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Beware: Smart Glasses Are the New Tool for Extortion
One woman was recently told to pay up if she wanted clandestine footage removed from social media.
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lamplighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2026/05/11
Status: user
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Extortion Using Smart Glasses Is a Thing Now https://gizmodo.com/extortion-using-smart-glasses-is-a-thing-now-2000755562[image or embed] -- Gizmodo (@gizmodo.com) May 7, 2026 at 10:25 AM
Extortion Using Smart Glasses Is a Thing Now https://gizmodo.com/extortion-using-smart-glasses-is-a-thing-now-2000755562[image or embed]
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More from the article ...
... When the woman contacted the account owner to request the video's removal, he replied that taking it down was a "paid service." She refused to pay and reported the matter to the police. The social media platforms removed the clip and banned at least one account, but whatever goes on the internet stays on the internet; copies and reposts of the footage kept appearing on other profiles. Smart glasses with built-in cameras make abuse like this easier because they look like ordinary eyewear and record discreetly. Some models have a recording indicator, but such a tiny light can be easy to miss. Some users even try to hide the light by covering it up. ...
Smart glasses with built-in cameras make abuse like this easier because they look like ordinary eyewear and record discreetly. Some models have a recording indicator, but such a tiny light can be easy to miss. Some users even try to hide the light by covering it up. ...
#1 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-05-09 12:55 AM | Reply
Mask up, everyone
#2 | Posted by hamburglar at 2026-05-09 07:40 PM | Reply
Apple, it is rumored, is about to come out with such devices...hope the recording indicator is large and obvious.
#3 | Posted by Hughmass at 2026-05-10 07:25 AM | Reply
The law says you have no reasonable expectation in public areas.
#4 | Posted by Miranda7 at 2026-05-10 09:37 AM | Reply
Stop the minimalistic framing.
Patriot Act - even our in-home privacy has been compromised.
#5 | Posted by fresno500 at 2026-05-10 10:08 AM | Reply
Footage doing what?
There's a pretty simple strategy I follow, I just don't do things which I would be embarrassed about.
#6 | Posted by oneironaut at 2026-05-10 11:13 AM | Reply
#6 "...I just don't do things which I would be embarrassed about."
Betrayed each and every time onepigironheaded clicks on the Publish Comment button.
#7 | Posted by A_Friend at 2026-05-10 11:27 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1
Recording indicators? How quaint. Hackers have figured out how to disable them with software workarounds ages ago.
#8 | Posted by sentinel at 2026-05-10 11:53 AM | Reply
You'd have to be stupid to wear them in the first place.
#9 | Posted by Yodagirl at 2026-05-10 02:22 PM | Reply
Hackers have figured out how to disable them with software workarounds ages ago.
#8 | POSTED BY SENTINEL They use that "high tech" Tape.
#10 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-05-10 02:26 PM | Reply
#5 Not sure why your panties are bunched up Fresno, I wasn't minimizing anything, just stating a fact. Recording another person in a public place is not illegal, because there is no reasonable expectation of privacy.
It has nothing to do with the Patriot Act. In the U.S. it would be covered in detail under Title Iii, which goes back decades, but this happened in England, where they have similar laws concerning expectation of privacy.
#11 | Posted by Miranda7 at 2026-05-10 09:25 PM | Reply
@#11 ... Recording another person in a public place is not illegal, because there is no reasonable expectation of privacy. ...
I do not disagree.
But then, I will also add, how that recording is used may present issues that our current law has not yet caught up with.
As another example, look at the FLOCK cameras that are being installed. When our current law was enacted, were things like FLOCK cameras imagined?
Welcome to DeFlock https://deflock.org/ An open-source project mapping license plate readers.
... ...
...
#12 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-05-10 09:40 PM | Reply
States react to FLOCK?
New CT law bars police from sharing license plate data for immigration enforcement www.ctinsider.com
... The legislation follows a CT Insider investigation that found Connecticut police departments using cameras from Atlanta-based company Flock Safety were sharing data to a "national network" that allowed out-of-state agencies to access their data. The data was searched thousands of times by out-of-state agencies for "ICE," "ICE-assist" and "immigration" purposes, the reporting found. ...
#13 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-05-10 09:44 PM | Reply
@#12
Did you know that the cameras provide that level of monitoring?
And feeding into the database?
#14 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-05-11 01:33 AM | Reply
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