. That is dangerous to the nations and states and their citizens.

2 hours agodotancohen

The kinetic solution starts at misdemeanour.

8 hours agobrador

"But I think the only valid way yo prevent this will be legislation though, it's not a fight individuals can win on their own."

It will need both. Secretly recording in the public is already prohibited in many if not most jurisdictions, but ad far as I know, not really prosecuted.

10 hours agolukan

If I want to record you, you'd never know.

https://www.dpreview.com/news/4272574802/omnivision-has-crea...

So all the people blathering about camera in public have a moot point. All the whining does is prevent the fairly obvious camera being put into devices.

But if someone wants to record you in public otherwise, they will and there's nothing you or any of us can do about it.

9 hours agofennecfoxy

The thing is, every beginner lockpicker makes a similar point when they realize how easy most locks are: "what's the point of locking my door if anyone can easily get in anyway?".

I think the same answers apply here: because making it harder to be casually recorded sends a clear signal that you don't want it, and now the act of recording goes from being an oversight to a deliberate, sometimes punishable act.

9 hours agoprobably_wrong

>The thing is, every beginner lockpicker makes a similar point when they realize how easy most locks are: "what's the point of locking my door if anyone can easily get in anyway?".

No they don't. I'm a beginner lockpicker and so far I've only been able pick a 2 pin lock once. Have not been able to repeat it. Have not been able to rake any lock open. Lockpicking is much more of a skill than people online give credit. People on the Internet always acting like lockpicking is just as easy as using the key for any old novice.

5 hours agoastura

It becomes an oversight to a deliberate act only if the recording person knows that he was detected. So that means that your anti recording glasses should signal 'no recording' in some way. Otherwise it's not really useful.. But at that point.. You can just stick a qrcode on you with the message 'no recording please look away from me'.

8 hours agosomethingsome

I think people are getting lost in the weeds here. The idea with detection is not to prevent public recording, it's to _know_ you're being recorded so you can act accordingly.

8 hours agoarionmiles

I think your point is a little black-and-white — there's tons of behaviour that sits in the "technical possible but frowned upon" bucket.

It's like people listening to music without any headphones on the train — technically has been possible for ages but previously would've gotten you told to turn it off. Now it barely gets a raised eyebrow.

Can you prevent people secretly filming you? No, but most people still don't want it be become accepted behaviour, even if to you that's all just "whining and blathering".

9 hours agoanother-dave

So if someone wants to sucker punch me in pubic, there's also nothing that I or anyone else can do to proactively prevent it.

But I don't get sucker punched very often, so it seems like there probably are things that can be done about. Norms, consequences, etc etc. "We live in a society".

5 hours agoNiloCK

> most things which would need to be protected from hidden cameras would be stationary

Counter-sniper systems that scan for reflections from optics have existed for twenty years already. These are indeed meant for static operation in military bases and other fixed installations.

11 hours agoanilakar

I could see these being worn by walking-around security in a place where filming by the audience isn’t allowed. Super cool.

10 hours agoaqme28

I agree, I laugh out loud at that pun.

11 hours ago_ache_

[flagged]

8 hours agokakacik

Switzerland is quite unusual in that regard.

I would imagine most Hacker News users live in places where recording or photography in a public place is not illegal.

Your suggestion of violence certainly isn't legal in most places!

8 hours agodaveoc64

And even in those few places where publishing identifiable photos of people is theoretically illegal, I'm sure it happens thousands or even millions of times a day. I don't shove a camera in people's faces but you'll find plenty of pics in my public feeds that have identifiable people in them, including from many countries in Europe.

5 hours agoghaff

Relax Rambo

6 hours agolan321

Sorry for not responding for your request for tech advise and instead commenting on the idea:

1. I would want this.

2. If possible, if the detecting device could be clipped on somewhow and not force me to use different (sun)glasses might be my necessary condition unless you're selling glasses that I like as much as my curreny ones.

3. If I could demand anything, I would demand you pair up with someone who has some streetcred in the privacy tech department (streetcred as in a known public personality with trackrecord on being on the right side of these issues or known to be advocating for them).

