Regulator contacts Meta over workers watching intimate AI glasses videos

51 points by csomar 19 hours ago on hackernews | 10 comments

jqpabc123 | 18 hours ago

If it has a Meta label on it, your privacy is being compromised.

hsbauauvhabzb | 18 hours ago

Hey now that’s not fair, there are plenty of other companies in the same boat. Basically all of big tech, in fact.

carrychains | 18 hours ago

No one's in the same boat as meta. They've been out front leading the fleet all by themselves since their inception.

hsbauauvhabzb | 17 hours ago

So flock or palantir are less bad?

ryukoposting | 17 hours ago

I believe both of them would face more public pressure if Meta hadn't normalized egregious corporate surveillance.

hsbauauvhabzb | 14 hours ago

Meta surveillance isn’t anywhere near as understood by the masses as you think. Most people who call flock bad will continuing to use Facebook and wouldn’t think twice about it.

jqpabc123 | 11 hours ago

You're excusing but not refuting.

The behavior of "most people" or "other companies" doesn't change the fact that Meta's business model is and has always been built around invading, compromising and monetizing user privacy.

If it has a Meta label on it, your privacy is being compromised.

MadnessASAP | 18 hours ago

Of course they did, in what world would they not have? You can't get any of these companies to take a single person-minute to look at an issue that affects you. However no problem putting a small country of people to work invading, reviewing, and annotating the shit out of your privacy.

gnabgib | 18 hours ago

Discussion (1407 points, 2 days ago, 824 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47225130

leonflexo | 18 hours ago

The tech/demand for the glasses didn't break through some threshold it hadn't reached before, all of the sudden. They became viable as a product again because real training data is more valuable now than ever.