Our weekly witty-but-serious video – news you can use, and it only takes a minute. Enjoy…
Tag Archives: Google Glass
Google Glass isn’t dead. It’s being fine-tuned for the masses
Privacy concerns made it smell like yesterday’s fish, but apparently that’s just the aroma of fine-tuning as the beloved/reviled face-huggers get made ready for the masses.
Forget Google Glass, here’s Sony’s (not quite as catchy) SmartEyeglass
Those aren’t augmented reality spectacles. THESE are augmented reality spectacles! But what about the privacy and security side?
Google Glass – going, going, gone…
Google’s website is still promising to “bring devices to more countries as quickly as possible.” Until next week, anyway, when it’s all over…
Don’t wear your Google Glass or other wearables when watching a movie
Two trade groups have officially adopted a zero-tolerance policy against all wearable recording devices being on during showtime.
Dubai police add facial recognition to Google Glass
A spokesman confirmed a report that Dubai police have developed software that will connect a Glass wearer to a database of wanted people. Is it 1984 yet?
Why would we let you say “No” to something that’s free? 60 Sec Security [VIDEO]
Here’s our latest 60 Second Security video for your viewing pleasure. Enjoy…
Target tops the list of most epic privacy fails
Our readers ranked Target’s data breach ahead of Adobe, Snapchat, Google Glass, and Talking Angela for the biggest privacy failure of the past year.
The top 5 privacy failures – what’s the most epic fail of all? [POLL]
The list of culprits in our eroding privacy is long, but some privacy fails stand out above the rest. So we’re calling out five privacy killers that deserve an extra level of shaming. Take our poll, and help us crown the most epic privacy fail of all …
Is that Google Glass wearer stealing your iPad passcode?
What about the one with a smartwatch? Snoopers can catch your code from nearly 10 feet away with Google Glass or Samsung’s smartwatch and from almost 150 away using a HD camcorder, thanks to researchers’ custom-coded, shadow-tracking recognition algorithm.