The finish makes several noteworthy adaptations to the Privacy Policy for its Metart Glass Ray-Ban. In E -Mail sent on April 29 to the owners of glasses, the company presented two key changes. First of all, it gives you a metal sight of the world more often. “Meta AI with the use of the camera is always included in the glasses, unless you turn off” hey meta “, said the e-mail, referring to the voice command function without using your hands.
So if you do not turn off this convenient function, the finish will regularly analyze all photos and videos that are recorded by the built -in camera. If you just want to use Ray-Ban metas as a “normal” camera without any artificial intelligence, you need to turn off “hey meta” and stick to physical controls. However, glasses never constantly record your surroundings.
Secondly, the finish takes after Amazon, no longer allowing Ray-Ban Owners to resign from storing voice recordings in the cloud. “The option to disable the storage of voice recordings is no longer available, but you can delete recording at any time in the settings,” the company wrote. IN His notification of voice privacyMeta states that “voice transcription and stored audio recordings are stored differently for up to one year to improve meta products.” If the company detects that voice interaction was accidental, these recordings will be removed after a shorter 90-day window.
The motivation of these changes is clear: the finish wants to continue to provide AI models with lots of data on which you can train and improve further results. Some users started noticing these changes in politics in MarchBut at least in the United States, META claims that they have come into force from April 29.
The company is reportedly planning a higher pair of Ray-Ban Metal Metals to release later in 2025. The current range of glasses starts from USD 299, but a more bonus version can cost about USD 1000. The finish line is to report its earnings in the first quarter of 2025. Later on Wednesday, and the company will probably deal with tariff chaos, which in recent months has been collecting markets.