Meta is reportedly testing a prototype pair of smart glasses that continuously captures audio and snaps photos every few seconds. The so-called “super sensing” mode may not even include a visible recording light to warn nearby bystanders. While the company’s $399 Kylie Jenner collaboration earns the magazine covers, the prototype lurking behind it tells a much darker story about where AI wearables are headed.
What “Always-On” Actually Means for Strangers
Meta pitches a wearable AI memory assistant; bystanders get enrolled without asking.
The company frames continuous capture as a convenience feature — a system that lets users ask Meta AI to recall what they saw or heard throughout the day. Think of it as a Black Mirror episode repackaged as a productivity tool. The gap Meta doesn’t address: your memory assistant is everyone else’s surveillance camera.
The current Jenner-branded glasses do include a recording indicator light, which Meta cites as a privacy safeguard. The prototype, according to reporting, drops that light during continuous capture. Some key details worth tracking:
- Current collab glasses retail at $399 with camera, open-ear audio, calls, and an AI assistant
- The prototype reportedly omits the warning light during always-on recording mode
- Protest collective Everyone Hates Elon ran holographic ads near Meta’s London headquarters that revealed the message “we’re always watching” when viewed head-on
- Singer Lorde told fans onstage: “fuck the glasses. Don’t get the glasses. Not sexy”
- Privacy advocacy groups have specifically flagged risks to women and young people in public spaces
That Lorde moment matters. Pop artists rarely call out specific tech products mid-concert. When they do, it signals something has crossed from industry debate into genuine public unease.
Privacy critics have described the product as “spy glasses,” according to multiple reports, warning that continuous capture normalizes surveillance in daily life. Meta maintains its current models include privacy protections. Battery life constraints also make truly 24/7 recording unrealistic — for now. That caveat doesn’t erase the concern; it just postpones it.
When Surveillance Looks Like an Accessory
Meta’s EssilorLuxottica partnership turns camera hardware into something fashionable enough to forget about — and that’s the point.
Fashionable eyewear doesn’t register as recording hardware. In any café, a person nearby may be wearing what looks like perfectly ordinary glasses. The social contract around consent gets quietly rewritten one stylish frame at a time. That’s the cultural critique worth making: when surveillance looks like an accessory, the discomfort it should trigger simply doesn’t arrive.
If Meta removes the recording indicator from production models, this conversation shifts from ethics to law. Biometric data regulations and bystander consent statutes aren’t hypothetical anymore. Watch what ships in the next generation of these glasses — it will define the rules for everything that follows.




























