Meta Sued Over AI Smart Glasses’ Privacy Concerns, After Workers Reviewed Nudity, Sex, And Other Footage

Meta AI smart glasses face a U.S. privacy lawsuit after workers were found reviewing intimate user footage — raising serious questions about wearable
Matilda
Meta Sued Over AI Smart Glasses’ Privacy Concerns, After Workers Reviewed Nudity, Sex, And Other Footage
If you own Meta's AI-powered smart glasses, you may want to stop and read this. A newly filed U.S. lawsuit accuses Meta of violating privacy laws after overseas workers were reportedly reviewing video footage from customers' glasses — footage that included nudity, sexual activity, and other deeply intimate moments. The allegations are striking, and they directly contradict Meta's own marketing promises. What the Meta AI Smart Glasses Lawsuit Actually Claims The lawsuit was filed in the United States by two plaintiffs — Gina Bartone of New Jersey and Mateo Canu of California — and is being handled by the Clarkson Law Firm, a public interest-focused legal group with a track record of taking on major tech companies. The complaint charges Meta and its glasses manufacturing partner Luxottica of America with violating consumer protection laws and engaging in false advertising. At the center of the lawsuit is a simple but devastating claim: Meta marketed its AI smart glasses with la…