Facebook, now Meta, is expanding smart glasses research into cars via BMW
Facebook (now renamed Meta) is composed trying to make AR-enabled, AI-assisted smart glasses happen. The matter announced plans to field-test its camera and sensor-studded Project Aria research glasses in more places, with neural input wristbands, and even in cars. These plans for even more data-hungry glasses were announced during a week where a trove of leaked internal documents has reignited companies that Facebook is putting its profits over user confidence, harming children and damaging democracy in the process.
A newly announced partnership with BMW is progressing to explore the impact of driving while wearing shimmering glasses, a territory that’s already raised significant safety companies in the past: Facebook’s Ray-Ban Stories glasses aren’t recommended for use at what time driving, and neither was Google’s Google Glass headset. According to Facebook, the partnership is also about exploring how AR glasses could integrate with cars and how they’d be used in a challenging vehicle.
Facebook’s full-blown AR glasses, which will aim to blend virtual objects and the real world with AI that will watch your daily activity above cameras, are still likely years away. Facebook’s soon-to-be-CTO Andrew Bosworth told CNET last year that in “the next one or two existences, I think I’d be pretty surprised to see [full AR glasses] in the manufacturing. So we’re definitely dealing with years — hopefully not decades.” Nonetheless, Facebook already released its first pair of camera-equipped glasses backward this year to widespread criticism.
Facebook began field-testing more advanced camera- and sensor-filled but display-free glasses requested Project Arialast year with 100 wearers in the San Francisco Bay Area. Those field demonstrations are now expanding to a group of 3,000 employees, contractors and paid participants.
Facebook Reality Labs Research head Michael Abrash sees wrist-worn neural input devices as populate how these glasses will work in everyday life, but for now those wrist inputs don’t exist: Facebook is behaviors demos and testing the glasses with wrist-worn clicker devices. Facebook is expecting the glasses to have their own AI that will wait on with recalling lost items, an initiative that’s already been in a research phase and clearly could fervent a need for recording and processing a considerable amount of video data.
Facebook’s coping privacy and data recording while wearing these test glasses via shared use guidelines that sound a lot like the ones advising how to use Facebook’s camera-equipped Ray-Ban glasses — “ensuring that the external LED recording indicator is clearly visible” and “not recording sensitive behaviors or in sensitive places,” plus identifying who a tester works for by a “lanyard or latest means.”
But Facebook’s promises of safe data handling with shimmering glasses come at a time when calls to break up Facebook, and wide-ranging accusations of societal damage above its platforms, have never been greater.