Here's why: if Meta decided to add this feature to their glasses, if I found a way to shut down all the other shit, I might go and buy their glasses. Which means if you are sucessful, if I were Meta I would buy you out and shut you down. Hence the public personality or who have you to prevent you fron doing this.

an hour agosillyfluke

I look forward to the social media rage meltdown shorts that widespread adoption of this tech will precipitate. I think I'm kidding. I should be kidding. But I am curious...

Question for people who resonate with this: whenever someone is holding their cellphone at an angle that "could be inferred" to be imaging you, how do you feel and think?

I grew up on Earth before the cellpocalypse (phone zombies, etc), and went through a stage of noticing all these new 'cameras' everywhere, but then I stoppped attending to it.

7 hours agokeepamovin

It's probably inevitable over time. "Smart" AR glasses that are indistinguishable from just a pair of regular glasses seem like something inevitable over the next decade or two.

5 hours agoghaff

is this the future we actually want????

or one that is truly inevitable and can’t be stopped?

4 hours agoobjcts

Want? I don't know. Outside of draconian regulation and punishment I don't see how you really stop aside from some level of social pressure/norms which can work to a degree. (No, you don't film/livestream the dinner party among friends that you are at.) People post photos from social events all the time. That ship has mostly sailed. Video and audio is mostly just an additional increment.

4 hours agoghaff

Just wait for the bionic eyeballs!

2 hours agokeepamovin

A few years back there was a prototype contact lens at HotChips for AR. I assume video/audio recording in jewelry of various types today would be fairly straightforward at least in conjunction with recording on a wireless device in a pocket or transmitting over cellular in some manner. Of course, audio recording (wearing a wire) has been practical for decades.

2 hours agoghaff
[deleted]
3 hours ago

I remember seeing some celebrities in the late 00s / early 10s with IR-emitting sunglasses or accessories to flood the camera sensors of paparazzi and make it harder for photographers to get spyshots of them.

Would this approach work for these camera glasses as well, simply flooding them with so much IR spectrum light that their sensors simply can't see you anymore?

10 hours agosspiff

Well, there's https://www.nii.ac.jp/userimg/press_details_20121212.pdf

I think fooling facial recognition systems and CCTV-cameras-at-night is easier than fooling professional photographers. Most photograhers' cameras have IR filters, after all. And nobody's got an LED brighter than the sun.

10 hours agomichaelt

On this topic, is there any benefit of trying to fool facial recognition systems with these type of accessories and or wearables, would the system not just mark you as suspicious and keep an even better track of you

Of course it is a different thing if these are adopted by the masses

9 hours agoTarmo362

Usually those systems are set up to track faces and/or people, and ignore everything else. If you get a low-confidence detection of a face that's much more likely to be a dog or a band t-shirt than somebody tricking your system. So you would typically ignore everything below a threshold, not flag it.

You could train a system to detect these kinds of attacks, but that's a lot more sophistication that these types of systems usually have, and would probably be specific to each "attack" (e.g. those glasses with lights would look completely different than the face paint approach)

The best defense would be a human watching the raw camera feed, since most of these attacks are very obvious to the human eye. But that's expensive. Maybe you could leverage vision-llms, but those are much more expensive than dedicated face-detection or object classification models. Those typically range from sub-million to maybe a hundred million parameters, while you need billions of parameters for a good vision-llm

6 hours agowongarsu

> nobody's got an LED brighter than the sun

It's low density silly fun but I did see these folk attempt to do such a thing with entertaining results https://youtu.be/m1S1r9I6DN4

9 hours agoadzm

One of my future ideas was to have the detection trigger turning a bunch of IR LEDs on to do just this! I've only tested it a little bit against my phone camera (with around 5 850nm LEDs), but it didn't work super well (fairly bright but not enough to be useful). It did work much better in low-light though. My guess is modern cameras have better IR-cut filters, but like I mentioned I only tested against my phone and not the Ray-bans yet.

10 hours agonullpxl

Have you thought about the potential eye/skin damage you would be causing with IR LEDS.

10 hours agospacedoutman

Potentially as much as none, because it's UV that does the damage?

9 hours agocard_zero

At some point it pretty much becomes a microwave. Radiation get absorbed and turned into heat. On a small scale not very helpful or harmful. On a larger scale nice to heat your food with but not your head.

