Meta Smart Glasses Can Now Track All the Food You Put Into Your Mouth
Source: Gizmodo
According to Meta, owners of Metas Ray-Ban AI glasses, or the Meta Ray-Ban Display, will soon be able to snap a photo of what theyre eating using a voice prompt and then log that food item in the Meta AI app. Meta says it will extract key nutrition details using AI and said photos. The idea is that Meta wants to use your food pics in concert with AI to give users personalized insights and help people make healthier, more informed choices.
That process might involve asking Meta AI stuff like What should I eat to increase my energy? or other prompts in that vein. One thing that jumped out to me in its explanation of that feature, though, is that Meta has lofty plans to expand that functionality in the future.
Obviously, having to manually log everything is a bit of a pain, and having smart glasses that do the same thing, but in an ambient kind of way, would be more convenient. Thats why Meta says that in the future, its smart glasses will understand what youre eating and automatically log your food. Sounds great, if youre into that sort of thing, but there are some pretty major problems with that idea.
For one, Im pretty sure Metas smart glasses would have to be always recording for that to work, and given the way things are going on the privacy front, I dont think people will be very receptive to smart glasses that record everything all the time. On top of that, making the camera engaged all the time is a one-way ticket to having a woefully short battery life. So, I dont know
sounds like a good idea in theory, but Im going to file that idea under probably not for now. Thats not even counting the fact that people might be a little more hesitant to hand their data over to Meta right now, even if its just the sad sandwich they panic-ate for lunch.
-snip-
Read more: https://gizmodo.com/meta-smart-glasses-can-now-track-all-the-food-you-put-into-your-mouth-2000742036
Oh, but Zuck would like all your data, all the time, the better to train his AI with, and the better for Meta's advertisers to target you...
RandySF
(84,414 posts)Pinback
(13,602 posts)My response: Uh, nope.
Jon Stewarts recent interview with Cindy Cohn of the Electronic Frontier Foundation sheds some much-needed light on the state of surveillance and privacy in the U.S.A. today:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2026/03/welcome-daily-show-viewers-learn-more-about-eff-and-privacys-defender
LisaM
(29,636 posts)Welcome to tech dystopia.
Cheezoholic
(3,722 posts)chowder66
(12,255 posts)niyad
(132,508 posts)OldBaldy1701E
(11,176 posts)But, it is way more than that. And, I am not alone in being someone whose image is part and parcel of their business and career.
I was in a 'superstore' the other day getting a few things and I went to check out. I got into a cashier line, not for any particular reason, just that it had one other person and they only had a few items. The dude working the register looked to be in his late teens or early twenties. He was nice and said hello. I started putting my stuff on the belt beside his register.
That was when I saw him reach up and touch the edge of his glasses. I realized that they were 'smart glasses'. Now, I am not usually one to be too 'pissy' about things, but I know something about electronics and especially audio/video. I am not saying that he was specifically trying to record his customers, but we also know that it is not just him controlling the device, now don't we? So, I finished my transaction, and I went to Customer Service. I asked to see a supervisor, and when one came over, I said the following:
"I want to say in advance that I am not trying to be a problem or anything. Nor am I accusing your employee of doing anything. But, I just dealt with a cashier that was wearing smart glasses. I am a performer (which is a lie... I used to be a performer, but still) and I can tell you now that if I find my copyrighted image wearing what I have on now, I will know where it came from and both he AND you will be hearing from my attorney. Have a nice day."
You can call me crazy if you want. I know enough to not be stupid when it comes to the capabilities of modern A/V equipment, or the deviousness of those companies.
Here is my philosophy... I know I am not alone.

BadgerKid
(5,009 posts)Does that conform to your states laws?
jmowreader
(53,208 posts)1. I have steak, shrimp, broccoli and a baked potato for dinner tonight. Tomorrow I receive an email from a fancy supermarket containing digital coupons for those products.
2. I have hamburgers for lunch three days a week. I receive newsletters on the ties between saturated fat and heart disease.
3. I have ramen for lunch. I receive a coupon for a free blood pressure screening due to the elevated sodium levels in my diet.
4. I put my frying pan in the dishwasher without wiping out the grease. I receive a $500 fine from the county sewage authority for unpermitted discharge of fats into the sewage system.
5. When I close the door of the dishwasher, the word "Bosch" is displayed prominently. I receive an email directly from Donald Trump calling me an un-American bastard and mandating I immediately buy a dishwasher made in a factory located in the United States, which makes me laugh because Bosch's only dishwasher factory is in New Bern, NC.
6. After I place the smart glasses on a large rock and beat them to a fine powder with a three-pound sledgehammer, the FBI arrests me for destroying a government surveillance device.
highplainsdem
(62,227 posts)msongs
(73,766 posts)flvegan
(66,288 posts)know shit about nutrition, especially not on an individual basis. Not looking forward to the first time Meta "AI" tells some one that peanut butter is a great source of nutrition...to someone with a deadly peanut allergy.
Stop feeding the fucking machine, people!