What you need to know
- Meta is rolling out a mandatory update that disables the camera entirely if the glasses’ privacy light is tampered with or covered.
- Earlier glasses only showed a prompt when the LED was covered, but users bypassed it by drilling holes or using mods.
- Meta will also remove ads and posts promoting tampering services and take action against any accounts linked to them.
- The change follows growing misuse of Meta’s AI glasses and public backlash over the company ignoring the issue for so long.
Something that should’ve been here from day one has finally happened. Meta is rolling out an update that blocks users from recording with its smart glasses if they tamper with the privacy light.
Smart glasses are inherently a privacy nightmare. To this day, plenty of people don’t realize that the glowing LED on Meta’s AI glasses means they’re being recorded, and Meta has finally taken a step to curb this creepy behavior.
The company has started rolling out a mandatory update for all Ray-Ban Meta and Meta’s new glasses that will now disable the camera entirely if the privacy light is destroyed or tampered with.
Starting with its second-generation glasses, Meta tried to stop users from covering the LED with tape or other objects by showing a prompt asking them to uncover the recording light before continuing.
Tampering with the privacy light now kills the camera
Even then, users found workarounds like drilling into the holes, and modders came up with more sophisticated methods, but that shouldn’t be possible anymore.
In its latest FAQ, Meta explains that the camera will now be physically disabled if the glasses detect that the privacy light has been tampered with or covered.
The company also says it’s working across its platforms to remove ads and posts advertising these kinds of tampering services, and that it will take action against any accounts tied to them.
There’s been growing misuse of Meta’s AI glasses, along with plenty of public backlash over the company failing to address this creepy behavior sooner. It seems Meta has finally listened, and this is an important privacy change.
It’s also worth noting that the update will be mandatory for all Meta and Ray-Ban Meta users.
Android Central’s Take
About time, honestly. Meta let this creepy behavior slide for far too long, and it took public backlash to force a fix. I’m glad it’s here, but I can’t help wondering why it wasn’t baked in from the start.