6 hours agoconsp

I guess IR can be harmful (IR lasers, military grade IR LEDs). But yes, likely not the consumer grade IR LED.

9 hours agothih9

That only works against night vision cameras. Most cameras have an IR filter that flips into place when when in daylight mode

5 hours agoRobotToaster

I have been thinking of a device to thwart license plate readers by dumping a ton of IR and/or visible light on the plate before it gets read.

Perhaps combined with some reflective coating? Retroreflectors are promising

9 hours agobeeflet

Repo men use those readers to track cars to be repossessed. And as it happens, it is very successful industry these days.

7 hours agodelis-thumbs-7e

Just as a heads up, this is likely illegal in many US states. (Legality is not morality - but it's good to know what the law is before you might break it).

4 hours agofwip

I heard about similar hats being used during the Hong Kong protests, but most modern cameras filter out IR anyway. Reflective jackets tend to work much better; they basically turn you into an overexposed bright blob on camera.

10 hours agoSamDc73

What about correlating transmitted wireless frames with a LED flashing pattern? If the glasses stream video with a variable bitrate codec over wireless, flashing vs. non-flashing should change bandwidth and therefore frame frequency. However, with searching over all channels this might be quite slow in practice.

9 hours agoSaloc

Semi-related question. Is there a method to print a picture on a t-shirt that can only be viewed by a camera and not be the naked eye? If so I would like to print images on the front and back of the shirt that would get the glasshole or cell phone cameras banned from their platforms.

6 hours agoBender

You could make a moire pattern, but it would probably be pretty hard to get it flat enough on a shirt, and it wouldn't be distinct enough to get interpreted by AI.

an hour agoavidiax

Infrared LEDs, or a green screen if you have enough access

5 hours agodownboots

Does anyone work on smart glasses for blind people yet? Something with blackened glass, obviously, that uses image recognition to translate visual input into text via (headphone) audio to the wearer.

That would allow for urgent warnings (approaching a street, walking towards obstacle [say, an electric scooter or a fence]), scene descriptions on request, or help finding things in the view field. There's probably a lot more you could do with this to help improve quality of life for fully blind people.

10 hours ago9dev

I’ve heard stories of people using the Meta smart glasses to help with reduced vision, i.e. asking the LLM assistant what you’re looking at, asking it to read a label, etc. The LLM assistant can see the camera feed so it is capable of doing that.

However things like the urgent warnings you mentioned don’t exist yet.

Hearing about the way people with bad vision use these glasses kind of changed my viewpoint on them to be honest; for the average person it might seem useless to be able to ask an LLM about what you’re looking at, but looking at it from an accessibility standpoint it seems like a really good idea.

8 hours agoaprilnya
[deleted]
3 hours ago

vOICe is a vision to sound sensory sub system. Works pretty well apparently.

2 hours agoparkaboy

If the top-level poster succeeds, the resulting device could possibly disable devices that allow blind people to see. This could open up another liability channel.

9 hours agoanonymousiam

Every time I read about smart glasses I wonder the same thing. Obviously the technology isn’t perfect, but it seems that even a basic pair of smart glasses with primitive image processing could be life-changing for a completely blind person. Yet as far as I can tell, most blind people don’t use technology at all for this purpose.

Unfortunately, the HN website is extremely unfriendly to users relying on assistive technologies (lack of ARIA tags, semantic elements etc.), otherwise there might be more blind people commenting here who could shed light on such things, no pun intended.

9 hours agop-e-w

Makes me wonder just how big the market for such a device would be, and if it would attract investors…

8 hours ago9dev

Comparable to what I read someone say about AI the other day: we're living in the small sliver of history where smart-glasses with cameras are technically feasible yet are still (kind of) detectable.

8 hours agoicoder

I could see the guards at the courthouse, wearing these.

Cameras are so small, these days, that I don't think it's realistic to be able to detect them. I just go through every day, assuming that I'm on Candid Camera.

6 hours agoChrisMarshallNY

A much-needed project. Making yourself invisible to such privacy-invasive devices will be the need of the day. Of the two approaches you mentioned, blocking/jamming the specific wireless traffic would be pretty interesting, if possible.

10 hours agowowamit

> blocking/jamming the specific wireless traffic would be pretty interesting, if possible.

