Two Harvard students made headlines after converting Meta’s smart glasses into a device that automatically captures people’s faces with facial

PimEyes says Meta glasses integration could have ‘irreversible consequences’

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2024-10-08 03:30:03

Two Harvard students made headlines after converting Meta’s smart glasses into a device that automatically captures people’s faces with facial recognition and runs them through face search engines. One of the companies providing the face search function, PimEyes, is not too happy about it.

AnhPhu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio released a video of themselves using the smart glasses to identify people on the street and look up their personal information through services such as PimEyes. The students used the integrated camera on Meta’s Ray-Ban glasses to capture live video through Instagram and ran it through their software I-XRAY.

“We stream the video from the glasses straight to Instagram and have a computer program monitor the stream,” Nguyen says in the video. “We use AI to detect when we’re looking at someone’s face, then we scour the internet to find more pictures of that person. Finally, we use data sources like online articles and voter registration databases to figure out their name, phone number, home address and relatives names and it’s all fed back to an app we wrote on our phone.”

The I-XRAY software is unique because it relies on Large Language Models (LLMs) to process and compile large amounts of information. The main goal behind the project, however, is not to demonstrate how LLMs and reverse face search work together but to highlight privacy risks from widely available technology, the two Harvard students note.

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