I can see some moments where this would be helpful and others where it would suck.
For example, while driving. It'd be like your own personal dash-cam. You get cut off, you see someone weaving/DUI, you get pulled over by a cop. Recording all of that could be very beneficial.
Attending a lecture or a class. Imagine having the entire presentation to play back and then use to build your notes.
There are times where a recording of your POV (instead of just your recollection) would be beneficial.
But the invasion of others privacy and/or anonymity (they are not the same, especially in public) is a huge risk.
English
-
[quote]But the invasion of others privacy and/or anonymity (they are not the same, especially in public) is a huge risk.[/quote] I'm sure there would be privacy and/or anonymity settings. Hopefully, they'd work correctly.
-
Edited by FoMan123: 3/13/2013 12:11:49 AMHow are you going to affect the privacy/anonymity settings on someone else's Google Glass device? Besides: privacy settings on a Google product? LOL. If you find a way to stop a Google product from sending data back to Google, you let me know.
-
From what I've seen, the Google Glass thing is pulling up information from the web, right? Where is the Google Glass pulling the info from? Maybe FaceBook? Twitter? Then set that information as inaccessible to all but a few people. Then, a stranger won't be able to access that information.
-
I think you fail to understand the problem that Foman is describing. The problem is Google having all that info that the Glass device is collecting.
-
Ahh, I see. My mistake, I apologize.