And probably highly illegal.

10 hours agoaDyslecticCrow

Deauth attacks weer common in the Google Glasses days. Nobody got arrested as far as I can remember.

6 hours agojeroenhd

At the end of the day, legality is what society settles as an acceptable way of running itself when all the stakeholders reluctantly agree or at least don't protest too much. Right now the 'costs' are sufficiently low that no one cares. As with most things, I suspect that there is a threshold ( though likely much higher than I have previously anticipated ) at which normal person would be unwilling to go as if anything changed.

7 hours agoA4ET8a8uTh0_v2

Yeah, true. Implementing this would be tricky.

9 hours agowowamit

Implementing it is trivial. you can just overlook the radio from openWRT and drown out every 2.4-2.5 gHz device in a 100M radius.

Doing it targeted is more difficult since it does frequency hopping, but you could probably reverse the frequency hopping algorithm to target specifically Bluetooth and force high packet loss.

This is still illegal for radio jamming reasons, and also patent infringement since a misbehaving Bluetooth device has not gotten permission to use Bluetooth patents held by SIG.

8 hours agoaDyslecticCrow

[dead]

4 hours agopixxel

I'll feel much safer when I'm visible only to every single ATM camera, traffic camera, random smartphone camera and doorbell camera, but not to people's glasses.

7 hours agounsupp0rted
[deleted]
2 hours ago

I think this generation will be remembered for how desperately it tried to cling onto privacy over our public image well beyond what should have been the reasonable time to acknowledge its passing.

2 hours agoelif

Isn't there some kind of fluorescent effect that you can use? I.e., send one very specific wavelength onto the camera sensor, and receive one other very specific wavelength back.

3 hours agoamelius

Are there any smart glasses being developed for people with prosopagnosia or really bad face memory?

I often bump into people I know on the street but can’t place their faces. A lot of them get offended when I don’t immediately recognize them, even though I remember who they are—just not what they look like.

4 hours agonomdep

Sorry I'm still confused. Do you have a reliable way to detect if a smart glass is recording or not? I never used smart-glasses regularly, but wouldn't it be "on" all the time if one is using it, so detecting the power-on and pairing is kinda useless?

10 hours agothrdbndndn

Regular pairing, advertising and control likley use Bluetooth LE for simplicity and battery life. Streaming or transferring video likley use Bluetooth classic for increased bandwidth.

These are two different protocols with different radio behaviour.

So beyond detecting the glasses themselves, which seem like the focus of the project; detecting recording is feasible at the point of transfer to a phone.

The issue is distinguishing it from any other high bandwidth Bluetooth device nearby, such as headphones.

10 hours agoaDyslecticCrow

Pretty neat idea! I love the BLE detection approach, would be pretty amazing if this works. I'll be following this with some interest!

10 hours agoarionmiles

Tangentially related it's also useful to quickly gauge if your smarts-wielding neighbors are home or not so noise levels can be adjusted accorsingly (:

8 hours agobaobun

Thank you for the technical write up. I have no expertise in the BTE area but it's clear enough for me to understand.

The swap pattern is very interesting but even if it's silly, maybe experimenting with an actual camera to detect cameras may give you a good base line to what to expect from a working Rayban banner.

11 hours ago_ache_

Super interesting project, at first I thought it would be a naive implementation of YOLO but I wasn't aware about retro-reflections. The papers he linked in the GH discuss very interesting ideas

9 hours agoegeres
[deleted]
11 hours ago

It is interesting to see the consensus that nobody is enthusiastic about meta Ray-Bans except Zuckerberg.

It's creepy.

6 hours agonothrowaways

The only real usage I've seen is on Instagram reels etc. where people are using them in red light districts like in Amsterdam to film the women.

6 hours agobenbristow
[deleted]
5 hours ago

I have them and like them. I don't wear them constantly, but on days when I'm doing something interesting, they help me document much more than I otherwise would.

3 hours agowillidiots

Putting myself in the shoes of a qa for a second...

What is the cheapest way for me to trigger a false positive on such a detection device?

And what can we do about it?

Rinse and repeat until the cheapest cost exceeds a standard pair of smart glasses.

