A Swedish investigative report, based on interviews with more than 30 employees at Kenya-headquartered Sama and former US Meta employees, described subcontractor workers performing video, image, and speech annotation for Metaâs AI systems. Several interviewed workers said they had seen Ray-Ban Meta smart-glasses footage depicting people having sex and using the bathroom, including scenarios where the glasses were set down and continued capturing private moments.
Meta told the BBC it âsometimesâ shares content users provide to the Meta AI chatbot with contractors to review for product improvement and said the data is filtered to protect privacy, including blurring faces. Metaâs wearables privacy policy states that photos and videos can be sent to Meta when cloud processing is enabled, when interacting with Meta AI on the glasses, or when uploading media to certain Meta services; it also states that livestream audio/video and related transcripts and recordings may be sent to Meta and processed by trained reviewers and third-party vendors. The report prompted a UK data watchdog to write to Meta, and a proposed class-action lawsuit was filed against Meta and Luxottica of America challenging marketing claims that the glasses are âdesigned for privacy, controlled by you.â