bug-bounty507
xss274
rce154
google122
bragging-post119
account-takeover115
facebook111
privilege-escalation101
exploit98
malware97
authentication-bypass95
open-source94
microsoft90
csrf87
access-control78
stored-xss75
cve73
ai-agents67
web-security66
reflected-xss63
phishing60
information-disclosure52
input-validation52
sql-injection51
smart-contract49
privacy49
cross-site-scripting48
ssrf48
defi48
tool46
reverse-engineering46
ethereum46
writeup45
api-security45
ai-security41
apple40
vulnerability-disclosure40
web-application38
llm38
opinion37
burp-suite37
automation36
web336
responsible-disclosure35
credential-theft35
remote-code-execution34
supply-chain34
race-condition34
browser33
infrastructure33
0
4/10
The Electronic Frontier Foundation warns against purchasing and using Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses due to serious privacy concerns including automatic cloud upload of footage to Meta servers for AI training (including human review), invisible recording design that makes consent difficult, and Meta's disclosed interest in adding facial recognition capabilities.
privacy
surveillance
smart-glasses
meta
ray-ban
facial-recognition
data-collection
ai-training
third-party-contractors
cloud-storage
public-recording
consent
civil-liberties
Meta
Ray-Ban
Oakley
Google
Warby Parker
Apple
Snapchat
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Thorin Klosowski