10 hours agomcny

Before putting yourself in the mind of QA, you have to be 100% sure on what the goals and priorities of the product is supposed to be in the first place.

Only a subset of use potential cases will be worried with false positives, but this approach says to drive the cost greater for all potential use cases.

6 hours agozamadatix

Bluetooth packets similar to smart glasses and IR filters used by a popular brand should probably be enough.

6 hours agojeroenhd

When I worked for a big Hollywood media conglomerate, there was a project to detect cameras in theaters. (There was a piracy problem where people would record the movie on a camcorder). It worked by detecting the IR filter that’s in front of the CMOS detector in almost all cameras. It’s a retroreflector for UV range. Shine a UV light to the audience and look for spots of light. I’d imagine this would work for cameras in any darkened environment even today.

3 hours agofortran77

I was thinking about this just the other day. You're on your way to implementing your own real-life stealth meter! Very cool!

9 hours agozppln

I love both names - ban-ray and ray-banned.

I have no experience in this area, so I’ll just ask a noob question: Can we make it so that if someone is looking at me through smart-glasses without my consent, my glasses respond with some form of interference that gives them a tiny headache?

And if I do grant someone consent to record me, I can just turn my glasses off.

And of course, my glasses don’t record anything, so they wouldn’t be hurting my own eyes.

3 hours agohedayet

This is seriously neat. Love the name too

10 hours agookincilleb

Thank you! To settle a debate between me and a friend, do you think Ray-BANNED or Ban-Rays is the better name?

10 hours agonullpxl

I think Ray-BANNED is the better name, by far.

2 minutes agookincilleb

Ray-Banned is a good pun, but might bring you legal trouble. I’d go with Ban-Rays

10 hours agolouthy

But you’d agree Ray-Banned is better

a minute agookincilleb

Ban-Rays. Ray-BANNED could be read to mean that you've been banned by Ray-Ban IMO, the opposite of what's happening.

10 hours agorendaw

the former

9 hours agobjord

That’s a really interesting project! It sounds like you’ve already explored some creative approaches with IR reflections and BLE traffic.

6 hours agoasw_rer

Cool project, but I'd use the first mode to look for hidden cameras at Airbnbs!

11 hours agoScramblejams

I think it's time we normalize carrying mini EMP devices.

3 hours agocamillomiller

I have a pen camera and a key fob camera. These are widely available. Obviously they won’t give you real time intel on what you’re looking at, but if you’re worried about being surreptitiously recorded, smart glasses are just a small part of the problem.

3 hours agofortran77

spiderman-pointing.jpg

5 hours agojessepasley
[deleted]
3 hours ago

next: smart glasses app to detect glasses that can detect smart glasses that have cameras

10 hours agobyyoung3

the esp32 in the side of the head should give it away

10 hours agoAmbroseBierce

It's a lovely idea.

10 hours agokanak8278

Taping over the recording indicator is illegal.

Is there any way your device can find the MAC address of the glasses through bluetooth or something and file a lawsuit automatically?

10 hours agod--b

I don't think taping over the indicator is illegal.

The zuckerberg glasses supposedly detect attempts to cover the indicator, though.

6 hours agojeroenhd

it’s not illegal. meta raybans will detect the tape blocking a light sensor and not allow you take photos.

5 hours agonickthegreek

That is a feature Meta has implemented, but those protections were quickly defeated.

4 hours agothreecheese

They were not quickly defeated. And as it stands currently, I thought there was only 1 somewhat involved hardware mod that worked. as opposed to any spy cam that you can guy purchase from amazon for a fraction of the cost.

4 hours agonickthegreek

Why is it illegal?

9 hours agohammock

Do you have a parts list for what's in the zuck glasses?

10 hours agodmead

An eye for an eye and soon everyone's blind...

7 hours agojeffrallen

How is this an eye for an eye? Doesn't seem like the expression fits here.

3 hours agoFartyMcFarter

Now integrate it with ink jet technology to spray the offending camera lens like a squid!

10 hours agoDonHopkins

One more gizmo throwing IR at MY eyes? No, thanks!

10 hours agofoormanek

[dead]

7 hours agoelng11

I want to normalize the idea that if I see anyone wearing recording eye-wear, I should be able to punch them in the face. And you should too!