×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Wednesday
14
Jan 2026
weather symbol
Athens 11°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> World

Facebook’s new camera glasses are dangerously easy to use

The company has partnered with Ray-Ban to make a pair of video-capturing Wayfarers. They’re everything you hoped for & feared in smart glasses

Newsroom September 10 12:22

Facebook is notorious for borrowing ideas from other tech companies, then taking advantage of its massive global platform and its expertise in building sticky apps to bring those ideas into the mainstream. Some of Facebook’s most egregious lifts have been from Snap, née Snapchat, whose 24-hour disappearing stories and technically sophisticated augmented-reality filters later showed up as copycat features inside Instagram. And like Snap, Facebook has in recent years declared itself to be a camera company, with Mark Zuckerberg proclaiming on a 2016 earnings call that he believed “a camera will be the main way we share.”

Facebook’s latest foray into “Wait, haven’t I seen this before?” is a pair of photo- and video-capturing sunglasses, à la Snap Spectacles. They’re called Ray-Ban Stories, with Ray-Ban appearing first and Facebook second in most of the product branding. Even though this is a product collaboration between two globally recognizable brands, these are Facebook glasses. This is Facebook’s first piece of wearable tech designed for casual use—not just specialized VR applications, which is what Oculus is for—and the sunglasses are designed for completely frictionless media capture of the world around you. They go on sale today for $299.

See Also:

The Matrix Resurrections trailer is here and it is insane (video)

>Related articles

Elon Musk: Don’t save for retirement – It won’t matter

EU calls on Iran to release Nobel Peace Prize laureate Mohammadi

Research: The BBC’s “first Black Briton” from the Roman era was ultimately…white and originated from southern England

It’s the “effortless” part that will raise eyebrows behind the plastic frames. Facebook has made a pair of smart glasses—even if they’re not true AR glasses—that people might actually want to wear. (Giaia Rener, Ray-Ban’s global brand director, even describes them as “the first smart glasses you’re going to want to wear.”) If the ultimate goal of wearable-tech makers has been to develop something at the intersection of comfort, invisibility, and invisible data capture, then Facebook seems to have accomplished this.

Cameras are everywhere now; a person doesn’t even need to pull out their phone to digitally memorialize a moment. The question is whether Facebook should own even more of those moments.

Read more: Wired

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#facebook#glasses#human rights#internet#internet glasses#privecy#ray-ban#science#shades#sunglasses#technology#wayfarers
> More World

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

“Traitor”: They vandalized tractors of farmers who went to the meeting with Mitsotakis at the Nikaia blockade, see pictures

January 14, 2026

Olive oil: How the market system inflates prices

January 14, 2026

Arrested 22-year-old man who was running at 167 km on the National Road of Thessaloniki – Moudania

January 14, 2026

Karystianou: Out of the Tempi Victims’ Association, with criticism toward relatives over finances: “I remain silent so as not to expose you”

January 14, 2026

Critical White House meeting on Greenland amid Trump’s threats to take over the island

January 14, 2026

The development plan for buildings on Alexandra Avenue has been launched

January 14, 2026

At least 2,571 people killed in repression of protests in Iran, according to human rights organisations

January 14, 2026

Natalia Kapodistria, the last descendant: “The film was extraordinary — It took my breath away”

January 14, 2026
All News

> technology

From Tesla to Disney, 4 companies are preparing humanoid robots for the market: What they can do, how much they will cost

They fold clothes, serve coffee, work in factories and are getting ready to enter our homes — the four most advanced robots moving closer to everyday life

January 4, 2026

iPhone 17: Slimmer, better, but not much more expensive despite Trump’s tariffs

September 10, 2025

Voice Cloning: A new form of AI-assisted fraud sweeps the US and is coming to Europe

October 20, 2024

Instagram: Changes for minors – Introducing ‘teen accounts’ with parental supervision, countries affected

September 17, 2024

Europe at the forefront of artificial intelligence: The first AI law

August 30, 2024
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα